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Tag: Personalized Medicine

  • Glioblastoma Foundation Genomic Testing & Research Laboratory Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony on Sept. 3rd

    Glioblastoma Foundation Genomic Testing & Research Laboratory Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony on Sept. 3rd

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    Opening of testing lab ushers in a new era of targeted treatments to change glioblastoma diagnosis from terminal to treatable

    The Glioblastoma Foundation is hosting a welcome ceremony to inaugurate its innovative Genomic Testing & Research Laboratory, a first-of-its-kind lab in the U.S. The cutting-edge laboratory is set to revolutionize the fight against glioblastoma by offering patients access to advanced genomic testing and personalized drug identification. Attendees will have a first-hand opportunity to tour the state-of-the-art lab, meet the team behind this groundbreaking initiative, and learn about the future of tailored glioblastoma treatment. The Lab aims to provide crucial, low-cost testing services and faster turnaround to enhance outcomes and improve quality of life for glioblastoma patients.

    WHAT: To mark the opening of the Genomic Testing & Research Laboratory, the Glioblastoma Foundation is hosting informational speakers and a guided tour of the Lab and testing equipment.

    WHO: Oncologists, neurologists, researchers, patients and their families, the media, and anyone else interested in leading the fight against the most aggressive form of brain cancer are welcome.

    WHERE: The Chesterfield Building, 701 W. Main St., Suite 200, Durham, NC 27701

    WHEN: Tuesday, September 3, 2024; 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM

    Scheduled activities

    10:00 AM – 10:15 AM  Registration & Refreshments

    10:15 AM – 10:30 AM   Welcoming Remarks, Gita Kwatra, PharmD, MBA CEO, Glioblastoma Foundation, Durham, NC 

    10:35 AM  – 10:55 PM  Glioblastoma Diagnosis & Surgery, Christopher Jackson, MD, Assistant Professor, Dept of Neurosurgery Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 

    11:00 AM – 11:20 AM   Postsurgical Management of Glioblastoma Patients, Glenn Lesser, MD, Professor & Deputy Director, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Comprehensive Cancer Center Wake Forest University Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC

    11:25 AM – 11:45 AM   Mission of the Personalized Medicine Coalition (PMC), Christopher Wells, MPA, Senior Vice President for Public Affairs, PMC, Washington, DC  

    11:50 AM – 12:00 PM   Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony  

    12:00 PM – 1:00 PM     Catered Lunch 

    1:00 PM – 2:00 PM       Guided Lab Tours        

    DETAILS: RSVP By August 29, 2024, to Sydney Carmer at sydney@glioblastomafoundation.org

    For more information about the Glioblastoma Foundation, visit https://glioblastomafoundation.org/

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    About the Glioblastoma Foundation: Established in 2016, the Glioblastoma Foundation aims to transform glioblastoma treatment and care through research, advocacy, and support initiatives. By funding innovative research projects, raising awareness, and providing resources for patients and families, the Foundation strives to improve outcomes and quality of life for those affected by this aggressive form of brain cancer. Initiatives such as the Genomic Testing & Research Laboratory will allow the Foundation to transform glioblastoma from a terminal cancer to a treatable one within the next five years. For more information about the Glioblastoma Foundation, please visit https://www.glioblastomafoundation.org.

    Source: Glioblastoma Foundation, Inc.

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  • New study shows promising evidence for sickle cell gene therapy

    New study shows promising evidence for sickle cell gene therapy

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    New research published in the New England Journal of Medicine indicates that stem cell gene therapy may offer a promising, curative treatment for the painful, inherited blood disorder sickle cell disease (SCD).

    The findings from a new clinical trial, published August 31, add to the body of evidence supporting gene therapy as a treatment for sickle cell disease, which primarily impacts people of color.

    About 100,000 Americans have sickle cell disease, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The condition, which can cause a lifetime of pain, health complications and expenses, affects one in 365 Black babies born in the U.S. and one in 16,300 Hispanic babies.

    Until recently, the only treatment options have been intensive bone marrow transplants from siblings or matched donors. But other curative therapies are now on the horizon. The University of Chicago Medicine Comer Children’s Hospital was one of three sites to enroll patients in the clinical trial, which tested a stem cell gene therapy to treat sickle cell disease.

    As part of the trial, researchers used CRISPR-Cas9 to edit specific genes in stem cells — the building blocks of blood cells — taken from each patient. The edits increased the cells’ production of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), a protein that can replace unhealthy, sickled hemoglobin in the blood and protect against the complications of sickle cell disease. The patients then received their own edited cells as therapeutic infusions.

    The therapy was the second for this disease to use CRISPR-Cas9 technology and the first to target a new genetic area and use cryopreserved stem cells with the hope of increasing access to such a treatment. Other gene therapy studies for SCD have used lentiviruses — a type of virus often modified and used for gene editing which remain in the cell long-term. No foreign material remains in stem cells edited with CRISPR-Cas9.

    Trial participants who received the CRISPR-edited stem cells reported a decrease in vaso-occlusive events, a painful phenomenon that occurs when sickled red blood cells accumulate and cause a blockage.

    “The biggest take-home message is that there are now more potentially curative therapies for sickle cell disease than ever before that lie outside of using someone else’s stem cells, which can bring a host of other complications,” said James LaBelle, MD, PhD, director of the Pediatric Stem Cell and Cellular Therapy Program at UChicago Medicine and Comer Children’s Hospital and senior author of the study. “Especially in the last 10 years, we’ve learned about what to do and what not to do when treating these patients. There’s been a great deal of effort towards offering patients different types of transplants with decreased toxicities, and now gene therapy rounds out the set of available treatments, so every patient with sickle cell disease can get some sort of curative therapy if needed. At UChicago Medicine, we’ve built infrastructure to support new approaches to sickle cell disease treatment and to bring additional gene therapies for other diseases.”

    As the scientific community continues to refine and expand the applications of gene therapy, the potential for curative treatments for diseases like sickle cell disease is becoming more of a transformative reality. The journey is ongoing, with the need for long-term follow-up and further research, but this study provides an encouraging glimpse into a future of effective genetic interventions.

    In the larger context of therapeutic development, LaBelle stressed the importance of the study’s contribution to the growing body of evidence supporting the viability of gene therapy as a treatment for sickle cell disease. Two other gene therapies for the disease are awaiting FDA approval this year.

    “The data from this trial supports bringing on similar gene therapies for sickle cell disease and for other bone marrow-derived diseases. If we didn’t have this data, those wouldn’t move forward,” he said.

    The study, “CRISPR-Cas9 Editing of the HBG1/HBG2 Promoters to Treat Sickle Cell Disease,” was published in NEJM in August 2023. Co-authors include Radhika Peddinti, along with researchers from St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital in Milan, Italy. The authors also acknowledged research coordinator Christopher Omahen and Amittha Wickrema, director of UChicago’s cell processing facility.

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    University of Chicago Medical Center

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  • Los investigadores de Mayo Clinic preparan el terreno para el tratamiento individualizado de la obesidad, adaptando las intervenciones a las necesidades de cada persona

    Los investigadores de Mayo Clinic preparan el terreno para el tratamiento individualizado de la obesidad, adaptando las intervenciones a las necesidades de cada persona

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    Newswise — ROCHESTER, Minnesota — En un estudio piloto de 165 personas, los investigadores de Mayo Clinic analizaron la eficacia de dos enfoques distintos para la pérdida de peso: una intervención estándar en el estilo de vida y tratamiento individualizado. La intervención estándar en el estilo de vida comprendía una dieta reducida, ejercicio y terapia conductual. El enfoque individualizado se basó en los fenotipos e incluyó diferentes intervenciones según la causa subyacente predominante de la obesidad en la persona. Una dieta basada en fenotipos tiene en cuenta las características genéticas y fenotípicas de una persona para crear un plan de alimentación personalizado destinado a optimizar la salud y el bienestar.

    Los investigadores compararon si las intervenciones en la dieta y el estilo de vida adaptadas a los fenotipos de la obesidad funcionarían mejor que las intervenciones estándar en el estilo de vida en la pérdida de peso, los factores de riesgo cardiometabólicos y las variables físicas que contribuyen a la obesidad. La salud cardiometabólica describe la conexión entre el corazón y los vasos sanguíneos con la energía y los procesos químicos del cuerpo. Cubre una amplia gama de trastornos y factores de riesgo que contribuyen a la enfermedad cardíaca y al síndrome metabólico.

    En los adultos con obesidad, las intervenciones en el estilo de vida adaptadas al fenotipo llevaron a una mayor pérdida de peso que las intervenciones estándar en el estilo de vida de una dieta baja en calorías, ejercicio y terapia conductual.

    Los hallazgos después de 12 semanas incluyeron lo siguiente:

    • Los pacientes que usaron intervenciones en el estilo de vida adaptadas al fenotipo obtuvieron mejores resultados en el tratamiento de su obesidad que los que usaron intervenciones estándar en el estilo de vida.
    • El grupo de pacientes centrado en el fenotipo tuvo una pérdida de peso más considerable, una disminución de la circunferencia de la cintura, una disminución de los triglicéridos, una disminución de la ingesta calórica diaria y menos ansiedad.
    • Tuvieron un aumento importante en el porcentaje de masa corporal magra.
    • También tuvieron una menor disminución en la cantidad de calorías que el cuerpo requiere durante las condiciones de reposo.

