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duminică, 5 august 2012

Children With Autism May Benefit From The Introduction Of A Pet Into The Family

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Main Category: Autism
Article Date: 03 Aug 2012 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Children With Autism May Benefit From The Introduction Of A Pet Into The Family
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The introduction of a pet can have a positive effect on autistic children's behavior, as reported in research published in the open access journal PLOS ONE.

The authors of the study, led by Marine Grandgeorge of the Hospital Research Center of Brest in France, found that participants who received a pet scored higher in two categories, "offering to share" and "offering comfort," a few years after the pet arrived than they did before having a pet. Participants who had lived with pets since birth, on the other hand, showed generally weaker relationships with their pets.

Both of these categories reflect prosocial behaviors, suggesting that individuals with autism can develop these types of behaviors in the appropriate context, the authors write.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our autism section for the latest news on this subject. Financial Disclosure: The Adrienne and Pierre Sommer Foundation gave the financial support for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The authors declare that they have no financial interests.
Competing Interest Statement: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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'Children With Autism May Benefit From The Introduction Of A Pet Into The Family'

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marți, 13 decembrie 2011

Adults With Hemophilia B Benefit From Gene Therapy

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Also Included In: Genetics;  Liver Disease / Hepatitis;  Cystic Fibrosis
Article Date: 13 Dec 2011 - 0:00 PST

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Symptoms improved significantly in adults with the bleeding disorder hemophilia B following a single treatment with gene therapy developed by researchers at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis and demonstrated to be safe in a clinical trial conducted at the University College London (UCL) in the U.K.

The findings of the six-person study mark the first proof that gene therapy can reduce disabling, painful bleeding episodes in patients with the inherited blood disorder. Results of the Phase I study appear in the online edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. The research was also scheduled to be presented December 11 at the 53rd annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology in San Diego.

Four study participants stopped receiving protein injections to prevent bleeding episodes after undergoing the therapy and have not suffered spontaneous bleeding. Several have also participated in marathons and other activities that would have been difficult prior to gene therapy. The study volunteers were all treated at the Royal Free Hospital in London under the care of Edward G.D. Tuddenham, M.D., Ph.D., a pioneer in the field of blood coagulation and a study co-author.

"This is a potentially life-changing treatment for patients with this disease and an important milestone for the field of gene therapy. It could have ramifications for the treatment of hemophilia A, other protein and liver disorders and chronic diseases such as cystic fibrosis," said first author Amit Nathwani, M.D., Ph.D., a faculty member at the UCL Cancer Institute, Royal Free Hospital and NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT).

Hemophilia B is caused by an inherited mistake in the gene for making a protein called Factor IX, which is essential for normal blood clotting. The gene is carried on the X chromosome. As a result, hemophilia B is almost exclusively a disease of men. About 1 in 30,000 individuals inherit the mutation.

Previous efforts to ease hemophilia B symptoms by introducing a correct copy of the gene have been unsuccessful.

The current study used adeno-associated virus (AAV) 8 as the vector to deliver the Factor IX gene along with additional genetic material into the patient's liver. AAV8 was picked because the incidence of natural infection with AAV8 is low. It belongs to a family of viruses that target liver cells but do not cause disease in humans or integrate into human DNA. Participants in the study received no immune suppressing drugs prior to gene therapy.

This approach was jointly pioneered by St. Jude and UCL, initially in the laboratory of study co-author Arthur Nienhuis, M.D, a member of the St. Jude Department of Hematology.

For this study, each patient received a one-time infusion of the vector into a vein in the arm. Two patients each were treated with escalating doses of the vector. Following treatment, Factor IX levels rose in all six patients from less than 1 percent of normal levels prior to the gene therapy to between 2 and 12 percent.

Factor IX levels increased the most in the two study volunteers who received the highest dose of the experimental vector, researchers said. After treatment, levels of the protein ranged from 3 to 12 percent in those men. Even modest increases that raise Factor IX production to more than 1 percent of normal levels have the potential to dramatically affect a patient's quality of life and reduce bleeding episodes, said the study's senior author Andrew Davidoff, M.D., chair of the St. Jude Department of Surgery.

"The first patient has been followed for the longest time, and his levels have remained at 2 percent for more than 18 months. These results are highly encouraging and support continued research. More patients are scheduled to be enrolled in future trials scheduled to begin later this year," Davidoff said.

