Trending Articles

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Farmers resist push for workers to wear protective gear against bird flu virus

STAT

WASHINGTON — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended this week that dairy and poultry farms with infected animals supply protective gear to workers in a bid to stave off human transmission of the H5N1 virus. The challenge now is making it happen. The CDC has no legal authority to order those protective measures, and health officials in some of the nine states with reported outbreaks in cattle have had little luck getting farmers to take them up on offers of free persona

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AZ oncology chief says AI can help solve cancer’s ‘ZIP code lottery’ as health disparities persist

PharmaVoice

Partnerships have been key to building the company’s AI capabilities and patient-focused R&D, said AstraZeneca’s head of U.S. oncology.

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Hot off the press: Bridge to EM curriculum (2nd edition) released

ALiEM - Pharm Pearls

It has been 3 years since the 8-week, self-guided Bridge to Emergency Medicine (EM) curriculum was launched to help graduating medical students prepare for EM residency. The curriculum has been viewed over 43,000 times and we have awarded over 5,000 ALiEMU course certificates. It is now a part of many residency programs’ intern boot camp. Launching the 2nd edition of Bridge to EM (2024) We are thrilled to announce that we launching the second edition of the curriculum.

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Sanofi forges $1.2bn alliance with vaccines firm Novavax

pharmaphorum

Sanofi has licensed joint commercial rights to Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccine and will work with the biotech on the development of combined flu/COVID shots in a deal worth up to $1.2 billion.

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Position Your Pharmacy for Expansion

Speaker: Chris Antypas and Josh Halladay

Access to limited distribution drugs and payer contracts are key to pharmacy expansion. But how do you prepare your operations to take the next step? Meaningful data: Collect and share clinical data regarding outcomes, utilization, and more Reporting: Limited distribution models require efficient tracking and reporting systems Workflows: Align workflows with specific pharma and payer contractual requirements For in-depth, expert insights on pharmacy expansion, watch this webinar from Inovalon.

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Patient dies in Pfizer study of Duchenne gene therapy

BioPharma Dive

Pfizer said the patient, a young boy who was treated earlier last year, had died suddenly. The company is working with trial researchers to investigate further.

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Federal officials will fund farms’ protective measures to contain H5N1 bird flu

STAT

WASHINGTON — The federal government will provide livestock farms as much as $28,000 apiece to bolster protective measures and testing for the avian flu virus spreading among dairy cows, officials said Friday. The Agriculture Department also allotted $98 million to aid states restricting the interstate movement of affected cattle, and health officials announced they would put an additional $101 million toward expanded surveillance, tests, treatments, and vaccines for the virus, which has n

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Potential best-in-class antibody shows “remarkable efficacy” in atopic dermatitis

European Pharmaceutical Review

New data from a Phase IIa trial in moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis has demonstrated that a novel monoclonal antibody (mAb) could facilitate dosing every 12 weeks for induction therapy. This is due to a 31-day half-life at anticipated therapeutic dose levels, Inmagene Biopharmaceuticals confirmed. Humanised anti-OX40 IgG1 mAb IMG-007 works via a silenced antibody -dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) function, Inmagene explained.

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Report warns economic instability has hit UK drug discovery

pharmaphorum

A UK report has said that inflation and geopolitical instability have led to a “dramatic drop” in investment in smaller companies developing new medicines, with a knock-on effect on the entire life sciences industry.

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Drug patents protect pharma profits. Track when they’ll expire here.

BioPharma Dive

Intellectual property is the foundation of the drug industry’s business model. This database will track key patent expiry dates for 30 top-selling medicines.

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Bird flu keeps rewriting the textbooks. It’s why scientists are unsettled by the U.S. dairy cattle outbreak

STAT

Twenty-seven years ago today, a 3-year-old boy in Hong Kong developed a sore throat, spiked a fever, and started to cough. Six days later, he was hospitalized; six days after that, he died of acute respiratory distress caused by viral pneumonia. Testing showed the toddler, who’d had contact with sick chickens before becoming ill, had been infected with H5N1 bird flu.

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5 Reasons to Upgrade Your Pharmacy Management Software

Are you still using workarounds to manage your daily operations? To achieve peak performance, it's time to explore other options for specialty and infusion pharmacy software. Streamline pharmacy operations and improve clinical performance with automated processing, real-time data exchange, and electronic decision support. Download this helpful infographic to: Drive efficiency and patient adherence from referral receipt to delivery and ongoing care – all with our Pharmacy Cloud.

