New Awareness Raising Event in Westwood, NJ to Benefit Renowned Brain Aneurysm Foundation

The 1st Anniversary Awareness Walk in Honor of Rhonda Martin is a new event in Westwood, New Jersey named for a local woman who inspired family and friends by overcoming her brain aneurysm during the summer of 2014. Since then, Rhonda Martin’s family has sought to raise greater awareness in hopes there will be one less case of someone suffering from a brain aneurysm.

Hanover, MA (PRWEB) June 02, 2015

Join us for a new event in Westwood, New Jersey—the 1st Anniversary Awareness Walk in Honor of Rhonda Martin, who overcame her brain aneurysm during the summer of 2014. Family members have since dedicated their resources to raising awareness and funds for brain aneurysm research.

Rhonda Martin’s family seeks to raise awareness in hopes that there will be one less case of someone suffering from a brain aneurysm.

All are welcome and encouraged to join the 1st Anniversary Awareness Walk in Honor of Rhonda Martin. And, any and all support is greatly appreciated!

The event is scheduled to take place on Saturday, June 27, 2015 at Pascack Brook County Park, which is located at 150 Emerson Road in Westwood, NJ.

Registration will begin at 9:00am and the 2 mile walk kicks off at 10:30am.

The cost is only $20 per participant if you register before June 13th. After that, the fee increases by $5. Also, all who register prior to June 13th receive a free t-shirt.

Sponsorships are available. For more information, please visit the event website or email Sarah Martin at Sarahmartin988(at)gmail(dot)com.

Now celebrating 20 years of service, the Brain Aneurysm Foundation was established in 1994 in Boston, Massachusetts with a mission to promote early detection of brain aneurysms by providing knowledge and raising awareness of the signs, symptoms and risk factors; work with the medical communities to provide support networks for patients and families; as well as to further research that will improve patient outcomes and save lives. For more information about the Brain Aneurysm Foundation, visit http://www.bafound.org.

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Advanced Vestibular Rehabilitation Online Series Now Available from Approved Continuing Education Provider Education Resources Inc.

To help healthcare professionals address the rising prevalence of dizziness, vertigo, balance problems, and Post-Concussion Syndrome, Education Resources Inc. is now offering an Advanced Vestibular Rehabilitation Series online.

Boston, MA (PRWEB) June 02, 2015

The series is recommended for physical therapists, occupational therapists, physical therapist assistants, occupational therapist assistants, nurses, physician assistants, neurologists, otolaryngologists, and emergency room professionals who have had experience with or have previously taken a two day introductory course in vestibular rehabilitation. Course participants can access the series for an entire year to hone their differential diagnosis and treatment skills at their convenience. Participants will receive downloadable handouts and may earn eleven continuing education hours upon completing the series.

Course topics include Advanced BPPV, Cervicogenic Dizziness, and challenging vestibular disorders including Post-Concussion Syndrome. The Advanced BPPV session focuses on differential diagnosis, advanced assessment and techniques for treatment of patients with vertigo from BPPV. The Cervicogenic Dizziness session focuses on the assessment and treatment of cervicogenic dizziness, and how to distinguish it from central vestibular deficits. The third session focuses on the assessment and treatment of patients with vertigo and dysequilibrium from unusual vestibular causes. Course participants will distinguish among causes of dizziness such as Concussion, Chronic Subjective Dizziness (Persistent Postural Perceptual Dizziness), Anxiety, Superior Canal Dehiscence, Fistula, Migraine, and Meniere's disease. Through case studies, demonstrations, extensive directed lab practice, and lecture, participants will advance their skills in vestibular rehabilitation.

"Dr. Clendaniel is an exceptional teacher. From the moment his class starts he makes you feel comfortable and ready to learn. Lab sessions are plenty and well organized. He incorporates hands on with lecture to provide the best learning experience. I would highly recommend taking his class to better enrich your clinician skills in vestibular rehabilitation." – Kip Chesmore, Physical Therapist

Richard Clendaniel, PT, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Community & Family Medicine, Doctor of Physical Therapy Division at Duke University Medical Center. Prior to joining the faculty at Duke, he was on faculty at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, where he was director of the Vestibular Rehabilitation program. He sits on the advisory board of the Vestibular Rehabilitation Association (VEDA) and maintains an active practice evaluating and treating patients with vestibular disorders and dizziness. His primary research is in the normal function of the vestibular system and the plasticity of the vestibular system following injury.

Education Resources Inc. is a leading provider of evidence-based continuing education for physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech language pathologists, assistants, educators and other health care professionals. For over 25 years, Education Resources Inc. and its esteemed faculty have educated therapists around the world on the latest topics applicable to clinicians practicing across the entire continuum of care. Education Resources, Inc. is co-owned by two physical therapists and is based in Massachusetts.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/05/prweb12731353.htm

Medical Marijuana Business SHANGO Announces Brandon Rexroad as EVP of Operations

Owners of the Portland-based medical marijuana business, Shango, today announced that Brandon Rexroad has officially been named the Executive Vice President of Operations.

Portland, OR (PRWEB) June 02, 2015

Owners of the Portland-based medical marijuana business, Shango, today announced that Brandon Rexroad has officially been named the Executive Vice President of Operations. Brandon assumes this critical position one month before the consumption of recreational marijuana is legal in the state of Oregon. As EVP, Brandon is charged with overseeing Shango’s six state-of-the-art cannabis cultivation facilities, and the company’s transition plan from medical marijuana only to recreational and medical marijuana retailer through the next seven months.

