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18-Sep-2020 5:10 PM EDT
October Issue of SLAS Discovery Features Cover Article “A Critical and Concise Review of Mass Spectrometry Applied to Imaging in Drug Discovery”
SLAS

The October edition of SLAS Discovery features the cover article, “A Critical and Concise Review of Mass Spectrometry Applied to Imaging in Drug Discovery” by Richard J. A. Goodwin Ph.D. (AstraZeneca), Zoltan Takats Ph.D. (Imperial College London), and Josephine Bunch, Ph.D. (National Physical Laboratory).

   
Released: 18-Sep-2020 8:30 AM EDT
Immunotherapy Drug Development Pipeline Continues Significant Growth in 2020 Despite Global Pandemic Impact
Cancer Research Institute

Despite the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic across the globe, there has been a resurgence of interest in immuno-oncology (I-O) preclinical and clinical development, bringing hope to cancer patients and physicians who treat them.

15-Sep-2020 5:15 PM EDT
A Scientific First: How Psychedelics Bind to Key Brain Cell Receptor
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

For the first time, scientists at UNC-Chapel Hill and Stanford solved the high-resolution structure of psychedelic drugs bound to the 5-HT2A serotonin receptor, a major step toward understanding how the drugs cause such wild effects and how they might be better used to treat psychiatric conditions.

Released: 17-Sep-2020 8:05 AM EDT
Children Who Take Prescription Steroids at Increased Risk for Diabetes, High Blood Pressure, Blood Clots
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Children who take oral steroids to treat asthma or autoimmune diseases have an increased risk of diabetes, high blood pressure, and blood clots, according to Rutgers researchers.

Released: 17-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
Why The Dose Matters: Study Shows Levels And Anti-Tumor Effectiveness of A Common Drug Vary Widely
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – Sept. 17, 2020 – When used to manage infections, the drug itraconazole is generally given at a single, fixed dose to all patients. But determining the correct dosage of the drug to help treat cancer isn’t that simple, new research by UT Southwestern suggests.

Released: 17-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
ATS Research Program/ Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals Grant Opportunity in Sarcoidosis
American Thoracic Society (ATS)

The ATS Research Program is pleased to announce a new one-year grant supporting sarcoidosis research. The award by Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals provides $50,000 in funding.

Released: 17-Sep-2020 6:00 AM EDT
New Smart Drug Delivery System May Help Treatment for Neurological Disorders
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

A Rutgers-led team has created a smart drug delivery system that reduces inflammation in damaged nervous tissues and may help treat spinal cord injuries and other neurological disorders. The system, which uses extremely thin biomaterials implanted in the body, also protects nerve fibers (axons) that connect nerve cells in injured neural tissues, according to a study in the journal Advanced Materials.

   
Released: 16-Sep-2020 4:25 PM EDT
JoAnn Trejo selected for 2020 ASCB Prize for Excellence in Inclusivity
American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

The ASCB has named JoAnn Trejo as the 2020 recipient of the Prize for Excellence in Inclusivity. Trejo is a professor of Pharmacology and Assistant Vice Chancellor for Health Sciences Faculty Affairs at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) where she has made significant contributions to the understanding of cell signaling by protease-activated G protein-coupled receptors.

   
Released: 16-Sep-2020 10:25 AM EDT
Potential COVID-19 drug azithromycin may increase risk for cardiac events
University of Illinois Chicago

Azithromycin — a commonly-prescribed antibiotic — also is being investigated as a potential treatment for COVID-19. Researchers have found that azithromycin by itself is not associated with an increase in cardiac events; however, if the drug is taken with certain other drugs that affect the electrical functioning of the heart, then cardiac events increased.

Released: 16-Sep-2020 9:35 AM EDT
One in 10 older dental patients inappropriately prescribed opioids
University of Illinois Chicago

A new study by researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago and the University of Pittsburgh suggests that a significant proportion of older patients receiving opioids at dental visits also use psychotropic medications — a potentially harmful combination. Their findings are published in the journal Pharmacotherapy.

Released: 16-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
Sanford Burnham Prebys receives $3M NIH award for drugs that restore immune response to COVID-19
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute have received a $3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to study how SARS-CoV-19 weakens the immune system—and identify drugs to help infected individuals recover. The research will be led by Carl Ware, Ph.D., director of the Institute’s Infectious and Inflammatory Disease Center, and builds on the Institute-wide initiative to develop therapeutics to treat COVID-19.