    “Los resultados destacan la importancia de identificar la causa subyacente de la obesidad como una enfermedad compleja con muchos factores”, afirma el Dr. en Ciencias Andrés Acosta, investigador de la obesidad de Mayo Clinic y último autor del estudio.

    ¿Qué es una intervención adaptada al fenotipo?

    Los fenotipos de la obesidad se basan en la causa de la enfermedad y los componentes conductuales, e incluyen las siguientes tres áreas principales:

    • Alimentación homeostática: comer en respuesta a una necesidad de energía percibida por el cerebro.
    • Conducta alimentaria hedónica: consumir alimentos por placer, no por sensación física de hambre o necesidades de energía.
    • Gasto anormal de energía: la cantidad de calorías quemadas en 24 horas en comparación con una persona promedio.

    Cuatro fenotipos aplicables de estas áreas incluyen la saciedad anormal, medida por las calorías ingeridas hasta experimentar una saciedad desagradable; la duración anormal de la saciedad; la conducta alimentaria emocional; y el gasto anormal de energía en reposo.

    Los investigadores informaron que las personas que utilizaron las intervenciones en el estilo de vida adaptadas al fenotipo mostraron una mejora considerable en algunas áreas específicas, como la saciedad anormal y la alimentación emocional.

    “Los resultados de este estudio respaldan la necesidad de una clasificación aplicable basada en el fenotipo [de los pacientes en el tratamiento de la obesidad] en lugar de depender únicamente del número en la balanza, las medidas corporales o las enfermedades relacionadas con la obesidad [si tienen], como enfermedad cardíaca, presión arterial alta y ciertos tipos de cáncer”, afirma el Dr. Acosta.

    Oportunidades para futuras investigaciones

    El Dr. Acosta afirma que es necesario contar con más investigación para evaluar el efecto a largo plazo de un enfoque basado en el fenotipo. En particular, es posible que otros estudios deban analizar otras variables físicas y metabólicas para comprender a las personas sin un fenotipo identificado.

    El Dr. Acosta también indica que los efectos del tratamiento en los dos enfoques deben examinarse de forma independiente. Las personas con un componente de alimentación emocional recibieron una intervención más intensa, con 24 sesiones de modificación de la conducta, para abordar este rasgo subyacente que puede tener un rol principal en el desarrollo de la obesidad.

    “Con más investigación, se mejorará el enfoque personalizado propuesto a partir de los datos”, afirma el Dr. Acosta. “Seguiremos trabajando en el tratamiento individualizado de la obesidad dirigido a rasgos específicos para identificar el tratamiento correcto para el paciente adecuado”.

    Declaración de intereses:
    El Dr. Acosta es accionista de Gila Therapeutics y Phenomix Sciences; fue médico especialista de Rhythm Pharmaceuticals, General Mills, Amgen, Bausch Health y RareStone; tiene contratos con Vivus Inc, Satiogen Pharmaceutical y Rhythm pharmaceutical; y ha presentado una patente para biomarcadores de una dieta adaptada al fenotipo.

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    Información sobre Mayo Clinic
    Mayo Clinic es una organización sin fines de lucro, dedicada a innovar la práctica clínica, la educación y la investigación, así como a ofrecer pericia, compasión y respuestas a todos los que necesitan recobrar la salud. Visite la Red Informativa de Mayo Clinic para leer más noticias sobre Mayo Clinic.

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    Mayo Clinic

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  • يُمهد باحثو مايو كلينك الطريق لعلاج السُمنة بصورة فردية، وتخصيص التدخلات وفقًا لاحتياجات الشخص

    يُمهد باحثو مايو كلينك الطريق لعلاج السُمنة بصورة فردية، وتخصيص التدخلات وفقًا لاحتياجات الشخص

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    روتشستر، مينيسوتا — فيدراسة  تجريبية شملت 165 شخصًا، درس باحثو مايو كلينك فعّالية طريقتين مختلفتين لفقدان الوزن: تدخُّل قياسي في نمط الحياة وعلاج فردي. يضمن التدخل القياسي في نمط الحياة اتباع نظام غذائي منخفض السعرات وممارسة الرياضة والعلاج السلوكي. وقام النهج الفردي على الأنماط الظاهرية وشمل تدخلات مختلفة اعتمادًا على السبب الكامن السائد للسُمنة لدى الشخص. يأخذ النظام الغذائي القائم على الأنماط الظاهرية في الاعتبار الخصائص الوراثية والمظهرية للشخص لوضع خطة تناول طعام مخصصة تهدف إلى تحسين الصحة والعافية.

    قارن الباحثون ما إذا كانت التدخلات في النظام الغذائي ونمط الحياة المصممة خصيصًا للأنماط الظاهرية للسُمنة ستعمل بشكل أفضل من التدخلات القياسية في نمط الحياة فيما يتعلق بفقدان الوزن وعوامل خطر مشكلات القلب والأوعية الدموية والمتغيرات الجسدية التي تساهم في السُمنة. تصف صحة القلب والأوعية الدموية العلاقة بين القلب والأوعية الدموية وطاقة الجسم والعمليات الكيميائية. وتشمل مجموعة واسعة من الاضطرابات وعوامل الخطر التي تُساهم في مرض القلب و متلازمة التمثيل الغذائي.

    في البالغين المصابين بالسُمنة، أدت التدخلات في نمط الحياة المصممة خصيصًا حسب النمط الظاهري إلى فقدان الوزن أكثر من التدخلات القياسية في نمط الحياة لنظام غذائي منخفض السعرات الحرارية وممارسة الرياضة والعلاج السلوكي.

    تضمنت النتائج بعد 12 أسبوعًا ما يلي:

    • عالج المرضى الذين استخدموا التدخلات في نمط الحياة المصممة خصيصًا للنمط الظاهري السُمنة بشكل أفضل من أولئك الذين استخدموا التدخلات القياسية في نمط الحياة.
    • حظيت مجموعة المرضى التي ينصَّب تركيزها على النمط الظاهري بفقدان وزن أكبر، ومحيط خصر أقل، وانخفاض الدهون الثلاثية، وانخفاض السعرات الحرارية اليومية وقلق أقل.
    • كان لديهم زيادة كبيرة في النسبة المئوية لكتلة الجسم الخالية من الدهون.
    • كان لديهم أيضًا انخفاض أقل في عدد السعرات الحرارية التي يحتاجها الجسم أثناء فترات الراحة.

    “تؤكد النتائج على أهمية تحديد السبب الكامن وراء السُمنة كمرض معقد له العديد من العوامل”، كما يقول أندريه أكوستا، دكتور في الطب والأبحاث الطبية، باحث في السُمنة في مايو كلينك والمؤلف الأخير للدراسة.

    ما هو التدخل المصمم خصيصًا حسب النمط الظاهري؟

    تعتمد الأنماط الظاهرية للسُمنة على سبب المرض والمكونات السلوكية وتشمل ثلاثة مجالات رئيسية:

    • تناول الطعام في حالة التوازن – الأكل استجابة للحاجة المتصورة للطاقة من الدماغ.
    • سلوك تناول الطعام للحصول على لذّة – تناول الأطعمة من أجل المتعة، وليس من أجل الجوع الجسدي أو احتياجات الطاقة.
    • استهلاك غير طبيعي للطاقة – عدد السعرات الحرارية التي حُرِقَت في 24 ساعة مقارنة بشخص عادي.

    أربعة أنماط ظاهرية عملية في هذه المجالات تشمل الامتلاء غير الطبيعي، يُقاس بالسعرات الحرارية التي يتم تناولها لتجربة الامتلاء المزعج، مدة الامتلاء غير الطبيعية، سلوك تناول الطعام لدوافع عاطفية واستهلاك غير طبيعي للطاقة أثناء الراحة.

    ذكر الباحثون أن الأشخاص الذين استخدموا التدخلات في نمط الحياة المصممة خصيصًا حسب النمط الظاهري أظهروا تحسنًا ملحوظًا في بعض المجالات الاستهدافيّة، مثل الامتلاء غير الطبيعي وتناول الطعام لدوافع عاطفية.

    “تدعم نتائج هذه الدراسة الحاجة إلى تصنيف عملي قائم على النمط الظاهري [للمرضى الخاضعين لعلاج السُمنة] بدلاً من الاعتماد فقط على الرقم على المقياس أو قياسات الجسم أو [إذا كان لديهم] أمراض مرتبطة بالسُمنة، مثل أمراض القلب وارتفاع ضغط الدم وبعض أنواع السرطان”، كما يقول الدكتور أكوستا.

    فرص لإجراء المزيد من الأبحاث

    يقول الدكتور أكوستا إن هناك حاجة إلى إجراء المزيد من الأبحاث لتقييم تأثير النهج القائم على النمط الظاهري على المدى الطويل. على وجه الخصوص، قد توجد حاجة إلى أن يبحث المزيد من الدراسات في المتغيرات الفيزيائية ومتغيرات التمثيل الغذائي الأخرى لفهم الأشخاص الذين ليس لديهم نمط ظاهري محدد.

    ويُشير الدكتور أكوستا أيضًا إلى أنه يجب فحص تأثيرات العلاج على الطريقتين بشكل مستقل. تلقى الأشخاص الذين يعانون فيما يتعلق بتناول الطعام لدوافع عاطفية تدخلاً أكثر كثافة، من خلال 24 جلسة لتعديل السلوك، لمعالجة هذه السمة الأساسية التي قد يكون لها دور رئيسي في اكتساب السُمنة.