“In my role as Executive Vice President, I will be making key improvements on the cultivation side to ensure maximum efficiency and quality, said Rexroad. “Over the next seven months, my job will be to realign Shango’s business model to prepare for the historic day when the sale of recreational marijuana is legal in Oregon. My partner and I founded Shango to be an example of excellence in our industry, and we must be sure every facet of Shango’s operations, cultivation and retail reflects this vision prior to January 2016.”

Brandon has been dedicated to the emerging Cannabis Industry since 1996 when California permitted the production and sale of medicinal cannabis. He is responsible for building Shango’s cultivation facilities, as well as its research and development center. These facilities are used to create a full range of combustible and cannabis-infused products for medicinal use.

Brandon has more than 20 years of experience in all aspects of residential, commercial and industrial construction and development. He was the Controller for Antera Corporation, managing accounting operations and securing financing for its development projects.

His major completed projects include Long Beach Town Centre, Cerritos Town Centre and Santa Catalina Island Civic Center, as well as facilities for national credit tenant clients such as Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, Von’s, Ralph’s, Food 4 Less, Kroger’s, Safeway and many others.

Brandon is the co-founder of Factory Direct Garden Supply, which imports and manufactures hoods, lamps, ballast and other specialized equipment for the hydroponic gardening industry. This proven expertise in construction and hydroponics make him wholly qualified to lead future expansion of Shango’s cultivation and processing facilities in emerging cannabis markets.

Oregon will become only the third state in U.S. history to legalize the recreational use and sale of marijuana. This law, which was approved through Measure 91 in November 2014, legalizes the recreational use of marijuana in July 2015. The recreational sale of marijuana will be legal in January 2016.

Shango currently has two stores in Portland: 8056 SE Harold Street, Portland, OR 97206 (at the corner at 82nd Street and Foster Road). Hours of operation are 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. PT Monday through Saturday and 11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. PT on Sundays. A second Shango is located at 6033 NE Win Sivers Drive, Portland, OR 97220 (located near the airport). Hours of operation are 12:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. PT Monday through Saturday and 12:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. PT on Sundays.

The opening of additional Shango stores in Oregon and other States will be announced soon.

For more information about Shango, please visit http://www.goshango.com, Follow us on Instagram and Twitter @ShangoCannabis and LIKE us on Facebook.com/Shango-Cannabis.

About Shango:

Based in Portland, Oregon, Shango is a premium cannabis brand offering a full range of award-winning cannabis products including flower, concentrates and cannabis-infused specialties. Prepared for prominence as an industry leader in premium cannabis, Shango upholds the highest possible levels of consistent, quality products. Shango is a committed advocate of promoting cannabis education and the safe and responsible use of cannabis products.

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For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/06/prweb12763255.htm

PruittHealth Honors 2015 Guiding Light Caregiver of the Year

Healthcare Professionals Recognized with Annual Awards

NORCROSS, Ga., June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — PruittHealth recently announced the 2015 winners of the Guiding Light Caregiver Award program at their annual Spring Conference. The award allows each of the PruittHealth locations to nominate their outstanding C.N.A.s and Pharmacy Technicians for special recognition for dedicated and outstanding service. The nominees are reviewed and evaluated based on criteria, such as length of service, demonstration of excellence in customer service, leadership, dependability, professionalism, and an exceptional display of commitment to caring for patients and their families. The list is then narrowed down to the top ten finalists, who are invited to attend a special awards banquet with their families. In addition to three grand prizes, each finalist also receives an award plaque and esteemed recognition.

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Congratulations to the 2015 winners:

1st place – Kelly Watford, PruittHealth – Valdosta

2nd place – Shirley Gillison, PruittHealth – Estill

3rd place – Margaret Welborn, PruittHealth – Washington

Other top finalists were:

    --  Tia Harris, PruittHealth - Crestwood
    --  Lillie Lindsey, PruittHealth - Macon
    --  Angela Miller, PruittHealth Hospice (Valdosta)
    --  Betty Robinson, PruittHealth Hospice (Swainsboro)
    --  Harris Smith, PruittHealth - Blythewood
    --  Clara Suarez, PruittHealth Hospice (New Bern)
    --  Clementine Verdell, PruittHealth - Holly Hill

Congratulations to all of these outstanding professionals, especially Kelly Watford, PruittHealth’s 2015 Caregiver of the Year. Kelly has worked as a C.N.A. for the PruittHealth family of providers for nearly ten years. Dependable, trustworthy, and dedicated, Kelly is an active leader in the center’s events and activities, as well as in the community. Kelly stated, “I am so grateful for being honored for the Guiding Light Caregiver of the Year Award. It is a pleasure to be in the same category as so many special and caring individuals. I would like to thank my co-workers at PruittHealth – Valdosta, as well as Mr. Pruitt, for providing me with the opportunity to further my career with the PruittHealth family.” There is no doubt that Kelly has left a lasting, positive impact on the lives of those who have been in her care, and she has continuously demonstrated her commitment to caring over the years as a part of the PruittHealth family of providers.