Released: 16-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
$11.4 million NIH grant advances drug to treat nicotine addiction
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, Camino Pharma, LLC and University of California San Diego School of Medicine have been awarded an $11.4 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to advance a novel drug candidate for nicotine addiction into first-in-human Phase 1 studies. The drug targets a neuronal signaling pathway underlying addictive behaviors, and would be a first-in-class medication to help people quit smoking.

Released: 15-Sep-2020 6:25 PM EDT
TV Ads for Psoriasis and Eczema Medications Portray Few People of Color
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Commercials from pharmaceutical companies advertising medication to treat psoriasis and eczema lack people from racial and ethnic minorities, according to research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Released: 15-Sep-2020 2:05 PM EDT
COVID-19 Virus Uses Heparan Sulfate to Get Inside Cells
UC San Diego Health

UC San Diego researchers discovered that the SARS-CoV-2 virus can’t grab hold of cell receptor ACE2 without a carbohydrate called heparan sulfate, which is also found on lung cell surfaces — disrupting that interaction with a repurposed drug may help treat COVID-19.

Released: 15-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
Scientists uncover a novel approach to treating Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys, Fondazione Santa Lucia IRCCS, and Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in Rome have shown that pharmacological (drug) correction of the content of extracellular vesicles released within dystrophic muscles can restore their ability to regenerate muscle and prevent muscle scarring. The study, published in EMBO Reports, reveals a promising new therapeutic approach for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an incurable muscle-wasting condition.

Released: 14-Sep-2020 2:45 PM EDT
Virtual Reality Trains Public to Reverse Opioid Overdoses
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

The United States has seen a 200% increase in the rate of deaths by opioid overdose in the last 20 years. But many of these deaths were preventable. Naloxone, also called Narcan, is a prescription drug that reverses opioid overdoses, and in more than 40 states — including Pennsylvania — there is a standing order policy, which makes it available to anyone, without an individual prescription from a healthcare provider.

Released: 14-Sep-2020 1:00 PM EDT
Tiny Antibody Component Highly Effective Against SARS-COV-2 in Animal Studies
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

Scientists announced today that they have isolated the smallest biological molecule to date that completely and specifically neutralizes the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which is the cause of COVID-19.

Released: 14-Sep-2020 12:55 PM EDT
New Henry Ford Study Finds Certain Immuno Suppressing Drugs Do Not Increase Risk for Contracting COVID-19
Henry Ford Health

Patients on immunosuppressive therapy for common skin and rheumatic diseases like psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis are not at increased risk for contracting COVID-19 and should continue taking their medicine as prescribed, say Henry Ford Health System dermatology researchers in a study published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. Most of these patients are not at any greater risk for COVID-19 than the general population, despite their weakened immune system.

11-Sep-2020 4:55 PM EDT
New study from MD Anderson and BridgeBio’s Navire Pharma shows SHP2 inhibition overcomes multiple therapeutic-resistance mechanisms in lung cancer
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

New preclinical research from MD Anderson and Navire finds a novel drug targeting SHP2 can overcome multiple paths of therapeutic resistance in lung cancer. Navire will launch a clinical trial of SHP2 inhibitors by the end of 2020.

Released: 11-Sep-2020 4:15 PM EDT
Novel Discovery Challenges a Current Kidney Cancer Paradigm
Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah

Newly published research has reversed our understanding of an aspect of kidney tumor growth. Researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah discovered that two key proteins have opposite roles than what was previously believed.

Released: 11-Sep-2020 9:55 AM EDT
Veterinary college team IDs gene that drives ovarian cancer
Cornell University

Scientists at the College of Veterinary Medicine have collaborated on a study that pinpoints which specific genes drive – or delay – High-grade serious ovarian carcinoma.

Released: 10-Sep-2020 2:55 PM EDT
Could the time of day impact the effectiveness of COVID-19 treatment?
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

For months, experts have warned against the use of anti-inflammatory medications, such as ibuprofen, to treat COVID-19 symptoms. But could the timing of when this drug is taken play a role in its effectiveness?

Released: 10-Sep-2020 11:25 AM EDT
Liver cancer treatment showing positive results, Tulane study says
Tulane University

A biomedical engineering research team from Tulane University is developing a novel cancer treatment hepatocellular carcinoma, a highly fatal form of liver cancer.