    يقول الدكتور أكوستا: “ستعمل المزيد من الأبحاث على تعزيز النهج المصمم خصيصًا المقترح من البيانات”. “سنواصل العمل على علاج السُمنة الفردي الموجه إلى سمات معينة لتحديد العلاج المناسب لكل مريض.”

    إعلان المصالح

    الدكتور أكوستا هو أحد المساهمين في Gila Therapeutics وPhenomix Sciences. وكان مستشارًا لشركات Rhythm Pharmaceuticals وGeneral Mills وAmgen وBausch Health وRareStone؛ لديه عقود مع Vivus Inc وSatiogen Pharmaceutical وRhythm Pharmaceutical؛ ولديه براءة اختراع مقدمة للمؤشرات الحيوية لنظام غذائي مصمم خصيصًا للنمط الظاهري.

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    نبذة عن مايو كلينك
    مايو كلينك هي مؤسسة غير ربحية تلتزم بالابتكار في الممارسات السريرية والتعليم والبحث وتوفير التعاطف والخبرة لكل مَن يحتاج إلى الاستشفاء والرد على استفساراته. لمعرفة المزيد من أخبار مايو كلينك، تفضَّل بزيارة شبكة مايو كلينك الإخبارية.

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    Mayo Clinic

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  • Dialysis exercise improves health, study says

    Dialysis exercise improves health, study says

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    Newswise — Patients who engage in light exercise while undergoing dialysis are physically fitter and are admitted to hospital less frequently than those who do not. These are the findings of a large-scale study conducted by a consortium led by the Technical University of Munich (TUM). The researchers believe that exercise programs should be offered to dialysis patients as standard.

    Around 558,000 people in the United States have such severely impaired kidney function that they require dialysis several times per week. In Germany, about 80,000 people regularly undergo dialysis. Many also suffer from additional health issues such as diabetes and heart disease. “The limitations imposed by these diseases, and the time required for dialysis, often mean that those affected engage in little physical exercise. We wanted to change that,” says Martin Halle, Professor of Preventive and Rehabilitative Sports Medicine at TUM, who headed up the study.

    Personalized exercise plans

    Approximately 1,000 patients at 21 dialysis centers in Germany took part in the study, which has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine – Evidence. “We mounted one of the world’s largest studies on physical activity in the context of specific diseases,” says Martin Halle. Data from health insurance providers was consulted to ensure that the participant pool was representative of dialysis patients in Germany in terms of aspects such as age, gender and overall health.

    Over a twelve-month period, half of the study participants completed accompanied exercise sessions at least once and ideally three times per week alongside their dialysis, while others were subject only to medical monitoring. These sessions included 30 minutes of endurance training with a bed-cycle ergometer and a further 30 minutes of exercises with weights, resistance bands and balls. The exercises were tailored to each patient’s ability.

    Improvements in standardized testing

    After a year, the health of the study’s active participants had improved significantly. This included completing more repetitions in a one-minute sit-to-stand test and walking further in six minutes than at the start of the study. In the control group, these values were even lower at the end of the study period than at the outset.

    “This type of standardized testing may admittedly not appear to be particularly reflective of everyday life,” says Martin Halle. “However, the results demonstrate tangible improvements in quality of life and autonomy. For example, the participants were able to stand up from a chair at home without assistance, which was not always the case beforehand.” There are other signs of the training program’s positive effects: participants who completed regular training sessions spent an average of two days in hospital during the study, compared to an average of five days for the control group.

    Low costs per training unit

    “To my mind, the results speak for themselves,” says Martin Halle. “We were able to improve the participants’ health and also reduce the costs to the healthcare system with relatively little outlay.” The researchers’ figures suggest that the costs for personalized training would be around €25 per session per person.

    The DiaTT (Dialysis Training Therapy) consortium submitted the final report to the Federal Joint Committee (Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss – G-BA), which had financed the study through its Innovation Fund (Innovationsfonds). This committee will ultimately determine whether this training is offered to all dialysis patients with statutory health insurance. “I hope our exercise program will become standard in statutory health insurance in Germany,” says Martin Halle. “The benefits will likely also apply to patients in other countries. However, the best approach for a broad implementation has to be found for each society.”

    The study participants will continue to be monitored in future to help researchers learn more about the effects of exercise over the long term. “Our study shows how important it is to adopt a holistic view of health, especially when it comes to elderly and infirm patients”, says Martin Halle. “While high-tech medicine is important, it can only achieve its full potential in combination with other fields, such as preventive medicine.”

    Publication:

    K. Anding-Rost, G. von Gersdorff, P. von Korn, G. Ihorst, A. Josef, M. Kaufmann, M. Huber, T. Bär, S. Zeißler, S. Höfling, C. Breuer, N. Gärtner, M.J. Haykowsky, S. Degenhardt, C. Wanner and M. Halle, for the DiaTT Study Group. “Exercise during Hemodialysis in Patients with Chronic Kidney Failure.” NEJM Evidence (2023). DOI: 10.1056/EVIDoa230005

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    Technical University of Munich

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  • New Preliminary Findings on Potential Response Indicator of Rakuten Medical’s Alluminox Treatment from Phase 2 Window of Opportunity Study at SNMMI 2023

    New Preliminary Findings on Potential Response Indicator of Rakuten Medical’s Alluminox Treatment from Phase 2 Window of Opportunity Study at SNMMI 2023

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    18F-FDG PET/CT imaging 1 day after Alluminox treatment with ASP-1929 may serve as a potential indicator of treatment response

    The oral presentation was given by Dr. Lindenberg of NCI, NIH, which is collaborating with Rakuten Medical to conduct ASP-1929-103, the Company’s very first study for operable cancer

     

    Newswise — SAN DIEGOJune 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — Rakuten Medical, Inc., a global biotechnology company developing and commercializing precision, cell targeting therapies based on its proprietary Alluminox™ platform, today announced that new interim evaluation data from the ASP-1929-103 study has been presented at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) 2023 Annual Meeting held from June 24 to 27.  ASP-1929-103 is a Phase 2, open-label, single-arm, window of opportunity study* of Alluminox treatment (photoimmunotherapy: PIT) using an antibody-dye conjugate ASP-1929 with fluorescence imaging (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05182866) in patients with operable primary or recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) or cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cuSCC).  

    The oral presentation was given by Liza Lindenberg, M.D., of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), which has a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement to conduct ASP-1929-103 study. ASP-1929-103 is the very first clinical trial of Alluminox treatment in operable cancer. As part of this trial, early time point (1 day) 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging was investigated as a potential response indicator of Alluminox treatment.

    The preliminary, descriptive imaging analysis based on interim evaluation of 6 patients in ASP-1929-103 study presented during the meeting showed that 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging demonstrates a therapeutic response 1 day after Alluminox treatment using ASP-1929.  PET/CT is an imaging modality for combined acquisition of positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) pictures. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) is the radiotracer used for this PET study.  Like glucose (sugar), 18F-FDG  is taken up by cells, particularly rapidly dividing cells such as cancer cells. Following uptake, 18F-FDG accumulates in the cytoplasm rather than undergoing further metabolism which results in signal amplification from labeled cells.

    Key findings presented at SNMMI 2023
    “Early 18F-FDG Response after Near-Infrared Photoimmunotherapy for Head and Neck and Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma” (Abstract: P50) presented by Liza Lindenberg, M.D., Molecular Imaging Branch, NCI, NIH

    –  18F FDG PET/CT demonstrates a therapeutic response 1 day after a single ASP-1929 PIT treatment
    –  Delayed 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging may decrease confounding inflammatory uptake on scans
    –  Pathologic tumor response may add complementary information to 18F-FDG PET/CT in PIT

    Disclaimer: These early findings may change upon trial completion and final data analysis.

    ASP-1929-103 study overview
    ASP-1929-103 is a Phase 2, open-label, single-arm, window of opportunity study* of Alluminox treatment (PIT) using an anti-EGFR antibody-dye conjugate, ASP-1929 with fluorescence imaging in patients with operable primary or recurrent HNSCC or cuSCC. The study, sponsored by Rakuten Medical in collaboration with NCI and Shimadzu Corporation (Shimadzu), will enroll 22 patients in the US to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a single Alluminox treatment using ASP-1929 administered prior to standard of care surgical tumor resection.  The feasibility of the Shimadzu fluorescence imaging system for real-time monitoring and recording of the fluorescence of the IRDye® 700DX portion of ASP-1929 will also be assessed.

    *  Window of opportunity study takes place in the period between a cancer diagnosis and the subsequent initiation of standard treatment, during which, the patient receives a non-standard drug or treatment of interest over a short period of time 1.2.
    1.  Aroldi F, Lord SR. Window of opportunity clinical trial designs to study cancer metabolism. Br J Cancer. 2020;122(1):45-51. doi:10.1038/s41416-019-0621-4.
    2.  Schmitz S, Duhoux F, Machiels JP. Window of opportunity studies: Do they fulfil our expectations? Cancer Treat Rev. 2016 Feb;43:50-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2015.12.005. Epub 2015 Dec 31. PMID: 26827692.

