Friday, December 25, 2009
Trabectedin for advanced soft tissue sarcoma....
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Pyramidine core- a new drug for drug resistant non small cell lung cancers
http://www.dana-farber.org/abo/news/press/2009/research-yields-new-agent-for-some-drug-resistant-non-small-cell-lung-cancers.html
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
New three-drug combination for multiple myeloma ! ...
Fifteen of the 35 newly diagnosed patients in the open-label phase 2 portion of the study subsequently underwent autologous (using their own blood-forming stem cells) transplants, a standard treatment for multiple myeloma and did very well.
For the entire group, after a median 19.3 months of follow up, the median time-to-progression (TTP) of the disease, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) had not yet been reached, according to the presentation. The estimated TTP and PFS at one year are 76 percent, and the estimated one-year overall survival is 100 percent, the results showed.
Except for the main adverse effect, peripheral neuropathy (numbness or pain in the extremities), which typically cleared up after dosages were lowered and the treatment was completed.
The combination has now gone into large phase 3 clinical trials, and the researchers think that this regimen has the potential to be a new standard of treatment in multiple myeloma....
http://www.dana-farber.org/abo/news/press/2009/multiple-myeloma-patients-experience-high-response-rate-with-new-three-drug-combination.html
Monday, December 21, 2009
Apremilast a new hope for severe Psoriasis...
About apremilast :
Apremilast, is a member of a proprietary pipeline of novel small molecules with anti-inflammatory activities that inhibit the production of multiple proinflammatory mediators including, PDE-4, TNF-alpha, interleukin-2 (IL-2), interferon-gamma, leukotrienes, and nitric oxide synthase.
As per the claim by the company, 41% of patients treated with 30mg of oral apremilast BID achieved a PASI-75 after 16 weeks (p<0.001).
Ref : :http://ir.celgene.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=111960&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1365878&highlight=
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Treprostinil as IV infusion reduces breathlessness in PAH patients...
The more interesting part of their research is that PAH patients had higher than normal blood levels of factors known to play central roles in the clogging of arteries as part of major diseases like atherosclerosis and hypertension, including angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) and platelet derived growth factor. Treatment with treprostinil was associated with lowers levels of Ang-2.
Though the mode of action has to be established (relaxing muscles surrounding blood vessels for easier blood flow and turning off sticky ingredients that cause blood clots e.g. platelets) , its is a good achievement. Treprostinil-treated patients feel like they are breathing easier because their lung arteries, not the lungs themselves, are working more efficiently. Better understanding of the mechanisms involved may lead to refinements in drug design; for example, blocking the effects of Ang-2 to treat the disease (may be easier on patients than a continuous IV infusion). Though further studies are essential, its a good achievement and hope in the days to come people with PHT will definitely breathe a sigh of relief instead of breathlessnessssss.....
Source : http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/news/story/index.cfm?id=2711
Friday, December 18, 2009
FDA approves Olanzapine as Extended Release Injectable Suspension.....
Ref : http://newsroom.lilly.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=429876
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Synthetic platelets halt blood-clotting time....
Nilotinib more efficiant over Imatinib for (Ph+ CML)....
Nilotinib, in the form of the hydrochloride monohydrate salt, is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, approved as Tasigna in USA and the EU for drug - resistant chronic myelogenous leukemia (June 2006), resistant to treatment with imatinib (Gleevec), another tyrosine kinase inhibitor currently used as a first-line treatment.
As per the claim by the researchers, in the first head-to-head study of these two oral treatments as initial therapy for this life-threatening leukaemia, nilotinib demonstrated statistically significant improvement over imatinib in key measures of effectiveness used in the trial. The trial showed that at 12 months, significantly fewer patients on nilotinib 300mg twice-daily progressed from the initial chronic phase of the disease to the later accelerated or blast crisis phases than those on imatinib 400mg once-daily. This demonstrates that nilotinib provided significantly better control of the disease compared to imatinib.
95% of patients with CML have an abnormality known as the Philadelphia chromosome. This chromosome produces a type of protein called Bcr-Abl, which is responsible for the overproduction of the cancerous white blood cells that are the main feature in Ph+ CML. Nilotinib is a potent and selective inhibitor of the Bcr-Abl protein, thereby inhibiting the production of these cancerous cells.
Ref : http://www.novartis.com/newsroom/media-releases/en/2009/1359764.shtml
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Lidocaine IV injection as pain killer after ambulatory surgery ?