   
Released: 9-Sep-2020 10:00 AM EDT
Hair Loss Drug Spironolactone May Be Safe for Use in Breast Cancer Survivors
George Washington University

Researchers at the George Washington University have found that the hair loss drug spironolactone is not associated with increased risk of female breast cancer recurrence and may be safe to treat female pattern hair loss in breast cancer survivors. Their findings are published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Released: 8-Sep-2020 4:35 PM EDT
MD Anderson and Astex Pharmaceuticals announce strategic collaboration to accelerate clinical evaluation of therapies for patients with leukemia
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

MD Anderson News Release September 08, 2020 The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Astex Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., based in Tokyo, Japan, today announce a  strategic collaboration agreement aimed at accelerating the clinical evaluation of Astex’s pipeline of products for patients with certain types of leukemia, including myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Released: 8-Sep-2020 3:30 PM EDT
Generic Cholesterol Drugs Save Medicare Billions of Dollars, Study Finds
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – Sept. 9, 2020 – The switch from brand name to generic cholesterol medications that occurred between 2014 and 2018 has saved Medicare billions of dollars, even as the number of people on cholesterol-lowering drugs has increased, UT Southwestern scientists have calculated. Their data, published in the journal JAMA Cardiology, suggest that policymakers and clinicians could help cut Medicare costs even further by switching more patients to generic drugs.

Released: 8-Sep-2020 2:05 PM EDT
Chemotherapy Drug More Effective When Combined With Microbubbles
American Institute of Physics (AIP)

Hepatocellular carcinoma is usually treated by blocking the flow of blood to the tumor to induce cancer cell death, but the common treatment, transarterial chemoembolization, is invasive and too imprecise to be a local drug delivery method. Aiming to increase the precision, researchers at Tulane University created a treatment that involves vaporizing tiny droplets of perfluorocarbon, a common organic material composed of carbon and fluorine. The method of gas embolization is published in APL Bioengineering.

   
Released: 8-Sep-2020 11:55 AM EDT
NSLS-II User Profile: Joshua Carter, CEO of Helix BioStructures
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Joshua Carter is a co-founder and the CEO of Helix BioStructures, a contract research organization serving the pharmaceutical industry in early-phase drug discovery. Since starting Helix Biostructures in 2017, Carter has leveraged the fast-paced, industrial capabilities of the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II)—a U.

   
Released: 8-Sep-2020 8:15 AM EDT
‘One size fits all’ medication approach doesn’t work in pregnancy
University of South Australia

New research led by the University of South Australia shows that a blanket approach to prescribing medication during pregnancy may put low birth weight babies at risk for the rest of their lives.

Released: 8-Sep-2020 8:00 AM EDT
A pain reliever that alters perceptions of risk
Ohio State University

While acetaminophen is helping you deal with your headache, it may also be making you more willing to take risks, a new study suggests. People who took acetaminophen rated activities like “bungee jumping off a tall bridge” as less risky than people who took a placebo.

   
4-Sep-2020 8:15 AM EDT
Genetic Study of Proteins Is a Breakthrough in Drug Development for Complex Diseases
University of Bristol

An innovative genetic study of blood protein levels, led by researchers in the MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit (MRC-IEU) at the University of Bristol, has demonstrated how genetic data can be used to support drug target prioritisation by identifying the causal effects of proteins on diseases.

Released: 4-Sep-2020 11:15 AM EDT
Common Class of Drugs Linked to Increased Risk of Alzheimer’s Disease
UC San Diego Health

UC San Diego researchers report that a class of drugs used for a broad array of conditions, from allergies and colds to hypertension and urinary incontinence, may be associated with an increased risk of cognitive decline, particularly in older adults at greater risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

Released: 3-Sep-2020 11:05 AM EDT
MD Anderson and Xencor enter strategic collaboration to advance investigational XmAb® drug candidates
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Xencor, Inc. today announced a strategic collaboration to study investigational treatments for patients with a variety of cancer types.

Released: 3-Sep-2020 11:00 AM EDT
Attacking Tumors From The Inside
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – Sept. 3, 2020 – A new technology that allows researchers to peer inside malignant tumors shows that two experimental drugs can normalize aberrant blood vessels, oxygenation, and other aspects of the tumor microenvironment in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), helping to suppress the tumor’s growth and spread, UT Southwestern researchers report.