    About Rakuten Medical, Inc.
    Rakuten Medical, Inc. is a global biotechnology company developing and commercializing precision, cell targeting therapies based on its proprietary Alluminox™ platform, which, in pre-clinical studies, has been shown to induce rapid and selective cell killing and tumor necrosis. Alluminox therapies have not yet been approved outside of Japan. Rakuten Medical is committed to its mission to conquer cancer by delivering our innovative treatments as quickly as possible to as many patients as possible all over the world. The company has offices in 6 countries, including the United States, where it is headquartered, Japan, the Netherlands, Taiwan, Switzerland and India. For more information, visit www.rakuten-med.com.

    About Alluminox™ platform 
    The Alluminox™ platform is an investigational technology platform based on a cancer therapy called photoimmunotherapy, which was developed by Dr. Hisataka Kobayashi and team from the National Cancer Institute in the United States. Rakuten Medical is developing the Alluminox platform as a technology consisting of a drug, device, and other related components. The drug component of the platform consists of a targeting moiety conjugated with one or more dyes leading to selective cell surface binding. The device component consists of a light source that locally illuminates the targeted cells with light to transiently activate the drug. Pre-clinical data have shown that this activation elicits rapid and selective necrosis of targeted cells through a biophysical process that compromises the membrane integrity of the targeted cells. Therapies developed on the Alluminox platform may also result in local and systemic innate and adaptive immune activation due to immunogenic cell death of the targeted cancer cells and/or the removal of targeted immunosuppressive cells within the tumor microenvironment. Outside of Japan, Alluminox therapies have not yet been approved by any regulatory authority.

    About ASP-1929
    Rakuten Medical’s first pipeline drug developed on its Alluminox™ platform is ASP-1929, an antibody-dye conjugate comprised of the antibody cetuximab and IRDye® 700DX, a light activatable dye. ASP-1929 binds to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), a cancer antigen expressed in multiple types of solid tumors, including head and neck, breast, lung, colorectal, prostate and pancreatic cancers. After binding to cancer cells, ASP-1929 is locally activated by   illumination with red light (690 nm), emitted by a laser device system to produce a photochemical reaction. This reaction is believed to cause damage to the membrane of cancer cells, leading to selective necrosis of cancer cells. ASP-1929 received Fast Track designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in January 2018, and is currently under investigation in a global Phase 3 clinical trial for recurrent head and neck cancer. In Japan, ASP-1929 received marketing approval from the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare for unresectable locally advanced or recurrent head and neck cancer in September 2020, under the Sakigake Designation System and the Conditional Early Approval System. Outside of Japan, ASP-1929 has not yet been approved by any regulatory authority.

    Forward Looking Statements 
    This press release contains forward looking statements that correspond to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements include various risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that may cause Rakuten Medical’s business plans and results to differ from the anticipated results and expectations expressed in these statements. These “forward looking statements” contain information about the status and development of our products, including the Alluminox™ platform, as well as other regulatory and marketing authorization efforts, the potential benefits, efficacy, and safety of therapies created using the Alluminox platform, and the status of regulatory filings. The approval and commercial success of the product may not be achieved. Forward looking statements relate to the potential benefits, efficacy, and safety of our therapies, and the status of regulatory filings. Such statements may include words such as “expect,” “believe,” “hope,” “estimate,” “looks as though,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “may,” “suggest,” “plan,” “strategy,” “will,” and “do”, and are based on our current beliefs. In addition, this press release uses terms such as “important,” “notable,” and “abnormal” to express opinions about clinical trial data. Ongoing clinical trial studies include various risks and uncertainties, in particular, problems that arise during the manufacturing stage of our therapies, the occurrence of adverse safety events, situations in failure to demonstrate therapeutic benefits, and other various risks and uncertainties, both reasonable and unreasonable. For this reason, actual results, including regulatory approvals and uncertainties in the commercialization process of our therapies, may differ from published information. Except to the extent required by applicable law, we undertake no obligation to publicly update this or any other forward-looking statement, whether because of new information, future developments or events, changes in assumptions, changes in the factors affecting forward-looking statements. If one or more forward-looking statement(s) is updated, no inference should be drawn that additional updates will be made to those or other forward-looking statements.

     

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  • Global initiative addresses theranostics education challenges

    Global initiative addresses theranostics education challenges

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    Newswise — Reston, VA—Leaders from 12 nuclear medicine organizations around the world have issued a white paper about the challenges and opportunities in theranostics education. Published in the June issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, the report outlines the current theranostic educational and accreditation offerings across the globe. It also provides guidelines to assist countries in developing educational and training curriculums that enable physicians to confidently and safely perform nuclear theranostics procedures.

    The concept of theranostics refers to the integration of therapeutics and diagnostics into a single management approach. Through their high sensitivity and specificity, theranostic radiopharmaceuticals have started to play a major role in precision medicine by significantly improving patient disease management, particularly in oncology.

    “As exciting as it sounds, the clinical implementation of theranostics radiopharmaceuticals in nuclear medicine faces significant challenges. The practice of a fully integrated diagnostic and therapeutic nuclear medicine specialty requires an in-depth knowledge in many different fields of medicine, radiochemistry and radiopharmacy, dosimetry and radiopharmacology, complex imaging equipment along with an in depth understanding of patient’s diseases and management, health-care systems and health-care economics,” said the authors. “This type of complex knowledge, experience, and expertise represents both unique opportunities and significant challenges for medical school, imaging, and nuclear medicine centers across the globe.”

    In the report, members of the Nuclear Medicine Global Initiative summarize the educational and training initiatives on theranostics available worldwide between 2018 and 2022. Participating organizations include the Australian and New Zealand Society of Nuclear Medicine, Asia Oceania Federation of Nuclear Medicine and Biology, Arab Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, British Nuclear Medicine Society, Canadian Association of Nuclear Medicine, European Association of Nuclear Medicine, International Atomic Energy Agency, Japanese Society of Nuclear Medicine, Korean Society of Nuclear Medicine, South African Society of Nuclear Medicine, Society of Nuclear Medicine–India, and Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.

    Given the diversity in the backgrounds of providers and in order to ensure appropriate and safe use of nuclear theranostics, a curriculum template with minimum requirements is desirable to provide proper education, training, and expertise for the use of theranostics. The report outlines a universal framework for postgraduate education and training of nuclear medicine physicians for proficiency in nuclear theranostics. It also includes a framework for educating current nuclear medicine physicians about theranostics.

    “Like the other fields in medicine, the science and practice of theranostics radiopharmaceuticals is very rapidly evolving. Continuing medical education will be critical to maintain sufficient and up-to-date knowledge and expertise to perform diagnostic and therapeutic nuclear medicine procedures,” the group noted.

    This article was made available online in May 2023.

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  • Cancer: In Italy every year over 8000 patients candidate for liquid biopsy

    Cancer: In Italy every year over 8000 patients candidate for liquid biopsy

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    Newswise — Rome, 21 February 2023 – Almost 8,000 lung cancer patients are thought to qualify for a liquid biopsy each year in Italy in order to determine the best course of treatment. But in the not-too-distant future, the number of cancer patients for whom a simple blood test will choose the optimum course of treatment will grow dramatically. Blood sample enables continuous, real-time monitoring of the neoplasm’s development, much like in a video. An image of the tumour at the time of diagnosis can only be captured by a conventional biopsy, which is performed on tumour tissue. Also, even if it doesn’t currently reflect clinical practise, the difficulty is in using a blood test to make an early cancer diagnosis. The study, which is presented in the book “Liquid Biopsy: New Challenges in the Age of Immunotherapy and Precision Oncology,” by Antonio Russo, Ettore Capoluongo, Antonio Galvano, and Antonio Giordano, Ed. Elsevier, brings up truly innovative views on the use of liquid biopsy, which was presented today at a press conference in the Chamber of Deputies and has signatures from the top international experts.

    “Twenty years ago, in 2003, there were fewer than 50 publications in oncology that used the term “liquid biopsy,” but today there are more than 10,000, making it a real “hot topic,” states to Antonio Russo, COMU President, Full Professor of Medical Oncology at DICHIRONS – University of Palermo, and Treasurer of AIOM (Italian Association of Medical Oncology). The “Liquid Biopsy” manual serves as evidence of both the prominence of Sicily, specifically the University of Palermo, and the brilliance attained in this subject by Italian scholars across the globe.

    “Up to this point,“ continues Professor Russo, “the applications of liquid biopsy that have been shown effective in clinical practise involve advanced stage non-small cell lung cancer, for the assessment of the EGFR gene mutational status. In two clinical contexts, the method is suggested in these instances as a possible alternative for tumour tissue examination. 

    First of all, in patients who have just received a diagnosis and prior to beginning any kind of treatment, when the quantity or quality of tissue available is insufficient to perform the anticipated molecular analyses, when the molecular analysis of tissue has been found to be insufficient, or when it is impossible to obtain biopsy tissue due to the patient’s poor clinical conditions. It should be kept in mind that, even when used for histological diagnosis, the tissue sample is not acceptable for molecular characterization in roughly 30% of instances. In the second scenario, the liquid biopsy provides a very important contribution during the monitoring of patients with EGFR gene mutation, in progression after first-line treatment with targeted therapies, i.e. with first and second generation EGFR inhibitors. In these cases, blood sampling is very useful for searching for a specific resistance mutation and directing the change of cure, i.e. treatment with the third generation EGFR inhibitor. The latter, in light of the robust overall survival data, has now become a solid option on the front line and, given the high inhibitory activity, has made the use of liquid biopsy for the search for the resistance mutation secondary”.