About PruittHealth

Since 1969, PruittHealth has been a family-owned organization committed to the care of patients in our communities. We provide a seamless network of post-acute care services and resources, offering skilled nursing care, home health care, end-of-life hospice care, rehabilitation, and pharmacy/infusion services across the Southeast. Our organization is well known for its holistic model of care, as well as its proactive performance improvement programs, and its continuous commitment to caring and to quality. We serve communities across more than 170 provider locations throughout Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and one center in Florida. The PruittHealth seamless care network ensures that on any given day, our 24,000 patients are cared for by PruittHealth’s 16,000 employed partners. Our highly-trained staff and commitment to providing each patient and their family with the level of care and dignity we would expect for our own loved ones are why PruittHealth has remained a leader in healthcare for more than 45 years. For more information please visit: www.PruittHealth.com.

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SOURCE PruittHealth

Circular orbits common amongst Earth-sized exoplanets

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Researchers from MIT and Aarhus University in Denmark have solved a decades-long riddle, demonstrating for the first time that the circular orbits maintained by Earth and the other planets in the Milky Way are not unique to our solar system’s worlds.

As the authors report in the latest edition of The Astrophysical Journal, they discovered a total of 74 exoplanets, some located hundreds of light years from Earth, that orbit their respective stars in essentially circular patterns, maintaining essentially the same distance at all times.

Astronomers had long wondered if these types of orbits were considered rare for planets located in other parts of the universe, and the new paper reveals that this type of orbital regularity is the norm, at least when it comes to planets that are roughly the same size as Earth.

Why is orbital circularity so important?

These 74 exoplanets, which orbit a total of 28 different stars, have far different orbits than massive exoplanets, many of which travel around their stars in eccentric orbits. They come extremely close to their host stars at one point before moving farther away as they continue their journey.

Vincent Van Eylen, a visiting graduate student in MIT’s Department of Physics, told redOrbit via email that the findings “will help astronomers in understanding the process of planetary formation,” which can result in either in these types of circular orbits or in the “highly eccentric orbits… commonly observed for exoplanets as massive as Jupiter.”

“It’s exciting that our results show orbits which are close to circular, in contrast with previous exoplanet measurements for massive planets,” Van Eylen said. “The similarity with the almost circular orbits for the planets in the solar system is striking, although we don’t fully understand yet why this is the case,” he added, noting that it could be related either to the small size of the planets or the number of planets contained within a system.

In addition to the learning more about planetary formation, the researchers said that they wanted to understand the circularity of exoplanet orbits because of the influence that eccentricity has on a planet’s climate. If most Earth-like planets had highly eccentric orbits, their climate would vary greatly over the course of a year as it moved closer to and further away from its star.

Good news in the search for life on other worlds

According to Van Eylen, the discovery that circular orbits appear to be the norm for smaller exoplanets is good news when it comes to the search for extraterrestrial life. While little is known about most exoplanets, the two factors that are most important are that these planets are small enough to be rocky, and are located in their star’s habitable zone (and thus are capable of supporting liquid water).

“Up until now, we knew almost nothing about the orbits of such planets,” he told redOrbit via email. “Now our evidence suggests that such planets may well have circular orbits, which means their climates are likely to be more stable. If they were eccentric like some of the massive exoplanets we know, their climates would be very variable when the planets move closer and further away from the star during one planet year.”

Van Eylen said that he emphasized the word “suggests” because, while they have found circular orbits for Earth-sized planets, none of those worlds are far enough away from their stars to have liquid water. With access to better data, he and his colleagues hope to learn more about such planets in the future – and maybe even discover some additional surprises.

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Seven signs your partner is watching porn

Abbey Hull for redOrbit.com – @AbbeyHull4160

In every relationship, there are some things you want in a partner: humor, intelligence, tall, dark, and handsome…you get the idea. But in most relationships there is one thing girls do not want—the big P… (No, not that!) …

Porn. That’s right, porn: all men have used it at least once, and while it may begin innocently enough (or as innocent as that can be…) it’s a slippery slope into addiction. Ladies fear that our guys will become addicted to porn, and so we must be prepared. It doesn’t take agent 007 to see the warning signs in our mates, because no matter how clever they think they are in erasing their internet history (and they will think that’s enough to cover their tracks), there are plenty of ways to tell if your partner has a porn addiction.

1. Less interest in the bedroom

While porn addiction may lead to increased time between the sheets, after a while the addiction will make your partner lose interest. He may become desensitized, and with all that energy going towards his computer screen, he may begin to prefer the safety of a screen over the intimate risks in the bedroom.

2. Unable to maintain an erection during sex

There are several medical reasons your partner may have erectile dysfunction, but porn can also induce his private to fall down on duty. After watching enough porn, the brain is conditioned to only “turn on” during masturbation with pornographic material.

3. Changes in sexual tastes

This doesn’t mean kinky is bad, but there may be an underlying reason behind his new interest. Some men show interest in “rough” sexual activities such as bondage, BDSM, group sex, or other actions that may make you feel belittled or inadequate. Love doesn’t hurt, and if he gets frustrated at you when he does something you haven’t discussed—he’s waving the red flag.

4. Excessive time online

This one is fairly obvious to see—if he’s spending more time looking at a screen than at you, it may be more than just “work” on his screen, especially at those odd middle-of-the-night hours or during your family reunion. Let’s face it: addictions make no exceptions.

