Discovery could help to develop drugs for organ transplant and cancer patients
- Details
- Category: Research
Loyola researchers are reporting surprising findings about a molecule that helps ramp up the immune system in some cases and suppress it in others. The finding eventually could lead to new drugs to regulate the immune system by, for example, revving it up to attack tumor cells or tamping it down to prevent the rejection of transplanted organs.
UCLA-engineered stem cells seek out and kill HIV in living organisms
- Details
- Category: Research
Expanding on previous research providing proof-of-principal that human stem cells can be genetically engineered into HIV-fighting cells, a team of UCLA researchers have now demonstrated that these cells can actually attack HIV-infected cells in a living organism.
Alzheimer's precursor protein controls its own fate
- Details
- Category: Research
A research team led by the University of South Florida Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Neurosciences has found that a fragment of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) - known as sAPP-α and associated with Alzheimer's disease - appears to regulate its own production.
Normalizing tumor blood vessels improves delivery of only the smallest nanomedicines
- Details
- Category: Research
Combining two strategies designed to improve the results of cancer treatment - antiangiogenesis drugs and nanomedicines - may only be successful if the smallest nanomedicines are used.
Report says new evidence could tip the balance in aspirin cancer prevention care
- Details
- Category: Research
A new report by American Cancer Society scientists says new data showing aspirin's potential role in reducing the risk of cancer death bring us considerably closer to the time when cancer prevention can be included in clinical guidelines for the use of aspirin in preventative care.
First targeted nanomedicine to enter human clinical studies
- Details
- Category: Research
A team of scientists, engineers and physicians from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI), Harvard Medical School (HMS), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), BIND Biosciences, Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), Wayne State University Karmanos Cancer Institute, and Weill Cornell Medical College have found promising effects of a first-in-class targeted cancer drug called BIND-014 in treating solid tumors.
Cancer stem cell vaccine in development shows antitumor effect
- Details
- Category: Research
Scientists may have discovered a new paradigm for immunotherapy against cancer by priming antibodies and T cells with cancer stem cells, according to a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
More Pharma News ...
- DNA sequencing lays foundation for personalized cancer treatment
- The next frontier in battle against atherosclerosis
- The 'living' micro-robot that could detect diseases in humans
- The path to personalized cancer treatment
- Single antibody shrinks variety of human tumors transplanted into mice
- Diabetes drug can prevent heart disease
- Pain relievers could be spiking your blood pressure