    “The liquid biopsy has undoubted advantages over the traditional approach consisting of the analysis of tumor tissue – says Antonio Giordano, Director of the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine of Temple University in Philadelphia (USA) and Professor of Anatomy and Pathological Histology at the University of Sien, and Founder and President of the Sbarro Health Research Organization (SHRO). “It is minimally invasive, low-cost, has very fast reporting times and is practically free of complications, because it can be performed with a simple blood sample. Furthermore, it is characterized by a high level of acceptance by patients and can be repeated without problems, by performing serial sampling to highlight the onset of resistance to therapy in real time and, if necessary, modify the treatment.”

    “The liquid biopsy has undeniable advantages over the conventional method that involves the study of tumour tissue,” says Antonio Giordano, Director of the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine of Temple University in Philadelphia (USA) and Professor of Anatomy and Pathological Histology at the University of Siena, “It is less invasive, inexpensive, has extremely quick turnaround times, and is essentially complication-free because it can be carried out with a simple blood sample. Furthermore, serial sampling is used to highlight the development of therapy resistance in real time and, if necessary, change the treatment. It is characterised by a high level of patient acceptability and can be repeated without issues.

    Instead, very few patients opt to have a second tissue evaluation, in part because the general clinical circumstances often exclude it. Moreover, the tissue biopsy sample, particularly when it is obtained through fine-needle aspiration, may not necessarily be an accurate representation of the entire tumour. This is not the case with the liquid biopsy, which solves the issue of the heterogeneity of the tumour tissues by analysing the tumour DNA discharged into the circulation.”

    The predominant biopsy method currently utilised in clinical practise today is the examination of circulating tumour DNA, or ctDNA (circulating tumour DNA), which is a fraction of circulating free DNA (cell free DNA, or cfDNA), isolated from peripheral blood (particularly from plasma).

    “The chance of success is dependent on the quantity of ctDNA in the peripheral blood, which may impact the test’s sensitivity,” underlines Ettore Capoluongo, Full Professor of Clinical Biochemistry and Clinical Molecular Biology and SOC Director of Clinical Pathology and Genomics, Cannizzaro Hospital of Catania, “One drawback is that, depending on the volume and locations of the disease, the amount of ctDNA in the context of cfDNA is frequently limited, and this might result in “false negative” results on the liquid biopsy sample. The size and stage of the tumour are really connected to the concentration of ctDNA in plasma, with advanced-stage neoplasms releasing more ctDNA than early-stage ones. Exosomes, platelets, circulating tumour cells, circulating tumour RNA and microRNA, as well as other biological fluids like urine, saliva, ascitic fluid, and pleural could all be used in clinical practise in the future to provide additional information beyond that provided by the analysis of ctDNA isolated from plasma.” It is crucial that the measurement of these molecular tumour markers be as consistent as possible; for this reason, using liquid biopsy as part of the diagnostic process is the perfect scenario for clinic and laboratory collaboration.

    “Due to its capability to swiftly translate laboratory discoveries into clinical applications, the liquid biopsy must only be examined in laboratories that pass quality controls and serves as a key illustration of translational medicine,” explains Marcello Ciaccio, Full Professor of Clinical Biochemistry , Dean of the School of Medicine and Surgery of the University of Palermo, Past President and President-elect of SIBioC (Italian Society of Clinical Biochemistry and Clinical Molecular Biology), “which enables the simultaneous identification of all forms of genetic changes in several genes during a single liquid biopsy study. NGS is more cost-effective than a single gene method, according to cost analyses. This advantage becomes even clearer once a threshold of patients has been evaluated in order to fully realise the potential of NGS technologies, which enable the simultaneous profiling of several individuals while optimising costs and turnaround times. The subsequent step will be to make NGS approaches accessible and convenient to utilise. Building a real network is important to accomplish this goal.”

    “The liquid biopsy definitively establishes the importance of multidisciplinarity,” says Saverio Cinieri, National President of AIOM (Italian Association of Medical Oncology), “The Molecular Tumor Boards, interdisciplinary committees where various talents are combined to govern the clinical and decision-making processes of appropriateness, are responsible for selecting the material to be exposed to molecular analysis. Yet it’s important to make a distinction between regular clinical practise and research. Although if research efforts are in the right direction, it is not yet possible to diagnose cancer from a blood sample. Nowadays, the liquid biopsy plays a significant role as a predictor of response to therapy in lung cancer. An investigation based on a novel strategy, namely the methylation signatures of circulating free DNA, was presented at the most recent Congress of the European Society of Oncology. There were more than 6,000 participants who were over 50, appeared healthy, and had never been given a cancer diagnosis. In 1.4% of the participants, the test revealed changes in the methylation profile, which are common to more than 50 distinct forms of neoplasms. Among these individuals, the oncological diagnosis was confirmed in around 40% of the instances. Yet, in more than 60% of cases, no oncological illness diagnosis was made after the positive test results.”

    “The sensitivity of the liquid biopsy, in a context of early diagnosis, is therefore still conditioned by a high rate of false positives, the causes of which are being studied,” continues the AIOM President, “The emerging clinical applications of this procedure mainly concern colorectal, breast and advanced melanoma cancers. Indeed, there is solid and reproducible information regarding the characterization of RAS and BRAF genes for colorectal, PIK3CA for breast, BRAF and NRAS in melanoma. It is likely that plasma analysis for this type of alteration will soon be recommended in clinical practice”.

    “In order to personalise treatment, a very active area of study is the use of liquid biopsy in immunotherapy. This field has the potential to produce “dynamic” and reproducible biomarkers in the near future,” highlights Antonio Galvano, Associate Professor of Medical Oncology at the University of Palermo, “Only a fraction of patients today show a significant response or long-term benefit with immunotherapy drugs. Individual biological and immune factors affect the heterogeneity in the response. For this reason, the identification of predictive biomarkers of response or resistance to treatment, for example, with immune checkpoint inhibitors, assumes an important role. Numerous studies are underway with the aim of evaluating the potential use of cfDNA, ctDNA and soluble forms of immune checkpoints as predictive biomarkers of response. In recent years, our research group has published studies conducted mainly on lung, pancreatic and melanoma tumors in important international scientific journals. It is crucial to keep moving in this direction. “.

    “One of the roles of Patients’ Associations is to support the scientific community with regard to research progress, adopting a rigorous, but informative and easy to understand method,” continues Adriana Bonifacino, President of the IncontraDonna Foundation, “It is essential that patients are increasingly involved in trials, including those on liquid biopsy. The quality of life is becoming a central element in the evaluation of the innovativeness of treatments and the liquid biopsy fits into this context. Being able to monitor the evolution of the tumor in real time with a simple blood sample also represents an element of reassurance from a psychological point of view for the patient, as well as avoiding the invasiveness of traditional procedures on tumor tissue”.

    “The “Liquid Biopsy” book is distinguished by the special focus on educational aspects and by the inclusion of the so-called “expert comments,” authored by internationally known experts,”  concludes Professor Russo, “Our group of researchers from the University of Palermo has been conducting experiments on liquid biopsy since the early 2000s and is at the forefront in this sector, today with further studies on exosomes and on the determination of circulating immunocheckpoints. The exciting data from studies may also lead to changes in the parameters used to classify cancer stages. To the TNM system, where T describes the extent of the disease, N the status of the lymph nodes and M the possible presence of metastases, the B, such as blood, should be added, which provides information on circulating tumor DNA.”

     

     

    About the Sbarro Health Research Organization

    The Sbarro Health Research Organization (SHRO) is non-profit charity committed to funding excellence in basic genetic research to cure and diagnose cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and other chronic illnesses and to foster the training of young doctors in a spirit of professionalism and humanism. To learn more about the SHRO please visit www.shro.org

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  • باحثو مايو كلينك يصممون لقاحات علاجية مخصصة لمكافحة السرطان

    باحثو مايو كلينك يصممون لقاحات علاجية مخصصة لمكافحة السرطان

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    جاكسونفيل، فلوريدا لطالما حمت اللقاحات الناس من الأمراض الفتاكة لأجيال. فهل يمكنها أيضًا المساعدة في محاربة السرطان؟  يعمل باحثو مايو كلينك على تطوير لقاحات علاجية مخصصة للسرطان يمكنها استهداف خصائص الورم المميزة لكل شخص. إن هذا النهج الجديد، المبني على التقدم في الأبحاث الجينومية وتحليلات البيانات، يحمل إمكانات تحويلية لتعزيز قوة الجهاز المناعي للتعرف على الخلايا السرطانية ومهاجمتها.  

    يقول كيث كنوتسون، الحاصل على الدكتوراه، والقائد المشارك لبرنامج علم المناعة والعلاج المناعي في مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان في فلوريدا، والمؤسس المشارك لبرنامج اللقاح المخصص لمستضدات الورم في مايو كلينك: “بالنسبة لبعض مرضى السرطان، قد يحفز اللقاح أورامهم على الانكماش ويوفر مناعة طويلة الأمد ومقاومة للأورام”. تركز أبحاث الدكتور كنوتسون على منع تطور السرطان.  

