Sunday, May 26, 2019

gene therapy that treats an inherited condition called spinal muscular atrophy.

FDA approves $2M medicine, most expensive ever

U.S.regulators have approved the most expensive medicine ever, for a rare disorder that destroys a baby's muscle control and kills nearly all of those with the most common type of the disease within a couple of years.
FDA approves $2M medicine, most expensive ever U.S. regulators have approved the most expensive medicine ever, for a rare disorder that destroys a baby's muscle control and kills nearly all of those with the most common type of the disease within a couple of years.

The treatment is priced at $2.125 million. Out-of-pocket costs for patients will vary based on insurance coverage.

The medicine, sold by the Swiss drugmaker Novartis, is a gene therapy that treats an inherited condition called spinal muscular atrophy. The treatment targets a defective gene that weakens a child's muscles so dramatically that they become unable to move, and eventually unable to swallow or breathe. It strikes about 400 babies born in the U.S. each year.

The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the treatment, called Zolgensma, for all children under age 2 who are confirmed by a genetic test to have any of the four types of the disease. The therapy is a one-time infusion that takes about an hour.

Novartis said it will let insurers make payments over five years, at $425,000 per year, and will give partial rebates if the treatment doesn't work.

The one other medicine for the disease approved in the U.S. is a drug called Spinraza. Instead of a one-time treatment, it must be given every four months. Biogen, Spinraza's maker, charges a list price of $750,000 for the first year and then $350,000 per year after that.

The independent nonprofit group Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, which rates the value of expensive new medicines, calculated that the price of the new gene therapy is justifiable at a cost of $1.2 million to $2.1 million because it "dramatically transforms the lives of families affected by this devastating disease."

ICER's president, Dr. Steven D. Pearson, called the treatment's price "a positive outcome for patients and the entire health system."

The defective gene that causes spinal muscular atrophy prevents the body from making enough of a protein that allows nerves that control movement to work normally. The nerves die off without the protein.

In the most common type, which is also the most severe, at least 90% of patients die by age 2, and any still alive need a ventilator to breathe. Children with less-severe types become disabled more slowly and can live for up to a couple decades.

Zolgensma works by supplying a healthy copy of the faulty gene, which allows nerve cells to then start producing the needed protein. That halts deterioration of the nerve cells and allows the baby to develop more normally.

In patient testing, babies with the most severe form of the disease who got Zolgensma within 6 months of birth had limited muscle problems. Those who got the treatment earliest did best.

Babies given Zolgensma after six months stopped losing muscle control, but the medicine can't reverse damage already done.

It is too early to know how long the benefit of the treatment lasts, but doctors' hopes are rising that they could last a lifetime, according to Dr. Jerry Mendell, a neurologist at Nationwide Children's in Columbus, Ohio, who led one of the early patient studies.

"It's beginning to look that way," he said, because a few children treated who are now 4 or 5 still have no symptoms.

Early diagnosis is crucial, so Novartis has been working with states to get genetic testing for newborns required at birth. It expects most states will have that requirement by next year.

The FDA said side effects included vomiting and potential liver damage, so patients must be monitored for the first few months after treatment.

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

New nasal spray treats depression faster: Study

'Google's AI better at spotting lung cancer than human'

Deccan Herald

Saturday, May 11, 2019

cancer and cigaratte-I:Tobacco C: chairmanDeveshwar dies of cancer

  Freebase Nicotine

ITC chairman YC Deveshwar passes away

Economic Times









famous people who died of cancer from smoking





Cigarette smoking is responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the United States, including more than 41,000 deaths resulting from secondhand smoke exposure. This is about one in five deaths annually, or 1,300 deaths every day. On average, smokers die 10 years earlier than nonsmokers.Nov 28, 2018















..