5. More antisocial and distant

Many men describe the feeling of distance as “numb” when they begin to lose interest in their personal relationships with family and friends. His life will revolve around one thing—his next “hit,” and in those in-between times be sure to check for aggression, angry outbursts, lying, manipulative flattery, or lack of remorse.

6. Secretive actions and (more importantly) reactions

Try two simple tests: when he’s on his computer alone in the room, walk in unexpectedly. Does he nervously react? Test two: ask him what he’s been up to today. Does he become irritable, evasive, or defensive? Odds are he isn’t picking out your engagement ring at that moment, so be cautious of these signs.

7. Appearance is everything…to him

Your looks, weight, chest, and sexual performance can all go under the knife of his approval. Studies have shown that the more men watch porn, the more they devalue the attractiveness of “average people.”

No matter how much your partner tries to cover up his addiction, the fact remains that there are always ways of finding out. Just like any addiction, overexposure within your partner’s porn addiction can lead to a rewiring of his brain and a disconnect in the relationship.

Stand firm, know the signs, and don’t let his porn addiction get the best of you.

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‘Helicopter parents’ can’t make up for it with extra love

Shayne Jacopian for redOrbit.com – @ShayneJacopian

According to a new study by Brigham Young University, published in Emerging Adulthood, “Helicopter parents,” those who make important decisions for their children and try to solve their problems and conflicts for them even into young adulthood, can’t make up for the negative affects of such parenting with love, support, and overall parental warmth.

You mean the motive doesn’t make any difference to the outcome of the action?

“From our past work, we thought there might be something positive about helicopter parenting under certain conditions, but we’re just not finding it,” said study author Larry Nelson. Nelson’s work was a follow-up to 2012 research that found children of helicopter parents to be less engaged in school, in addition to having a lower self-worth and being more likely to engage in risky behavior.

Surveying 438 undergraduate students from four different American universities, students reported on their parents’ controlling behavior, warmth, and affection—the researchers defined “warm” parents as ones who made themselves available to talk and spend time with their child—and on their own perceptions of self-worth, as well as their risky behavior and their academic lives.

The results showed that while kinder helicopter parents caused less negative effects than unkind ones, the difference was only slight.

“Overall, stepping in and doing for a child what the child developmentally should be doing for him or herself, is negative,” Nelson said in a release. “Regardless of the form of control, it’s harmful at this time period.”

Everyone has to learn to fend for themselves at some point, and helicopter parenting deprives children and young adults of these learning opportunities. Regardless of why they do it, helicopter parents need to learn to let their children have important learning experiences, even if it means they have to make mistakes along the way.

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Animal Dermatology Clinic Announces the Opening of Their Newest State of the Art Veterinary Specialty Practice in Ontario, CA

ONTARIO, Calif., June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Animal Dermatology Clinic announces the opening of a full time, state of the art, dermatology specialty practice in Ontario, CA. The over 2000 square foot facility has four dermatology exam rooms, a large treatment area, and a separate procedures room for specialized services such as laser surgeries, intradermal allergy testing, skin biopsies, video otoscopy, diagnostic testing, and treatments on-site, in a quiet and stress-free environment.

“We are very excited about our new location. It is large and modern and offers additional amenities for patients and their owners in the Inland Empire,” says co-owner and lead doctor Colleen Mendelsohn DVM, Diplomate ACVD. In addition to Dr. Mendelsohn, Megan Frazer, DVM, Diplomate ACVD and Kimberly Lo, DVM, dermatology resident, will be receiving cases in the new facility. Drs. Mendelsohn and Frazer are two of just over two hundred board-certified specialists in dermatology in the U.S. and Canada. The Animal Dermatology Clinic-Ontario has been serving communities in and around the Inland Empire since October 2005 and has been co-located with another specialty practice. “Our new clinic is still within the same centrally located shopping center and provides easy access for many referring veterinarians and their clients. The clinic is located in the Vineyard Pavilion Shopping Center, 2409 S. Vineyard Ave., Suite M, Ontario, CA 91761 and appointments can be made by calling 909-218-8288.

Founded in 1980 by Dr. Craig Griffin, Animal Dermatology Clinic, is the largest group of veterinary dermatologists across the globe. The original clinic was located in Garden Grove, CA. In February of 2000 this practice moved to a multi-specialty veterinary referral practice in Tustin, CA, which is where the Orange County office of Animal Dermatology Clinic is today. Since 1980, Animal Dermatology Clinic has expanded to include nine full time clinics in San Diego, Los Angeles, Marina del Rey and Pasadena, CA. Additionally full time clinics are operating in Marietta, GA, Louisville, KY and Indianapolis, IN as well as Perth, Australia and the newest in Auckland, New Zealand. In addition there are 28 satellite facilities, throughout California, Georgia, Kentucky, Indiana, Maryland, Washington State and Western Australia. For more information, please visit the website at www.animaldermatology.com.

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SOURCE Animal Dermatology Clinic

Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center Partners with CipherHealth to Introduce New Patient Discharge Solution

“Echo” Provides Recorded Discharge Instructions for Blind and Visually Impaired Patients

NEW YORK, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Nationally recognized full-service teaching hospital Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center announced today it is among the first hospitals in the state to comply with the New York State Public Health law Act mandating that hospitals provide recorded discharge instructions to blind and visually impaired patients who request it with a permanent, sustainable solution. The introduction of the new law enabled Kingsbrook to enhance its discharge procedures for all patients with the launch of Echo, created by CipherHealth, a leading provider of innovations and technologies designed to help healthcare providers improve the quality of patient care.