One of the participants who received the highest dose of the vector underwent successful, short-term steroid treatment after his liver enzymes rose slightly after the vector infusion. The rise signalled mild liver damage. The volunteer remained otherwise healthy, his Factor IX levels remain above pre-infusion levels and his liver enzymes have returned to normal. Liver enzymes also rose slightly, but remained in the normal range, for the other participant who received the highest dose of the vector. That participant also received a short course of steroids.

Researchers believe an immune response targeting the vector triggered the elevated enzyme levels. A similar response was reported in earlier gene therapy trials conducted by other investigators using a different vector.

The vector used in this study was produced at the Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) facility on the St. Jude campus. The GMP operates under U.S. government-approved manufacturing guidelines and produces highly specialized medicines, vaccines and other products that pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to pursue. The vector can also now be produced in a similar facility at UCL.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our blood / hematology section for the latest news on this subject. Other authors are Savita Rangarajan, Basingstoke and North Hampshire Foundation Trust; Cecilia Rosales, Jenny McIntosh and David Linch, all of UCL Cancer Institute; Pratima Chowdary, Anja Griffioen, Anne Riddel, Jun Pie, Chris Harrington and James O'Beirne, all of Royal Free NHS Trust; Keith Smith, NHSBT; John Pasi, Bertie Glader, Pradip Rustagi and Mark May, all of Stanford University; Catherine Y.C. Ng, Junfang Zhou, Yunyu Zpense, Christopher Morton, all of Queen Mary's School of Medicine, London; James Allay, the late John Coleman, Susan Sleep, John Gray and Ulrike Reiss, all of St. Jude; John Cunningham, University of Chicago; Etiena Basner-Tschakarjan and Federico Mingozzi, both of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Katherine High, of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
In the U.S., the research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Assisi Foundation of Memphis and ALSAC. In the U.K. the research was funded in part by The Katherine Dormandy Trust, Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, NHS Blood and Transplant and the UCLH/UCL NIHR Biomedical Research Centre.
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luni, 12 decembrie 2011

Some Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C May Benefit From Boceprevir But Extent Of Added Benefit Still Unclear

Main Category: Liver Disease / Hepatitis
Also Included In: Cancer / Oncology
Article Date: 12 Dec 2011 - 1:00 PST

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The active ingredient boceprevir has been available since the middle of 2011 as a treatment for chronic hepatitis C of genotype 1. In an early benefit assessment pursuant to the "Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products" (AMNOG), the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) has now examined to establish whether boceprevir offers added benefit in comparison with the previous standard therapy. According to this assessment, the dossier submitted by the pharmaceutical company provides indications of added benefit for patients who have not yet developed liver cirrhosis. However, the extent of this added benefit cannot be classified.

The pharmaceutical company provided no data - or inadequate data - for two other indications - patients with liver cirrhosis and patients for whom prior treatment was totally ineffective (zero response to prior interferon-based therapy) - and therefore added benefit for these patients is not proven.

An addition to previous standard drug therapy

Hepatitis C viruses attack the liver and can trigger inflammation there. If this becomes chronic, cirrhosis can develop and liver function progressively deteriorates. Moreover, the risk of liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma, HCC) increases. Boceprevir (trade name Victrelis®, manufacturer MSD Sharp & Dohme) inhibits the reproduction of hepatitis C viruses. Experts assume that if no viruses are detectable in the blood over a sustained period after treatment (sustained virological response, SVR), the risk of secondary disease is reduced.

Boceprevir is administered in addition to the active ingredients peginterferon alfa and ribavirin, which are already on the market. In accordance with the approval status, different patient groups are treated for different periods, as was allowed for in the assessment. The dual combination of peginterferon alfa and ribavirin has been the standard therapy and this was compared with boceprevir given in a triple combination with the former two drugs.

Reduction in secondary diseases: extent cannot be classified

For the two indications of pretreated (treatment-experienced) and non-pretreated (treatment-naive) patients without cirrhosis, data from one approval study each (SPRINT-2 and RESPOND-2) were available. With the available studies, it is not possible to assess directly whether the new active ingredient influences secondary diseases, such as the development of liver cancer. This is partly because the studies have not lasted long enough for these patient-relevant outcomes to be recorded.