    يقول الدكتور كنوتسون إن اللقاحات الفردية للسرطان مصممة بشكل مشابه للقاحات الإنفلونزا أو فيروس كورونا المستجد (كوفيد-19)، فالمكون الرئيسي هو بروتين محدد مرتبط بمرض معين.  

    ويوضح الدكتور كنوتسون: “عندما يتعلم الجهاز المناعي التعرف على هذا البروتين، يمكن أن يحفز إنتاج الخلايا التائية القاتلة لمكافحته”.  

    في استراتيجية لقاح السرطان العلاجية في مايو كلينك، يتكون العنصر الرئيسي من أجزاء من طفرات بروتين الورم الفريدة لدى الشخص، والمعروفة باسم مستضدات الورم. يتم صنع شظايا البروتين المجهرية من الطفرات الجينية في خلايا الروم. توجد مستضدات الورم على سطح الخلايا السرطانية فقط، وليس على الخلايا السليمة.  

    نظرًا لأن مستضدات الورم غريبة على الجسم، يمكن لجهاز المناعة التعرف عليها باعتبارها من الغزاة المسببين للأمراض. عندما يقترن اللقاح بالعلاج المناعي، يمكن أن يساعد في توليد استجابة دفاعية قوية.  

    يقول الدكتور كنوتسون: “الفكرة هي أنه إذا تمكنا من تحديد ما بين 20 إلى 30 بروتينًا متحورًا من سرطان الشخص، فيمكننا صياغة تلك البروتينات في لقاح. ثم يمكننا تحصين الناس بشكل متكرر أثناء خضوعهم للعلاج المناعي بحصار نقاط التفتيش المناعية”.  

    في النماذج الحيوانية ما قبل السريرية، قدم الدكتور كنوتسون وفريقه اللقاح ومجموعة العلاج المناعي لعلاج سرطان الثدي. ووجدوا أن العلاج المزدوج يطيل البقاء على قيد الحياة دون التسبب في سمية كبيرة.  

    ويقول: “نأمل أن نكون قادرين على تحقيق تلك النتائج في البشر”.  

    تبدأ عملية تطوير اللقاح في مركز مايو كلينك للطب الفردي من خلال عمل تسلسل جيني لخلايا الورم لدى المريض وتحليل الحمض النووي وسلاسل الأحماض الأمينية اللبنات الأساسية للبروتينات للعثور على مستضدات الورم المرشحة المحتملة. 

    تقوم يان أسمان، الحاصلة على دكتوراه، وهي متخصصة في المعلومات الحيوية في مركز الطب الفردي في مايو كلينك بفلوريدا، وأحد مؤسسي برنامج اللقاح المخصص لمستضدات الورم في مايو كلينك، على الاختيار الدقيق للمضادات الجديدة – بالإشراف على الاختيار الدقيق لمستضدات الورم. حيث تستخدم طرق تسلسل واسعة النطاق وخوارزميات حسابية لاختيار ما يصل إلى 36 من مستضدات الورم من بين المئات إلى الآلاف والتي قد تولد أقوى استجابة مناعية.  

    توضح الدكتورة أسمان: “من المعروف أن بعض الأورام تتسم بتغيرات كبيرة، مثل: إعادة ترتيب البنية الجينومية، حيث تنفصل قطعة الحمض النووي بأكملها وتندمج معًا مرة أخرى. هذه التغييرات الكبيرة تؤدي في الواقع إلى المزيد من مستضدات الورم الأجنبية وبالتالي إلى المزيد من المناعة”.   

    بعد ذلك، يقوم فريق الدكتور أسمان بالتحقق يدويًا من كل طفرة ودقة مستضدات الورم المرشحة الناشئة عن الطفرات.   

    تقول الدكتورة أسمان: “نحن نبحث عددًا هائلًا من التغييرات في أنسجة الورم. إنها عملية بيولوجية معقدة للغاية لتوليد مستضدات الورم، ولكننا نعمل على أتمتتها باستخدام الخوارزميات الحسابية، بما في ذلك نماذج التعلم الآلي”.   

    بمجرد اختيار مستضدات الورم، يقوم الدكتور كنوتسون بصياغة مكونات اللقاح لتوفير أقوى الاستجابات المناعية الممكنة لتدمير الورم بالكامل.   

    يقول الدكتور كنوتسون: “ثم نقوم بعد ذلك باختيار مستضدات الورم بعناية والتي يمكن تصنيعها بسرعة لتصل إلى درجة نقاء عالية من أجل إعطائها للمريض بشكل آمن وفي الوقت المناسب”. 

    يأمل الدكتور كنوتسون أن يتم إدخال هذه الاستراتيجية في التجارب السريرية قريبًا لعلاج أنواع مختلفة من السرطانات، وكذلك للوقاية من الأمراض.  

    ### 

    نبذة عن مايو كلينك 

    مايو كلينك هي مؤسسة غير ربحية تلتزم بالابتكار في الممارسات السريرية والتعليم والبحث وتوفير التعاطف والخبرة لكل مَن يحتاج إلى الاستشفاء والرد على استفساراته. لمعرفة المزيد من أخبار مايو كلينك، تفضَّل بزيارة شبكة مايو كلينك الإخبارية 

     

    جهة الاتصال الإعلامية: 

    شارون ثيمير، مايو كلينك للتواصل، [email protected] 

     

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    Mayo Clinic

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  • Using machine learning to predict brain tumor progression

    Using machine learning to predict brain tumor progression

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    Newswise — Researchers at the University of Waterloo have created a computational model to predict the growth of deadly brain tumours more accurately. 

    Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a brain cancer with an average survival rate of only one year. It is difficult to treat due to its extremely dense core, rapid growth, and location in the brain. Estimating these tumours’ diffusivity and proliferation rate is useful for clinicians, but that information is hard to predict for an individual patient quickly and accurately.

    Researchers at the University of Waterloo and the University of Toronto have partnered with St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto to analyze MRI data from multiple GBM sufferers. They’re using machine learning to fully analyze a patient’s tumour, to better predict cancer progression.

    Researchers analyzed two sets of MRIs from each of five anonymous patients suffering from GBM. The patients underwent extensive MRIs, waited several months, and then received a second set of MRIs. Because these patients, for undisclosed reasons, chose not to receive any treatment or intervention during this time, their MRIs provided the scientists with a unique opportunity to understand how GBM grows when left unchecked. 

    The researchers used a deep learning model to turn the MRI data into patient-specific parameter estimates that inform a predictive model for GBM growth. This technique was applied to patients’ and synthetic tumours, for which the true characteristics were known, enabling them to validate the model.

    “We would have loved to do this analysis on a huge data set,” said Cameron Meaney, a PhD candidate in Applied Mathematics and the study’s lead researcher. “Based on the nature of the illness, however, that’s very challenging because there isn’t a long life expectancy, and people tend to start treatment. That’s why the opportunity to compare five untreated tumours was so rare – and valuable.”

    Now that the scientists have a good model of how GBM grows untreated, their next step is to expand the model to include the effect of treatment on the tumours. Then the data set would increase from a handful of MRIs to thousands.

    Meaney emphasizes that access to MRI data – and partnership between mathematicians and clinicians – can have huge impacts on patients going forward.

    “The integration of quantitative analysis into healthcare is the future,” Meaney said.

    The study, Deep Learning Characterization of Brain Tumours With Diffusion Weighted Imaging, co-authored by Meaney, Sunit Das, Errol Colak, and Mohammad Kohandel, appears in the Journal of Theoretical Biology.

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    University of Waterloo

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  • Consider risks and alternatives before deciding on LASIK surgery, UT Southwestern ophthalmologists say

    Consider risks and alternatives before deciding on LASIK surgery, UT Southwestern ophthalmologists say

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    Newswise — DALLAS – Jan. 13, 2023 – Patients considering LASIK vision correction surgery should weigh the risks as well as benefits and see a doctor who can assess whether they are a good candidate for the procedure, according to an ophthalmologist at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

    At UT Southwestern, we use a patient-specific approach to LASIK with technology that calculates the precise pattern of a patient’s eye, like a fingerprint, and adapts the treatment to those measurements. This level of customization is one of the keys to reducing the potential for side effects,” said William Waldrop, M.D., Assistant Professor in UT Southwestern’s Department of Ophthalmology.

    New guidelines proposed by the Food and Drug Administration would require physicians to provide better communication about the risks associated with LASIK, which can include dry eyes; visual phenomena such as glare or halos; decreased vision in low-light settings; eye pain; and temporary distortions in vision. Many of these side effects dissipate after three to six months. 

    Each year, an estimated 700,000 patients in the U.S. undergo LASIK to reduce their dependency on glasses or contact lenses. The procedure, which has been available in the U.S. since 1998, is fast, painless, and in most cases, provides improved vision for 10 years or longer.

    “From the beginning, LASIK outcomes have been outstanding, and we’ve continually improved the procedure to allow for a higher likelihood of better vision and higher quality vision,” Dr. Waldrop said. “Ultimately, though, the answer may be ‘no’ to LASIK, and sometimes that is the safest choice. LASIK isn’t always the best or only option for vision correction.”

    Dr. Waldrop said patients considering LASIK should focus first on choosing the right surgeon. UTSW ophthalmologists are skilled in a variety of vision correction surgeries, including advanced surface ablation and refractive lens exchange.