Now researchers from University of Virginia, Charlottesville, have come up with interesting info about the same drug. As per the claim by the researchers low doses of lidocaine given intravenously can help to control pain after common ambulatory surgery procedures. Intravenous lidocaine may offer a safe, inexpensive, and effective option for improving pain control after minimally invasive or minor surgery, reports the new study led by Dr Danja S. Groves of University of Virginia, Charlottesville. The results are surprising, because local anesthetics such as lidocaine are usually injected close to the nerve to numb the area for surgery. Though the anestheas (higher dose) are toxic, previous studies have found that that IV lidocaine injection is safe in small doses. Though the mode of action and anti inflammatory activity are still to be expalined, is a good achievement...
Ref : http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/559452/
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Combination of Lapatinib and Trastuzumab a better treatment for breast cancer....
Recently, researchers from Duke University Medical Center. Dr. Kimberly Blackwell have found more interesting results when they did try the combination of Trastuzumab (monoclonal antibody). As per the claim by the researchers, Lapatinib plus trastuzumab are significantly better than lapatinib alone in extending the lives of breast cancer patients whose tumors are HER2-positive.
Blackwell says, the combination targeted therapy gave patients more than a four-month survival advantage over those who took lapatinib alone. She says the findings may be the first step toward a chemotherapy-free future. This is the first time that a pair of targeted therapies has been shown to be superior to any intervention that paired a targeted therapy with a hormonal or chemotherapy based approach, she said. The interesting claim by the researchers trastuzumab binds to and blocks part of the HER2 growth factor that appears on the surface of some breast cancer cells while lapatinib binds to a second growth factor, EGFR, and part of HER2 that sits below the cell surface. It's sort of a double whammy, disabling the HER2 protein in two places instead of one......
Ref : http://www.dukehealth.org/health_library/news/targeted_therapy_prolongs_life_in_patients_with_her2_positive_breast_cancer
Monday, December 14, 2009
Methotrexate & Ocrelizumab combination a new hope for RA patients....
About monoclonal antibodies :
Ref : http://www.gene.com/gene/news/press-releases/display.do?method=detail&id=12487
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Bisphosphonates play a role in reducing recurrent breast cancer....
As per the claim by the researchers lead by Dr. Adam Brufsky , women who are on Medicare tend to go with tamoxifen because the cost of anastrozole puts them squarely in the donut hole of Medicare Part D, but once the cost barrier is removed there will likely be a mass switch to the aromatase inhibitor, which will necessitate the need for bone protection. More interestingly, in the same conference a research group lead by Rowan Chlebowski presented a study wherein "women who used bisphosphonates, had significantly fewer invasive breast cancers than women who did not use bisphosphonates. .......
http://www.upci.upmc.edu/news/upci_news/121009_study.cfm
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Xanthohumol may help in preventing prostate cancer....
Higher antioxidant activity is reported for prenylchalcones than for prenyl flavanones in the Cu2+- mediated oxidation of LDL, suggesting a relation between structure and function. Also, many chalcones suppress tumor promotion more effectively than flavonoids themselves.
Quantities of xanthohumol found in Hop are to small to have any biological effects under normal consumption amounts. Some of the researchers also claims that it has got anti-HIV-1 activity too.
Now researchers from German Cancer Research Center, in Heidelberg, Germany, have come up with more interesting result, i.e., Xanthohumol may aid in preventing prostate cancer. As per the claim by the authors, the compound blocks the effects of the male hormone testosterone.
Studies to date have shown that xanthohumol blocks the action of estrogen by binding to its receptor, which may lead to prevention of breast cancer. Since testosterone receptors act similarly to that of estrogen — by binding, then stimulating hormone-dependent effects, such as gene expression and cell growth — the researchers examined whether xanthohumol might not only block the effects of estrogen, but also of the male hormone androgen. Xanthohumol prevented the receptor from translocating to the cell nucleus, thus inhibiting its potential to stimulate the secretion of PSA and other hormone-dependent effects.
The interesting part of their research is the molecular modeling results, which showed that xanthohumol directly binds to the androgen receptor structure. The researchers suggest that this compound may have beneficial effects in animals — when they measured the anti-androgenic potential of xanthohumol in a rat model, they found that although xanthohumol was not able to prevent an increase in prostate weight after testosterone treatment, it could reduce testosterone-increased seminal vesicle weight.
As per the claim by the researchers the prostate weights were not changed, xanthohumol still reduced the effects of hormone signaling, such as gene expression, measured in the prostate tissue...
Ref : http://mct.aacrjournals.org/content/1/11/959.full
Friday, December 11, 2009
Carfilzomib for multiple myeloma ?
Ref : http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/cgi/content/full/110/9/3281/F1