With respect to SVR, there was a clear advantage for boceprevir, both for pretreated patients and for non-pretreated patients without liver cirrhosis. However, SVR is not itself a patient-relevant outcome and cannot be equated with "cure", and there are no studies in which SVR is validated as a surrogate outcome in accordance with the usual criteria employed by IQWiG. Nevertheless, the Institute accepts SVR in the context of the assessment as a surrogate for the reduced incidence of liver cancer. This is because it is currently accepted that patients with no detectable hepatitis C virus in the blood are at lower risk of liver cancer. However, it is unclear how many cases of liver cancer can in fact be prevented by boceprevir.

For the outcome "secondary diseases", IQWiG recognizes an "indication" of a benefit for boceprevir. The requirements for a "proof" are not fulfilled, one reason being that the data are only derived from a single study each, with a comparatively small number of patients. Moreover, the scientific data do not permit a conclusive assessment of the number of patients in whom liver cancer is actually prevented. It is therefore unclear whether the added benefit is "minor", "considerable" or "major". For such a case, the corresponding legal ordinance specifies the assessment category of "unquantifiable".

Indication of greater harm for patients without prior treatment

The indication of greater benefit is in contrast to the indication of greater harm, but only in previously untreated patients. In these patients, boceprevir more often led to anaemia, although this was rarely serious. IQWiG classified the extent of this greater harm as "considerable". In contrast, in patients with prior treatment, anaemia was no more frequent than with standard treatment.

Effect on mortality unclear

IQWiG established that the approval studies contained inadequate data on quality of life for patients with or without prior treatment. There were no statistically significant differences in mortality between the treatment groups. It thus remains unclear if and how boceprevir influences mortality.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our liver disease / hepatitis section for the latest news on this subject. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Car. "Some Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C May Benefit From Boceprevir But Extent Of Added Benefit Still Unclear." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 12 Dec. 2011. Web.
12 Dec. 2011. APA
Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Car. (2011, December 12). "Some Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C May Benefit From Boceprevir But Extent Of Added Benefit Still Unclear." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/238995.php.

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vineri, 9 decembrie 2011

Johns Hopkins Medicine To Offer Pepsico Employees New Travel Surgery Benefit

Main Category: Heart Disease
Also Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology;  Cosmetic Medicine / Plastic Surgery
Article Date: 09 Dec 2011 - 2:00 PST

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Johns Hopkins announced today that PepsiCo, the world's second-largest food and beverage business, will offer its employees the option to travel to Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore for cardiac and complex joint replacement surgeries.

The travel surgery benefit will be extended to PepsiCo's domestic employees and their dependents almost 250,000 people making the finest in medical care available regardless of geography.

PepsiCo, which sponsors its own self-funded medical plans, will waive deductibles and coinsurance for those who elect to have their surgery at Johns Hopkins. The company will also cover the travel and lodging expenses to Baltimore for the patient and a companion. The payment methodology for these procedures is a bundled rate, an all-inclusive rate for hospital and physician charges and certain preoperative testing. This innovative reimbursement model provides payment for all the patient care over the course of a clinical episode instead of paying for each service on a fee-for-service basis.

"We're excited about the opportunity to work with an innovative company like PepsiCo that is committed to ensuring cost-effective, higher-quality care as part of its employee health benefits," says Patricia M.C. Brown, president of Johns Hopkins HealthCare LLC, the managed care arm of Johns Hopkins Medicine. "We're offering their employees some of the best health care available, which should mean fewer complications and should result in employees being able to return to work sooner. At the same time, we're offering PepsiCo predictability regarding cost."

Brown adds that Hopkins is open to similar arrangements with other large companies.

"We are pleased to work with Johns Hopkins to offer PepsiCo employees and their families access to this outstanding health care institution," says Bruce Monte, senior director, PepsiCo Health & Welfare Benefits. "This is a great example of the distinctive programs we provide on top of our already strong health care benefits. These programs are designed to help our employees and their families live healthier lives and ensure a high level of workforce support, which in turn helps PepsiCo to be a successful company."

To be eligible for the new program, the patient must be approved for surgery in advance and be healthy enough to travel. Other types of surgery may be made part of the program in the future.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
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