    “You want a surgeon who will take the time to do a thorough examination and pre-surgical workup to determine if it’s appropriate for your unique characteristics,” he said. “Has wearing contacts changed the surface of your eye? How thick is your cornea? What is the likelihood of your cornea taking on an irregular shape after surgery? Those are all factors that can impact the success of your surgery.

    “If you aren’t a suitable candidate for LASIK, you want your surgeon to be upfront with you and offer an alternative,” Dr. Waldrop said.

    About UT Southwestern Medical Center

    UT Southwestern, one of the nation’s premier academic medical centers, integrates pioneering biomedical research with exceptional clinical care and education. The institution’s faculty has received six Nobel Prizes, and includes 24 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 18 members of the National Academy of Medicine, and 14 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators. The full-time faculty of more than 2,900 is responsible for groundbreaking medical advances and is committed to translating science-driven research quickly to new clinical treatments. UT Southwestern physicians provide care in more than 80 specialties to more than 100,000 hospitalized patients, more than 360,000 emergency room cases, and oversee nearly 4 million outpatient visits a year.

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    UT Southwestern Medical Center

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  • Investigators Develop Model to Predict Overall Survival in Adults Diagnosed with Advanced Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma

    Investigators Develop Model to Predict Overall Survival in Adults Diagnosed with Advanced Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma

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    ********** UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL Saturday, December 10 at 5:10 PM EST (4:10 PM CST) ***********

    Newswise — New Brunswick, NJ and Boston, MA, December 10, 2022 – Investigators from Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, the state’s only NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center and leading cancer program along with Tufts Medical Center in Boston, developed  and validated the Advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma International Prognostication Index (A-HIPI). A-HIPI is a state-of-the-art clinical decision model to predict five-year progression-free and overall survival in adults with advanced-stage classic Hodgkin lymphoma using comprehensive individual patient data from international clinical trials and large prospective cancer registries. To enhance the use of A-HIPI, the team developed an online calculator to assist clinicians and patients in estimating individualized prognosis. This work was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology (DOI: https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.22.02473) simultaneously with an oral abstract presentation at the 2022 American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition.

    For the last 25 years, the International Prognostic Score (IPS) has been the most commonly used risk stratification tool for patients with advanced Hodgkin lymphoma, however, more modern tools to help inform individualized treatment and promote personalized cancer care are needed. Significant debate remains about the optimal treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma patients in the modern era, in part as its treatment comes at human cost, including an increased risk of treatment-related late effects like secondary malignant neoplasms and cardiovascular disease, compromised health-related quality of life, and the potential loss of young lives.

    A-HIPI is the inaugural work of the HoLISTIC project (Hodgkin Lymphoma International Study for Individual Care), building on detailed multi-source individual patient data from more than 15,000 Hodgkin lymphoma patients. A-HIPI development was performed on eight recent seminal phase 3 clinical trials conducted around the world. External validation was performed from contemporaneously treated patients in four “real-world” Hodgkin lymphoma registries across North America and Australia.

    HoLISTIC is spearheaded by Andrew M. Evens, DO, MBA, MSc, associate director for clinical services at Rutgers Cancer Institute and system director of medical oncology and oncology lead, RWJBarnabas Health and Susan K. Parsons, MD, MRP, medical director of the adolescent and young adult (AYA) program and research director of the Center for Health Solutions at Tufts Medical Center, who are co-principal investigators on the work.

    “Through continued collaboration with worldwide Hodgkin lymphoma clinical experts, decision scientists, statisticians, epidemiologists, and patient advocates, we’re one step closer to improving individualized prognostication and enhancing personalized medicine for Hodgkin lymphoma patients across all ages and disease stages,” notes Dr. Evens, who is also a professor of medicine at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, vice chancellor of clinical innovation and data analytics at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences. “Through HoLISTIC, we will continue to develop innovative and evidence-based decision support models to guide Hodgkin lymphoma patients and their families and healthcare providers.” 

    “The A-HIPI model is an exciting first step for the HoLISTIC Consortium,” notes Dr. Parsons, who is also professor of medicine and pediatrics at Tufts University School of Medicine. “The next phase of the project will be significant, as we will extend the rigorous clinical modeling methodology to early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma and relapsed/refractory disease. We will also explore the impact of treatment selection and integrate PET imaging results and important biologic factors into the model.” The investigators plan to synthesize all of this information into a comprehensive and robust clinical decision model that estimates the likelihood of cure, life expectancy, post-acute and late effects, and quality-adjusted life expectancy for individual patients across varied treatment options.

    The dynamic and interactive decision support models generated by the HoLISTIC Consortium will guide individual patients and clinicians during initialdiagnosis, relapse, and through survivorship in addition to serving as a strong basis for future health outcomes analyses, including patient preference and cost of care. The authors note limitations of the study include a lack of data in adults older than 65 who were treated in the clinical trials utilized for model development. Efforts are underway to identify other sources of information on older adults, as well as younger patients (adolescents and young adults), who are also often less represented in adult clinical trials.

    This work was presented as an oral presentation at the 2022 American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition and is supported in part by a National Cancer Institute Grant (R01CA262265). Author acknowledgements, disclosures and other information can be found here.  

    About Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey  As New Jersey’s only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, Rutgers Cancer Institute, together with RWJBarnabas Health, offers the most advanced cancer treatment options including bone marrow transplantation, proton therapy, CAR T-cell therapy and complex surgical procedures. Along with clinical trials and novel therapeutics such as precision medicine and immunotherapy – many of which are not widely available – patients have access to these cutting-edge therapies at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey in New Brunswick, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey at University Hospital in Newark, as well as through RWJBarnabas Health facilities. To make a tax-deductible gift to support Rutgers Cancer Institute, call 848-932-8013 or visit www.cinj.org/giving

    About Tufts Medicine and Tufts Medical Center  Tufts Medicine is the parent organization of Tufts Medical Center, a world renowned 415-bed academic medical center in Boston that cares for the sickest patients in the region, includes a level one trauma center and one of the largest heart transplant centers in New England, and also serves as the principal teaching hospital for Tufts University School of Medicine. Tufts Medicine is also the parent organization of Lowell General Hospital, MelroseWakefield Healthcare, an expansive home care and hospice network, and a large clinically integrated physician network that cares for more than one million patients per year. The health system is dedicated to providing patients with the highest quality of care as close to home as possible.  

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    For patient appointments/inquiries – contact:  844-CANCERNJ (844-226-2376) 

     

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    Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

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  • Personalising whole genome sequencing doubles diagnosis of rare diseases

    Personalising whole genome sequencing doubles diagnosis of rare diseases

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    Newswise — Tailoring the analysis of whole genome sequencing to individual patients could double the diagnostic rates of rare diseases, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.

    In 2018, the UK’s department of health announced an NHS Genomic Medicine Service, which allows patients with rare diseases to have their entire genetic code read in the hope of providing a much-needed diagnosis.

    However, the interpretation of this data can be extremely challenging and many people with complex, rare genetic diseases still do not receive a molecular answer to the cause of their problems.

    In the study, published in Nature Communications, researchers at The London Mitochondrial Centre at UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology and UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health sought to offer such patients an improved chance of receiving a genetic diagnosis.

    To do so, they tested how using a genomic medicine team of specialist doctors, bioinformaticians, and scientists could boost the capabilities of NHS diagnostic laboratories beyond the standard semi-automated analysis of data. The UCL team re-evaluated undiagnosed cases to identify clues that might help direct further, more personalised analysis. They subsequently applied additional bioinformatic approaches, using advanced computer technologies to identify genetic alterations in a patients’ DNA which may be causing disease but had been overlooked during routine testing.

    The work included 102 undiagnosed patients, suspected of having a primary mitochondrial disease (a large group of incurable genetic disorders that affect children and adults, associated with a broad spectrum of medical problems, severe disabilities, and reduced lifespan), who had undergone whole genome sequencing via the NHS’s 100,000 Genomes Project.

    This personalised approach increased the diagnostic rate from 16.7% to 31.4%. It also detected potential disease-causing variants in a further 3.9% of patients.

    Lead author, Dr Robert Pitceathly (co-lead for the London NHS Highly Specialised Service for Rare Mitochondrial Disorders and a research group leader at UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology), said: “The NHS has invested heavily in advanced genetic technologies. Consequently, the UK has established itself at the forefront of diagnostic whole genome sequencing. That said, some people with rare genetic diseases remain without a molecular diagnosis after their genome is analysed.

    “We believe investing in specialist genomic medicine teams is crucial, ensuring equitable access to dedicated multidisciplinary expertise and maximising diagnoses. On average, patients in our study waited over 30 years for a diagnosis – we now have the capability to solve such cases but need adequate workforce planning to support NHS diagnostic genetic laboratories in achieving this goal.”

    Receiving a genetic diagnosis is important as it allows patients to receive access to family planning, specialised IVF, and drugs trials. It can also permit targeted screening of known disease complications and access to drug studies.

    Dr Pitceathly said: “In this study, every new genetic diagnosis had a direct impact on patient care. This included additional check-ups for heart problems, hearing loss, and diabetes, and access to clinical trials.”

    Professor Michael Hanna, Director of UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology said: “This work is a significant step forward in developing the best ways to maximise the benefits of genome analysis for patients. It clearly demonstrates that by combining automated approaches to genome analysis with data interpretation by a skilled multidisciplinary team the diagnostic rates doubles. This is an important finding that will influence how genomic medicine diagnostic services should evolve world-wide.”