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Echo was created to improve patient comprehension of and compliance to hospital discharge instructions. Echo allows healthcare providers to record secure instructions that patients can access from home. The platform gives patients and healthcare providers peace of mind after they leave the hospital and empowers them to take ownership of their care, post-discharge. The design of Echo made it versatile enough to allow Kingsbrook to be in rapid compliance with the new law while serving its entire patient population with a better level of care in the discharge process.

“The decision to implement CipherHealth’s Echo solution came as a way to provide top-notch care that meets specific patient needs,” said Dr. Jane Lederer, Vice President Nursing/Chief Nursing Officer for Kingsbrook. “For blind and visually impaired patients, this means empowering them with care plans they can comprehend in a most effective way.”

The New York State Public Health law, effective since October 2014, applies to all patients admitted and discharged from the hospital, including emergency departments. Hospitals must provide the recording upon discharge and must ensure that the patient requesting the information as a recording has access to it at his or her convenience.

“While Echo was created long before this new and important piece of legislation, we are quite pleased that we’ve been able to deliver it as a turn-key enhancement to Kingsbrook’s patient discharge procedures,” said Zach Silverzweig, Co-Founder of CipherHealth. “In terms of this new law, Echo truly represents a compliance solution that is fast to implement and allows centers to both quickly comply and also enhance the standard of care for all patients.”

About Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, celebrating its 89th year, is a 784-bed teaching Medical Center. Centers of Excellence Include: Kingsbrook Rehabilitation Institute offering Physical & Rehabilitative Medicine, including Brooklyn’s only New York State approved Traumatic Brain Injury & Coma Recovery Unit, an inpatient Geriatric Psychiatry Program, Pharmacy, Radiology, the Wound Healing & Hyperbaric Center, Orthopedic Surgery, a Women’s Wellness Center featuring Gynecological Surgery and state of the art Digital Mammography. Other specialty areas include: Emergency Services, Ambulatory Surgery and a Certified Non-Invasive Vascular Laboratory, as well as a 466-bed Adult and Pediatric long term care facility. Kingsbrook and Rutland Nursing Home are JCAHO certified and not-for-profit members of the Greater New York Hospital Association and the Healthcare Association of New York State.

About CipherHealth
Since 2009, CipherHealth has been innovating and delivering products to help care providers effectively and efficiently provide quality of care for their patients. By harnessing technology to improve patient outcomes and experiences, CipherHealth and its suite of products focus on the evolution of patient care. CipherHealth is based in New York City and was named “Best Place to Work in Healthcare” by Modern Healthcare (2014).

About Echo
Echo is a secure recording tool that allows healthcare providers to record discharge instructions that patients can access from home as frequently as they would like. Echo was designed to enable hospitals to better help their patients to comprehend and comply with their discharge instructions.

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SOURCE CipherHealth

Meridiam Reaches Financial Close For The Yozgat (Turkey) Education And Research Hospital Project

PARIS, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Meridiam, a leading global investor and asset manager specializing in public and community infrastructure, announced today that it has reached financial close for the Yozgat Education and Research Hospital Project. Following the firm’s recent closing of the Adana Integrated Healthcare Campus in December, 2014, Yozgat is Meridiam’s second such project in Turkey, and will be the first hospital PPP in Turkey to reach operations. Meridiam will design, build, finance, and operate the Yozgat Hospital, with a 24-month construction period followed by a 25-year operating period.

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Commercial Close was achieved on August 26 2014 with the signature of the Project Agreement between Ministry of Health of Turkey and the Project Company set up by Meridiam and its local partners. The 24-month construction period will be followed by a 25-year operating period.

The project will consist of a 475-bed hospital and associated technical and storage facilities, and is expected to become the first project to reach operations in Turkey’s PPP Healthcare Program. Designed as a single facility hospital, the project will help fulfill the growing demand for healthcare in the Yozgat area delivering a full range of healthcare services with state-of-the-art equipment in a single location thereby affording patients in the region efficient access to high quality healthcare. The Project fully meets Meridiam’s ESG Requirements as well as IFC’s Performance Standards (PSs) (2012), the EBRD Performance Requirements (PRs) (2014) and related World Bank Group Environmental, Health and Safety (EHS) Guidelines.

Leveraging its depth of experience and successful track record in PPP financing across Europe and North America, as well as its strong relationships with international banks and financial institutions, Meridiam was able to close an all-international commercial bank financing for the Project, a first for the Turkish PPP Healthcare Program. Yozgat represents an important milestone in the transformation of Turkey’s healthcare sector to improve healthcare services and facilitate greater access for the Turkish population in line with international standards.

“As Meridiam’s second investment in Turkey, the Yozgat Project reflects our continued commitment to the country as well as our confidence in the Ministry of Health’s program to improve the quality of healthcare services for the Turkish people,” said Thierry Deau, Founder/Chairman, Meridiam.

The closing also represents another landmark financing for Meridiam in the local project finance market, bringing together for the first time an all international commercial bank long term financing. The project’s funding includes an 18-year senior loan totaling EUR110m as well as equity investment by the shareholders in YZG Saglik Yatirim A.S., the project company formed to implement the Project.