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Using a body as ‘a bioreactor’ — a regenerative medicine expert on where the field is headed

PharmaVoice

The director of the University of Pittsburgh’s McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine believes the industry is “turning a corner.

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Data for First-in-Class IV-Administered Gene Therapy to Treat Epilepsy Presented at ASGCT 2024

PharmaTech

The company is presenting preclinical data at the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy annual meeting that supports the potential of the company’s CAP-002 gene therapy for correcting neurological phenotypes associated with genetic epilepsy due to syntaxin-binding protein 1 (STXBP1) mutations.

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Revealed: key files shredded as UK government panic grew over infected blood deaths lawsuit

The Guardian - Pharmaceutical Industry

Lost documents prevented victims from finding out the truth, official inquiry told Disastrous failures that caused the contaminated blood scandal were denied by ministers for decades after officials destroyed, lost and blocked access to key documents, memos submitted to the official inquiry reveal. Several batches of files involving the work of a blood safety advisory committee were shredded as the government faced the threat of legal action, documents show.

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AstraZeneca withdraws COVID-19 vaccine, citing declining demand

BioPharma Dive

The move ends a turbulent saga for AstraZeneca, which successfully developed a coronavirus shot but struggled to sell it amid competition and the emergence of rare but serious side effects.

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STAT+: Sanofi enters vaccine licensing deal with Novavax, giving beleaguered biotech a lifeline

STAT

LONDON — Novavax, the beleaguered maker of a Covid-19 vaccine, just got a boost of its own.   The French pharma company Sanofi on Friday said it had reached a licensing deal to sell Novavax’s Covid shot going forward as well as to try to combine the vaccine with Sanofi’s own flu shot. The pact includes a $500 million upfront payment, with up to $700 million more on the table if certain regulatory and launch milestones are reached.

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12 Questions with Ariel Buda-Levin

pharmaphorum

Get to know Ariel Buda-Levin from the IPG Health Network better with these 12 insightful questions. Learn more about her background, expertise, and experiences.

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Patients 'put at risk' as pharmacies face medicine shortages 'multiple times a day'

The Pharmacist

Eight in 10 pharmacy team members report that medicine shortages are putting patients’ health at risk, according to a survey by Community Pharmacy England (CPE). The Pressures Survey, completed by more than 900 pharmacy owners and over 2,000 pharmacy team members, found that medicine supply issues were affecting the majority of pharmacy teams (72%) ‘multiple […] The post Patients 'put at risk' as pharmacies face medicine shortages 'multiple times a day' appeared first o

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AstraZeneca withdraws Covid-19 vaccine worldwide, citing surplus of newer vaccines

The Guardian - Pharmaceutical Industry

Pharmaceutical company says newer shots led to decline in demand for AstraZeneca vaccine, which is no longer being manufactured or supplied AstraZeneca has begun the worldwide withdrawal of its Covid-19 vaccine due to a “surplus of available updated vaccines” that target new variants of the virus. The announcement follows the pharmaceutical company in March voluntarily withdrawing its European Union marketing authorisation , which is the approval to market a medicine in member states.

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iTeos shares jump on TIGIT update; Acelyrin swaps CEOs

BioPharma Dive

Interim data surpassed expectations, iTeos said. Elsewhere, Acelyrin revealed chief executive officer Shao-Lee Lin is departing and Bluebird bio gave a fuller account of its gene therapy launches.

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STAT+: No, alcohol isn’t good for you. Will new dietary guidelines be shaped more by health or industry interests?

STAT

In 1995, when Marion Nestle was on the committee drafting the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, things were run differently. She and other experts handled it all: deciding on nutrition-related research questions, collecting the evidence, issuing a scientific report, and then writing guidance for how Americans should eat. When it came time for that last part — the writing — Nestle and two co-authors got together at a bar, ordered glasses of wine, and got to work.

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Sorcero genAI conjures plain language from scientific papers

pharmaphorum

Understanding complex scientific studies is often a challenge for patients as well as healthcare professionals, but one that may become easier thanks to artificial intelligence.

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Pharmacists must be kept 'better in the loop' over medicine shortages

The Pharmacist

Community pharmacists must be kept better informed about medicine shortages, with greater transparency required from supply chains, the chief executive of the Independent Pharmacies Association (IPA) has urged. Dr Leyla Hannbeck also said the fact that pharmacists are unable to make minor amendments in the case of medicines shortages ‘has to change’.

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Episode 920: What blood gas parameters indicate possible methemoglobinemia?