    Co-author, Dr James Davison (Metabolic Medicine Department at Great Ormond Street Hospital and chair of the British Inherited Metabolic Diseases Group), said: “The journey to reaching a diagnosis for children and adults with rare, complex, medical conditions can be a very long process, and genomic medicine provides a transformative and powerful tool in helping reach that goal.

    “This study highlights the importance of the collaboration between specialist clinicians and genetic scientists in interpreting the results of genome sequencing to maximise the opportunity of reaching a diagnosis which can then help guide medical management and treatment options.”

    The researchers involved in this study are funded by the Medical Research Council.

    Patient story

    Rachel North was one of the patients involved in the trial and described getting a diagnosis as “life changing”. It has since allowed her to be screened for disease complications such as osteopenia, and these have been treated.

    She said: “I had attended so many hospitals over the past 20 years and had been searching so long, I never thought I’d get a diagnosis.

    “Wondering about it took up so much energy, and I was worried about my 12-year-old son, and if my condition would affect him. So, getting a rare recessive diagnosis was a relief and takes away fear of the unknown.

    “Having a diagnosis allows me to research my condition and be very proactive in managing it.

    “Anything that helps me understand and make sense of what is happening to my body helps me come to terms with it and gives me confidence that I am managing it as well as possible.”

    Notes to Editors

     

    William L. Macken, Micol Falabella, Caroline McKittrick, Chiara Pizzamiglio, Rebecca Ellmers, Kelly Eggleton, Cathy E. Woodward, Yogan Patel, Robyn Labrum, Genomics England Research Consortium, Rahul Phadke, Mary M. Reilly, Catherine DeVile, Anna Sarkozy, Emma Footitt, James Davison, Shamima Rahman, Henry Houlden, Enrico Bugiardini, Rosaline Quinlivan, Michael G. Hanna, Jana Vandrovcova, Robert D. S. Pitceathly. Specialist multidisciplinary input maximises rare disease diagnoses from whole genome sequencing, will be published in Nature Communications, on 7th November 2022 at 10:00 GMT / 05:00 ET.

     

    The DOI for this paper will be: 10.1038/s41467-022-32908-7

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    University College London

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  • Gene Therapy Rapidly Improves Night Vision in Adults with Congenital Blindness

    Gene Therapy Rapidly Improves Night Vision in Adults with Congenital Blindness

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    Newswise — PHILADELPHIA—Adults with a genetic form of childhood-onset blindness experienced striking recoveries of night vision within days of receiving an experimental gene therapy, according to researchers at the Scheie Eye Institute in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

    The patients had Leber Congenital Amaurosis (LCA), a congenital blindness caused by mutations in the gene GUCY2D. The researchers, whose findings are reported in the journal iScience, delivered AAV gene therapy, which carries the DNA of the healthy version of the gene, into the retina of one eye for each of the patients in accordance with the clinical trial protocol. Within days of being treated, each patient showed large increases, in the treated eye, of visual functions mediated by rod-type photoreceptor cells. Rod cells are extremely sensitive to light and account for most of the human capacity for low-light vision.

    “These exciting results demonstrate that the basic molecular machinery of phototransduction remains largely intact in some cases of LCA, and thus can be amenable to gene therapy even after decades of blindness,” said study lead author Samuel G. Jacobson, MD, PhD, a professor of Ophthalmology at Penn.

    LCA is one of the most common congenital blindness conditions, affecting roughly one in 40,000 newborns. The degree of vision loss can vary from one LCA patient to another but all such patients have severe visual disability from the earliest months of life. There are more than two dozen genes whose dysfunction can cause LCA.

    Up to 20 percent of LCA cases are caused by mutations in GUCY2D, a gene that encodes a key protein needed in retinal photoreceptor cells for the “phototransduction cascade”—the process that converts light to neuronal signals. Prior imaging studies have shown that patients with this form of LCA tend to have relatively preserved photoreceptor cells, especially in rod-rich areas, hinting that rod-based phototransduction could work again if functional GUCY2D were present. Early results with low doses of the gene therapy, reported last year, were consistent with this idea.

    The researchers used higher doses of the gene therapy in two patients, a 19- year-old man and a 32-year-old woman, who had particularly severe rod-based visual deficits. In daylight, the patients had some, albeit greatly impaired, visual function, but at night they were effectively blind, with light sensitivity on the order of 10,000 to 100,000 times less than normal.

    The researchers administered the therapy to just one eye in each patient, so the treated eye could be compared to the untreated eye to gauge treatment effects. The retinal surgery was performed by Allen C. Ho, MD, a professor of Ophthalmology at Thomas Jefferson University and Wills Eye Hospital. Tests revealed that, in both patients, the treated eyes became thousands of times more light-sensitive in low-light conditions, substantially correcting the original visual deficits. The researchers used, in all, nine complementary methods to measure the patients’ light sensitivity and functional vision. These included a test of room navigation skills in low-light conditions and a test of involuntary pupil responses to light. The tests consistently showed major improvements in rod-based, low-light vision, and the patients also noted functional improvements in their everyday lives, such as “can [now] make out objects and people in the dark.”

    “Just as striking was the rapidity of the improvement following therapy. Within eight days, both patients were already showing measurable efficacy,” said study co-author Artur V. Cideciyan, PhD, a research professor of Ophthalmology at Penn.

    To the researchers, the results confirm that GUCY2D gene therapy to restores rod-based photoreceptor functions—and suggest that GUCY2D–LCA patients with more severe rod-based dysfunction are likely to benefit most dramatically from the therapy. The practical message is that there should be an emphasis on rod vision measurements at screening of LCA candidates and in monitoring them throughout a treatment trial.

    The findings, the researchers said, also underscore the remarkable fact that in some patients with severe congenital vision loss, the retinal cell networks that mediate vision remain largely alive and intact, and need only the resupply of a missing protein to start working again, more or less immediately.

    The ongoing clinical trial is registered at clinicaltrials.gov as trial NCT03920007.

    Support for the research was provided by Atsena Therapeutics, Inc., the developer of the GUCY2D gene therapy; the National Institutes of Health (R01 EY11522); and by a CURE Formula grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

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    Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

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  • Endocrine Society experts recommend individualized approach to use of telehealth

    Endocrine Society experts recommend individualized approach to use of telehealth

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    Newswise — WASHINGTON—Following rapid growth during the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth visits are expected to remain an important part of endocrine care, according to a new Endocrine Society policy perspective published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

    Health care providers need to consider a variety of factors when determining which type of visit best serves an individual patient’s needs at a given moment. For many patients, scheduling a mixture of in-person and telehealth visits can make medical care more convenient and effective.

    “Clinicians will need to draw upon their own knowledge of each patient and their clinical goals to decide when to incorporate telehealth into their care,” said Varsha G. Vimalananda, M.D., M.P.H., of VA Bedford Healthcare System in Bedford, Mass., and Boston University School of Medicine in Boston, Mass. She is the policy perspective’s first author. “Telehealth visits can be considered as an option each time we schedule an appointment. Patient preference should be elicited, and decisions guided by weighing the factors we describe in the perspective piece.”

    The policy perspective explores five aspects of care that determine when telehealth is appropriate, including:

    • Clinical factors, including whether an in-person physical exam or assessment is needed;
    • Patient factors, such as geographic distance to the clinic, access to transportation, work and family obligations, and comfort level with technology;
    • The patient-clinician relationship;
    • The clinician’s physical surroundings and personal circumstances; and
    • Availability of infrastructure needed to provide quality telehealth services.

    Telehealth can be a valuable component of an individualized care plan. Health care providers and patients should discuss how telehealth fits into care as they develop a care plan together, the policy perspective recommended.

    Telehealth can play an important role in reducing disparities in health care access. Telehealth appointments can make it easier for patients facing barriers such as travel, cost, mobility, mental health, and work or caregiver responsibilities to access the medical care they need.

    Other authors of this study include: Juan P. Brito, M.D., M.S., of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.; Leslie A. Eiland, M.D., of the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, Neb.; Rayhan A. Lal, M.D., of Stanford University in Stanford, Calif.; Spyridoula Maraka, M.D., M.S., of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, Ark., VA Central Arkansas Healthcare System, Little Rock, Ark., and the Mayo Clinic; Marie E. McDonnell, M.D., of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Mass., and Harvard Medical School in Boston, Mass.; Radhika Narla, M.D., of the University of Washington in Seattle, Wash., and VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, Wash.; Mara Y. Roth, M.D., of the University of Washington; and Stephanie S. Crossen, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of California Davis School of Medicine in Sacramento, Calif.

    The manuscript, “Appropriate Use of Telehealth Visits in Endocrinology: Perspective Statement of the Endocrine Society,” was published online, ahead of print.

    # # #

    Endocrinologists are at the core of solving the most pressing health problems of our time, from diabetes and obesity to infertility, bone health, and hormone-related cancers. The Endocrine Society is the world’s oldest and largest organization of scientists devoted to hormone research and physicians who care for people with hormone-related conditions.

    The Society has more than 18,000 members, including scientists, physicians, educators, nurses and students in 122 countries. To learn more about the Society and the field of endocrinology, visit our site at www.endocrine.org. Follow us on Twitter at @TheEndoSociety and @EndoMedia.

     

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    Endocrine Society

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