About Meridiam

Founded in 2005, Meridiam is an independent investment firm specialized in the development, financing, and management of long-term public infrastructure projects. With offices in Paris, New York, Toronto and Istanbul, Meridiam is a leading investor in public infrastructure across Europe and North America. Currently managing EUR3.2 billion ($3.8 billion) of assets, the firm has to date invested in 40 projects. Designated Global Infrastructure Fund of the Year for the third time in 2012, Meridiam was also the first investor and asset manager to receive ISO 9001 certification for its responsible investment process. Meridiam is a founding member of the Long Term Infrastructure Investors Association.

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SOURCE Meridiam

Eye gene mutation strips color, reduces vision

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the Shiley Eye Institute at UC San Diego Health System have found a previously unidentified genetic mutation that plays a key role in the onset of an inherited eye disorder known as achromatopsia.

People with achromatopsia view the world as though they were watching an old black-and-white television set, and they have an extreme sensitivity to light that makes it nearly impossible to see in bright sunlight. The new mutation, published online Monday in the journal Nature Genetics, brings the total number of mutations discovered to six.

“There are whole families with this sort of vision problem all over the world,” Dr. Jonathan Lin, senior author of the study and an associate professor in the UC San Diego School of Medicine’s Department of Pathology, said. “We’re very excited to have discovered a mutation in the ATF6 gene which plays a major role in this disorder.”

New mutation affects a different process

Despite the fact that five genetic mutations had already been linked to achromatopsia, Dr. Lin said that there were still families that had the condition without any of those mutations, which led him to believe that there must be other genes involved. Sure enough, he and an international team of colleagues discovered a new mutation in the ATF6 gene that damaged proteins required for the eye’s cone photoreceptors to function properly.

The study authors looked at 18 achromatopsia patients from 10 different families, none of which possessed any of the five previously identified genetic mutations. Blood samples provided by the participants were analyzed using gene-sequencing technology, and each of the 18 participants were found to possess the newly-discovered ATF6 gene mutation.

When working correctly, the ATF6 gene is a key regulator of the unfolded protein response or UPR, a cellular stress relief mechanism drawing major scientific interest due to its role in many diseases, Dr. Lin explained. The UPR process helps the body ensure that its cellular proteins are functioning correctly, fixing badly folded or misshapen proteins to keep them from dying off.

“In this particular disease, we think a mutation in the ATF6 gene disrupts the UPR process and causes the production of bad proteins which keep cone photoreceptors from functioning properly,” he explained, adding that the UPR is a different molecular mechanism than those that the other five gene mutations affect. Dr. Lin added that his team was “really excited” because UPR represents “a new pathway found to be involved in this disease.”

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Zinc linked to development of kidney stones

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

In an attempt to find the root causes of kidney stones, a common urinary condition that can cause severe pain, a team led by scientists from the University of California, San Francisco have found that zinc levels could contribute to the formation of these small, hard deposits.

The study, which was published this week in the journal PLOS One, was designed to discover how the formation of urinary stones begins, and to pinpoint the cause of this and related ailments in order to discover new ways to prevent and/or treat these conditions.

“The ultimate goal of our research team is to prevent kidney stones from happening in the first place and to understand the mechanisms by which they form a part of that effort,” explained lead author, Dr. Thomas Chi, an assistant professor of medicine in the UCSF Department of Urology who has worked extensively on developing model of kidney stones using fruit flies.

Using fruit fly models to examine mineral interaction

Kidney stones are hard masses of crystalized minerals that form in a person’s kidney. While they can be small, they are often jagged in shape, and passing them can cause excruciating pain. Since fruit flies produce stones that are similar in nature to kidney stones, they have turned out to be an excellent model to explore potential risk factors in humans.

Dr. Chi and his UCSF colleagues, in collaboration with researchers from the Buck Institute on Aging and the Children’s Hospital of Oakland Research Institute, examined both humans and flies to investigate how zinc interacts with the other minerals that comprise kidney stones, which include oxalate and calcium.

“The idea made sense, because our most recent research demonstrates that zinc is important for the mineralization and calcification processes that lead to urinary stones,” Dr. Chi explained in a statement. His team found a link between changes in oxalate levels in the urine (an established risk factor for kidney stones) and dietary zinc intake. A decrease in zinc intake caused dramatic changes in urinary oxalate content, they discovered. Better cut down on that zinc intake!

Kidney stone prevalence has risen steadily over the past 30 years, forcing more than 500,000 people to go to the emergency room each year, according to the National Kidney Foundation. The lifetime risk of developing kidney stones is about 19 percent in men and nine percent in women, and up to half of those who develop one will have another within five years.

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Mystery disease claims half of endangered antelope population

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Nearly half of the global population of critically endangered Saiga antelope has died within the last month, and the culprit is believed to be an unknown environmental catalyst which causes the creature’s gut bacterial to turn virulent.

As BBC News explained on Monday, the antelope deaths were first reported on May 10. The creatures expire just hours after first showing symptoms, including depression, diarrhea, and even frothing at the mouth. Since it is currently calving season for the Saiga antelopes, reports indicate that entire herds of females and their newborn offspring have been wiped out.

Richard Kock of the Royal Veterinary College in London told BBC News that the animal begins by experiencing respiratory problems, loss of appetite, and extreme depression. Experts describe the spreading ailment as a major setback to conservation efforts that have helped the populations rebound from lows of approximately 50,000 during the 1990s.

