New drug can clear all psoriasis symptoms
- Details
- Category: Research
A University of Manchester led trial of a new psoriasis drug has resulted in 40 percent of people showing a complete clearance of psoriatic plaques after 12 weeks of treatment and over 90 percent showing improvement. The research tested 2,500 people with psoriasis. Half were given a new drug - ixekizumab - either once every two or four weeks. The other half were given a placebo or a widely used drug for psoriasis called etanercept.
Gold-standard clinical trials fail to capture how behavior changes influence treatment
- Details
- Category: Research
Double-blind clinical trials for new drugs are considered the "gold standard" of medical research because they're designed to determine the efficacy of a treatment free from doctor and participant bias. But one effect these trials fail to measure is how a medication's performance can vary based on patients' lifestyle choices, especially if patients change their habits because they are anticipating treatment, according to a new study published in PLOS ONE.
Single dose of HPV vaccine may prevent cervical cancer
- Details
- Category: Research
A single dose of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix appears to be as effective in preventing certain HPV infections as three doses, the currently recommended course of vaccination. That is the conclusion of a study published today in The Lancet Oncology and co-authored by Diane Harper, M.D., Ph.D., the Rowntree Endowed Chair and professor in the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine at the University of Louisville School of Medicine.
NIH researchers pilot predictive medicine by studying healthy people's DNA
- Details
- Category: Research
A new study by National Institutes of Health researchers has turned traditional genomics research on its head. Instead of trying to find a mutation in the genomic sequence of a person with a genetic disease, they sequenced the genomes of healthy participants, then analyzed the data to find "putative," or presumed, mutations that would almost certainly lead to a genetic condition.
Triple treatment keeps cancer from coming back
- Details
- Category: Research
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide, responsible for some 1.59 million deaths a year. That figure is due, in part, to the fact that the cancer often returns after what, at first, seems to be successful treatment. And the recurring cancer is often resistant to the chemotherapy and other drugs that originally drove it into remission.
Bacteria may cause type 2 diabetes
- Details
- Category: Research
Bacteria and viruses have an obvious role in causing infectious diseases, but microbes have also been identified as the surprising cause of other illnesses, including cervical cancer (Human papilloma virus) and stomach ulcers (H. pylori bacteria). A new study by University of Iowa microbiologists now suggests that bacteria may even be a cause of one of the most prevalent diseases of our time - Type 2 diabetes.
Eating a Mediterranean diet could cut womb cancer risk
- Details
- Category: Research
Women who eat a Mediterranean diet could cut their risk of womb cancer by more than half (57 per cent), according to a study published today in the British Journal of Cancer. The Italian researchers looked at the diets of over 5,000 Italian women to see how closely they stuck to a Mediterranean diet and whether they went on to develop womb cancer.
More Pharma News ...
- Discovery of a treatment to block the progression of multiple sclerosis
- Caffeine intake associated with reduced levels of erectile dysfunction
- Experimental immunotherapy shows high response rate in advanced lung cancer
- Infant antibiotic use linked to adult diseases
- Danish discovery accelerates targeted cancer treatment
- Scientists find new link between diabetes and Alzheimer's
- Generic transplant drugs as good as brand name