Pharmacy Joe

In this episode, I’ll discuss what blood gas parameters can make you suspect methemoglobinemia. Episode 920: What blood gas parameters indicate possible methemoglobinemia? Subscribe on iTunes , Android , or Stitcher Methemoglobin is formed when the ferrous irons of heme are oxidized to the ferric state. The ferric hemes of methemoglobin are unable to bind oxygen, therefore, causing a functional anemia.

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Can a Device Be Found Not Substantially Equivalent Because of Cybersecurity Risks? A Review of FDA’s Draft Guidance on Cybersecurity in Medical Devices

FDA Law Blog: Biosimilars

By Lisa M. Baumhardt, Senior Medical Device Regulation Expert & Adrienne R. Lenz, Principal Medical Device Regulation Expert — FDA recently issued a draft guidance which would update the agency’s Cybersecurity in Medical Devices: Quality System Considerations and Content of Premarket Submissions guidance. The draft guidance provides recommendations on what is required to meet cybersecurity obligations under section 524B of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FD&C).

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STAT+: CRISPR edits fail to cure HIV patients in early test

STAT

BALTIMORE — An ambitious effort to cure HIV with CRISPR genome editing fell short in an early clinical trial, investigators announced Friday morning. In the study, run by Excision BioTherapeutics, researchers tried to use the gene editing tool to address a chief reason HIV has been so hard to cure. While antiviral drugs can clear patients of replicating virus, HIV is able to worm its way into a patients’ own DNA in certain cells.

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Maze gets new Pompe partner after FTC blocks Sanofi deal

pharmaphorum

Five months after Sanofi walked away from a deal with Maze Therapeutics on an oral Pompe disease therapy, Shionogi has snapped up the drug.

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AMR support tools 'critically important' for pharmacist prescribers

The Pharmacist

The government has pledged to support pharmacist prescribers with tools to reduce unnecessary antimicrobial prescriptions as part of its five-year plan to tackle antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Such tools could make use of digital technologies including artificial intelligence (AI), but this would depend on ‘fully integrated digital systems’ with the right data governance permissions, the government said. […] The post AMR support tools 'critically important' for pharmacist prescr

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Qila.io collaborates with Mascot Spincontrol to bring transparency in clinical research

Express Pharma

Blockchain-as-a-service company Qila.io has partnered with global clinical research center Mascot Spincontrol to bring about transparency in clinical research through blockchain. The aim of the collaboration is to ensure that clinical trial data is secure, transparent and tamper-proof so that integrity of research outcomes is maintained. According to its statement, partnership will enhance transparency in clinical research, fortify data security, and instill greater confidence among stakehol

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OneChain’s CAR T trial treats its first cortical T-cell ALL patient

Pharma Times

The subtype accounts for 20% of all T-cell leukaemias, a rare form of blood cancer which produces too many abnormal T-cells

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Large amount of bird flu virus in milk suggests asymptomatic cows are infected with H5N1

STAT

Since March, when the first reported cases of H5N1 bird flu began showing up in dairy cattle in Texas, the Food and Drug Administration has been asking farmers to discard any milk from infected animals. Initially, spotting tainted milk was believed to be fairly easy because cows that get sick with H5N1 begin producing milk that is thick and yellowish.

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Spectral AI nears first sales of wound care system

pharmaphorum

The first commercial sales of Spectral AI's DeepView wound imaging system for burns are due to start in the UK, its first market, later this year

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Shinogi and Maze seal worldwide exclusive in bid to cure Pompe disease

Outsourcing Pharma

In an interesting development in the field of rare disease therapeutics, Shionogi & Co., Ltd., and Maze Therapeutics, Inc. have sealed an exclusive worldwide license agreement for MZE001, a novel therapeutic candidate aimed at tackling Pompe disease.

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The Promise of RFID for Improving Medication Inventory Management

Pharmaceutical Commerce

Radio frequency identification (RFID) not only helps hospitals boost their medication safety standards, as it also allows clinicians to continue to provide quality patient care.

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NHS to roll out fibre optic laser therapy to prevent seizures in epileptic patients

Pharma Times

The chronic brain disease that causes seizures currently affects around 600,000 people living in the UK

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Brain worms are more common than you think. Here’s what doctors who’ve treated them say.

STAT

Yes, it’s possible to have a worm living in your brain — in fact, it’s far more common than you might think, said Dr. David Hamer, a professor of global health and medicine at the Boston University School of Public Health, who also directs a travel clinic at Boston Medical Center. Brain worms became a topic of public fascination Wednesday after the  The New York Times  reported that presidential candidate Robert F.

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