Bacterial disease was likely the cause of death

According to Reuters, an estimated 300,000 Saiga (representing roughly 90 percent of the global population) roamed the steppes of Kazakhstan as of May 11, when the first dead antelope was discovered. Since then, over 120,000 bodies have been found in three different locations in their usual habitat, agricultural officials have said.

Yerzhan Madiyev, deputy head of the agricultural ministry’s veterinary committee, told the press that he and his colleagues believe that the deaths are due to pasteurellosis, a bacterial disease that can infect humans, cattle, rabbits, cats, and dogs. This microbe occurs naturally in the upper respiratory tract, but when a creature’s immune system becomes compromised, it grows harmful.

In addition to pasteurellosis, BBC News reports that another bacteria, clostridia, was also found on the bodies of each of the dead antelopes studied. Both bacteria occur naturally in the animal’s respiratory and gut systems, indicating that something most have reduced their immunity. One potential culprit is climate, as a very cold winter followed by a wet spring may have caused the Saiga to become more vulnerable to the bacteria.

“I have worked in veterinary diseases all my career and I have never seen 100 percent mortality. We had a herd of 60,000 aggregated and they all died. That is extraordinary,” Kock explained to Nature. Koch said that he helped perform necropsies on 50 antelope, and that the cause of death was likely “a polymicrobial disease” resulting from the bacteria. “Epidemiologically, you cannot get a directly transmitted disease to kill a whole population in seven days,” he added.

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Biomerics Announces Launch Of Rapid-Adapt(TM) Tool System

SALT LAKE CITY, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Biomerics LLC, a leading contract manufacturer and innovative polymer solutions provider for the medical device industry, announced today the launch of its proprietary Rapid-Adapt(TM) injection molding tool system.

“We are very proud of the Rapid-Adapt(TM) system–we’ve been working on it for the last two years and we’re excited to see it launch,” stated Dan Brittingham, VP of Engineering at Biomerics. “The Rapid-Adapt(TM) system enables us to provide fast, low-cost tooling solutions for vertically overmolded ISO 594 luers, ‘Y/T’ connectors, and junctions, as well as horizontally molded custom components and inserts. Ultimately, the Rapid-Adapt(TM) system allows us to better support our customers and help them get their products to market more efficiently.”

The Rapid-Adapt(TM) system is a proprietary injection molding tooling solution that utilizes a custom base and cavity design to enable tool standardization of catheters and medical components. The tooling system is available in 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 cavity drops, and can be applied to prototype manufacturing, bridge tooling, and/or full scale production. The system allows for fast cavity exchange without the removal of the base from the molding press. By stocking standard inserts, Biomerics can turn around new designs for its customers in as little as 2-3 weeks.

“As an FDA registered facility and an ISO-13485 certified manufacturer, we produce devices that must adhere to the requirements laid out under current good manufacturing practices (cGMP),” remarked Mike Anderson, Director of Sales and Marketing at Biomerics. “In order to ensure our compliance as a contract manufacturer, we have to document and manufacture products with precision and accuracy. The Rapid-Adapt(TM) system was developed with respect to cGMP and was designed to cut lead times and capital costs associated with traditional tooling, while preserving product realization/design transfer requirements.”

Travis Sessions, CEO of Biomerics, concluded, “We are excited about the Rapid-Adapt(TM) system and the flexibility and value it provides for customers. Combined with our expertise in material technologies, device development, and product manufacturing, the Rapid-Adapt(TM) system helps us deliver solutions to our customers faster than ever before. We are thrilled to expand our manufacturing capabilities and we are proud of the engineers who worked hard to develop this unique system.”

About Biomerics
Biomerics LLC specializes in the design, development, and production of finished medical devices used in diagnostic and interventional procedures. Biomerics provides complete development and manufacturing solutions for customers in the cardiovascular, structural heart, cardiac rhythm management, electrophysiology, neurovascular, vascular access, and pain management markets. Headquartered in Salt Lake City, Biomerics has operations across four ISO-13845 compliant facilities.

For more information, visit www.biomerics.com or call 1-888-874-7787.

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SOURCE Biomerics, LLC

San MediTech Showcases Smart Glucose Management Cloud Database at 75th ADA

BEIJING, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — San MediTech, the industry leader in China for continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) for diabetics, announced its plan to attend the American Diabetes Association (ADA) 75th Scientific Sessions in Boston on June 5(th) to 8(th) and present their newest Dynamic Glucose Monitoring System (DGMS). The company plans to show industry experts and academics from around the world the innovative technologies and advancements made by Chinese medical device companies. San MediTech will also unveil the world’s first data platform dedicated to diabetes management through continuous glucose monitoring.

San MediTech CGM: the integration of smart wearable devices and a big data health platform

As the only CGM company in China, San MediTech plans to showcase an innovative product: a novel Bluetooth CGM transmitter and mini-sensor. The device requires no dedicated receiver, and patients and doctors can view data on a smartphone. The showcase will take place at Booth 221 in the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center in Massachusetts. The San MediTech CGM is the world’s first dynamic glucose monitoring ecosystem. A simple, user-friendly app delivers medical data and receives news, tips, and advice from professionals. The system combines sensor and mobile communication technologies with big data analysis.

San MediTech will also show the results of research based on data mining of existing glucose data. This research highlights the transformation of San MediTech from a traditional medical device manufacturer to one based on research, service, and complete disease management. This research also heralds the arrival of the era when diabetes monitoring technology is combined with big data analysis as a means to determine the best options for treatment.

