New malaria drug requires just one dose and appears twice as effective as existing regimen
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- Category: Research
Scientists are reporting development of a new malaria drug that, in laboratory tests, has been twice as effective as the best current medicine against this global scourge and may fight off the disease with one dose, instead of the multiple doses that people often fail to take.
Cold viruses point the way to new cancer therapies
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- Category: Research
Cold viruses generally get a bad rap - which they've certainly earned - but new findings by a team of scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies suggest that these viruses might also be a valuable ally in the fight against cancer.
Target for obesity drugs comes into focus
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- Category: Research
Researchers at the University of Michigan have determined how the hormone leptin, an important regulator of metabolism and body weight, interacts with a key receptor in the brain. Leptin is a hormone secreted by fat tissue that has been of interest for researchers in obesity and Type 2 diabetes since it was discovered in 1995.
Strategies proposed to improve impact of comparative effectiveness studies
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Comparative effectiveness research conducted over the past decade has had a limited impact on the way medical care is delivered, but many opportunities exist to help doctors and others in the medical system translate such research into better patient care, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2012
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- Category: Development
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2012 to Robert J. Lefkowitz Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA and Brian K. Kobilka Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA for studies of G-protein-coupled receptors.
RNA-based therapy brings new hope for an incurable blood cancer
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- Category: Research
Three thousand new cases of Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL), a form of blood cancer, appear in the United States each year. With a median survival span of only five to seven years, according to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, this disease is devastating, and new therapies are sorely needed.
Aspirin may decrease risk of aggressive form of ovarian cancer
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- Category: Research
New research shows that women who regularly use pain relief medications, particularly aspirin, have a decreased risk of serous ovarian cancer - an aggressive carcinoma affecting the surface of the ovary. The study published in Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica reports that non-aspirin non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), paracetamol (acetaminophen), or other analgesics did not decrease ovarian cancer risk.
More Pharma News ...
- The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2012
- Rare disease researchers notch a win for patients with inherited muscle disease
- Discovery leads to new hope against ovarian cancer
- New antibiotic cures disease by disarming pathogens
- Biological markers increase clinical trial success rate of new breast cancer drugs
- First-ever treatment for rare childhood aging disease shows improvement in all trial participants
- Ten pharmaceutical companies unite to accelerate development of new medicines