Released: 3-Sep-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Tiny Biological Package Gets Drug Right To The ‘Heart’ Of Transplant Rejection
Johns Hopkins Medicine

For patients who receive a heart transplant in the near future, the old adage, “Good things come in small packages,” may become words to live by. In a recent study, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) demonstrated in mice that they can easily deliver a promising anti-rejection drug directly to the area surrounding a grafted heart by packaging it within a tiny three-dimensional, protein gel cocoon known as a hydrogel. Best of all, the researchers say that the release of the drug is spread out over time, making it highly regulatable and eliminating the need for daily medication to keep rejection in check.

Released: 3-Sep-2020 8:35 AM EDT
New computational tool allows researchers to predict key functional sites in proteins
Penn State College of Medicine

A new technology that uses a protein’s structure to predict the inner wiring that controls the protein’s function and dynamics is now available for scientists to utilize. The tool, developed by researchers at Penn State, may be useful for protein engineering and drug design.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 5:55 PM EDT
Steroid found to improve survival of critically ill COVID-19 patients
Imperial College London

A new international study published today [02 September] has shown that treating critically ill patients with COVID-19 with the steroid hydrocortisone improves their chances of recovery.

31-Aug-2020 10:05 AM EDT
Existing Class of Drugs May Improve Neurological Function in Patients with Rare, Aggressive Genetic Disorder
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

New findings show that some patients with a rare and aggressive form of leukodystrophy may benefit from receiving treatment with a class of targeted therapy drugs that could improve their neurological function.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 4:10 PM EDT
Studying an alternative steroid treatment to calm cytokine storms in COVID-19
University of Alabama at Birmingham

Randy Cron, M.D., Ph.D. wrote the first textbook on cytokine storm syndrome in 2019. Cron and UAB's Winn Chatham, M.D., are testing another potential treatment for cytokine storm syndrome in COVID-19: a targeted drug called anakinra.

31-Aug-2020 5:50 PM EDT
Common Drugs Tied to Increased Risk of Cognitive Decline
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

A class of drugs used for many conditions, including allergies, colds, high blood pressure and depression, may be associated with an increased risk of developing mild thinking and memory problems, particularly in people who have genetic risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease or markers of this condition, according to a study published in the September 2, 2020, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 2:50 PM EDT
Experimental vaccine that boosts antigen production shows promise against COVID-19
Ohio State University

A bioengineering technique to boost production of specific proteins could be the basis of an effective vaccine against the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, new research suggests.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 11:15 AM EDT
UC San Diego Joins Second Major National Clinical Trial for Novel Coronavirus
UC San Diego Health

UC San Diego Health will be part of the Phase III national AstraZeneca clinical trial that will recruit up to 30,000 participants at multiple sites across the country to assess the safety and efficacy of a vaccine to prevent COVID-19.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 11:05 AM EDT
Study leads to better understanding of blood pressure regulation, atherosclerosis
University of Kentucky

A new University of Kentucky College of Medicine study provides insight into how a protein called angiotensinogen contributes to blood pressure regulation and atherosclerosis.

1-Sep-2020 12:10 PM EDT
Corticosteroids Improve Survival in Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients, International Adaptive Randomized Trial Finds
REMAP-CAP

In a tremendous demonstration of global collaboration, clinician-scientists have pooled data from 121 hospitals in eight countries to find that inexpensive, widely available steroids improve the odds that very sick COVID-19 patients will survive the illness.

Released: 2-Sep-2020 8:30 AM EDT
Guilt by Dissociation: Study Sheds Light on Serotonin in Autism
Florida Atlantic University

A study on serotonin, a mood-regulating molecule in the brain that regulates many brain synapses, is helping to unravel the puzzle surrounding its role in autism. The activity and regulation of the serotonin transporter (SERT), protein is critically dependent on a number of other proteins that tell the protein where to locate on nerve cells and how to act. Shifts in the transporter’s activity can significantly impact the ability of serotonin to act in the brain.

Released: 1-Sep-2020 3:05 PM EDT
One in two Americans fear a major health event could lead to bankruptcy
West Health Institute

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to put lives and livelihoods at risk, 1 in 2 Americans say they fear a major health event could lead them to file for bankruptcy, marking a 5% increase since 2019.



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