Thursday, May 9, 2019

New AI method predicts future risk of breast cancer

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Sex drug 'effective' as heart failure treatment



Credit: CC0 Public Domain
A drug used to treat erectile dysfunction has been found by University of Manchester scientists to slow or even reverse the progression of heart failure in sheep.
The British Heart Foundation funded study is a breakthrough in the for the disease in which five year survival rates are lower than most common cancers.
The study of Tadalafil—which is in the same class as Viagra—proves that the is biologically effective as a treatment for failure in sheep.
However, lead author Professor Andrew Trafford argues the effect is likely to also be shown in humans. The study is published in the journal Scientific Reports.
Heart failure is a devastating condition, occurring when the heart is too weak to pump enough blood to meet the body's needs.
It also causes a build-up of fluid that backs up into the lungs, resulting in breathlessness as well fluid retention, resulting in swelling of different parts of the body.
Most current treatments are ineffective.
"This discovery is an important advance in a devastating condition which causes misery for thousands of people across the UK and beyond," said Professor Trafford.
"We do have limited evidence from and that show Tadalafil can be effective in treating heart failure.
"This study provides further confirmation, adds mechanistic details and demonstrates that Tadalafil could now be a possible therapy for heart failure.
"It's entirely possible that some patients taking it for er`ectile dysfunction have also unwittingly enjoyed a protective effect on their heart."
Sheep were used by the team as the physiology their hearts is similar to human hearts.
When the animals had heart failure—induced by pace makers—which was sufficiently advanced to need treatment, the team administered the drug. Within a short period the progressive worsening of the heart failure was stopped and, importantly the drug reversed the effects of heart failure.
And the biological cause of breathlessness in heart failure- the inability of the heart to respond to adrenaline was almost completely reversed.
The dose the sheep received were similar to the dose humans are given when being treated for .
Tadalafil blocks an enzyme called Phosphodiesterase 5 or PDE5S for short, which regulates how our tissue responds to hormones like adrenaline.
The research team found that in heart failure, the drug altered the signalling cascade—a series of chemical reactions in the body—to restore the hearts ability to respond to adrenaline.
And that increases the ability of the heart to force blood around the body when working harder.
Professor Trafford added: "This is a widely used and very safe drug with minimal side effects.
"However we would not advise the public to treat themselves with the drug and should always speaking to their doctor if they have any concerns or questions.
"Tadalafil is only suitable as a treatment for systolic heart failure—when the heart is not able to pump properly—and there may be interactions with other drugs patients are taking."
Professor Metin Avkiran, Associate Medical Director at the British Heart Foundation, said:
"Viagra-type drugs were initially developed as potential treatments for heart disease before they were found to have unexpected benefits in the treatment of erectile dysfunction. We seem to have gone full-circle, with findings from recent studies suggesting that they may be effective in the treatment of some forms of heart disease—in this case, heart failure.
"We need safe and effective new treatments for heart failure, which is a cruel and debilitating condition that affects almost a million people in the UK. The evidence from this study—that a Viagra-like drug could reverse —should encourage further research in humans to determine if such drugs may help to save and improve lives."

Explore further
Viagra linked with reduced heart attack risk and improved heart attack survival

More information: Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibition improves contractile function and restores transverse tubule loss and catecholamine responsiveness in heart failure, Scientific Reports (2019).
Journal information: Scientific Reports

User comments

14 hours ago
'When the animals had heart failure—induced by pace makers—'
This is a terrible animal model and it doesn't work to further human studies. The drug is not very effective either - done that with pulmonary hypertension studies and Sildenafil.

13 hours ago
This is inaccurate information. This article refers to Tidalafil as being Viagra which is incorrect, Tidalafil brand is Cialis, Viagra generic is Sildanafil. This is significant as half life of medications and onset of action are different, though they are both PD5's, this article fails to distinguish which is the correct medication used in the study...the fact that there is no author even raises more suspicion on legitimacy of study...

8 hours ago
Grossly irresponsible reporting. The sheep model is irrelevant to humans in this instance. And nitric oxide's very real role in the augmentation of neurodegenerative diseases like alzheimer's don't make it an attractive target for heart failure treatment--unless, of course, you've got a grant source and a crooked journal editor willing to publish your tripe.

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