This wearable device is light, simple to apply and remove, and small in size. The patient wears the device on the upper arm. After inserting the sensor, accurate glucose readings are collected 24 hours per day and are automatically displayed on a smartphone via a Bluetooth connection. The SMT app also sends automated glucose threshold alerts, enabling doctors and patients to evaluate glucose trends and take appropriate precautions. This mitigates the effect of diabetes, and minimizes the likelihood of excursion-related complications.

The CGM system can also store exercise, diet, medication, location, and mood. This data, along with glucose levels, is uploaded via cellular networks or wireless Internet connections, allowing patients to share their data with health care practitioners, friends, and family. Data recipients and doctors can also communicate directly with the patient, should this be necessary.

San MediTech: the industry leader in China’s glucose monitoring technology

This is the fifth time that San MediTech has attended the ADA. San MediTech plans to take advantage of the opportunity to enhance brand visibility, raise global awareness across the sector of the company’s products and services, as well as expand global partnerships.

“We are honored to participate in the ADA as the event is the world’s highest-level symposium in the research area of diabetes,” said Hao Gang, chairman of San MediTech. “The San MediTech CGM presented at this ADA is a new mobile wearable medical device. Patients can monitor their glucose data anytime and anywhere through an app they can download to their cellphone. We are looking forward to improving communication with partners via this platform, enabling them to have a thorough understanding of San MediTech’s powerful technology and service capabilities while jointly exploring cooperation opportunities in this era of mobile medical data.”

Contributing to China’s “One Belt, One Road” strategy, while caring for maternal and infant health

The proportion of gestational diabetes is rising. In 2013 alone, nearly 21 million newborns were born to mothers affected by gestational diabetes (GDM). San MediTech has been paying close attention to GDM and has conducted research on hyperglycaemia during pregnancy in recent years.

The new San MediTech CGM is a welcome solution for pregnant women with glucose control issues, or for mothers who have previously given birth to babies with fetal macrosomia. CGM also streamlines the monitoring of glucose levels throughout pregnancy, and minimizes the resources required by a hospital to conduct glucose tests. With CGM, hospitals and pregnant women have access to a 24-hour curve and can immediately measure the impact of diet, exercise and lifestyle on glucose levels.

In response to a request from the government, San MediTech donated the most advanced gestational diabetes monitoring platform and equipment to hospitals in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. This area in northwest China is key to the roll out of China’s One Belt and One Road economic strategy. This platform brings together best-practices provided by the Endocrinology Department of Peking Union Medical College Hospital, and remote management of GDM via San MediTech’s CGM. The remote link-up officially went online on World Diabetes Day 2014.

San MediTech and its partners also joined hands with the China Welfare Institute in proposing the establishment of a CGM-based program for maternal and infant healthcare as part of the One Belt, One Road Medical Financial Assistance initiative, aimed at extending the program beyond Xinjiang as a means to provide better personalized medical services for pregnant women in the countries along the Silk Road Economic Belt.”We will keep innovating our products and services so that diabetic patients the world over can benefit from this business model,” said Hao Gang.

About San MediTech

San MediTech, founded in 2003, is a medical device company specializing in Dynamic Glucose Monitoring products, for which it holds several world-leading patents and technologies. The company has developed Dynamic Glucose Monitoring products for both hospitals and individuals to serve specific uses. These devices help diabetics benefit from the world’s most advanced glucose monitoring technology.

About ADA

The American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions is the largest diabetes meeting in the world, bringing together thousands of participants from America and the world-including experts, professors, clinicians and researchers. The latest research findings from every corner of the world and famous universities and research institutes in America will be presented at the sessions. The ADA Sessions, a wind vane in the prevention and cure of diabetes worldwide, is the top-level seminar in diabetes research area. At the sessions, industry experts, professors and attendees will exchange latest information about diabetes research, their views, opinions, comments and information about their ongoing scientific research activities in their labs.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/san-meditech-showcases-smart-glucose-management-cloud-database-at-75th-ada-300092453.html

SOURCE San MediTech

Kentucky Medical Services Foundation, Inc. Selects MedAptus’ Enroll Solution to Streamline Provider Enrollment Needs and Improve Overall Processes

Combination of Market-Leading Software and Services Ensures Timely Application Processing and Prevents Revenue Loss Related to Denials

BOSTON, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — MedAptus® today announced that Kentucky Medical Services Foundation, Inc. (KMSF) has contracted for the company’s Enroll offering, powered by Newport Credentialing Solutions, the nation’s premier provider of cloud-based credentialing workflow software and IT enabled services. By implementing Enroll for its growing provider base, KMSF will stem the potential revenue loss that can occur when a provider is not fully credentialed with a patient’s payer at the time of an encounter.

Based in Lexington, Kentucky, KMSF is a non-profit organization that was founded in 1978 and provides support for the more than 900 physicians and other healthcare providers affiliated with UK HealthCare. The system, which offers care in over 80 specialty areas, also operates acute medical centers such as Chandler Hospital, Good Samaritan Hospital, and Kentucky Children’s Hospital.

KMSF first engaged with MedAptus in 2008 for the company’s Pro Charge solution. Over the years, the MedAptus technology has been deployed to several hundred physicians and extenders to automate pro fee coding and billing processes at the point-of-care, with the benefit of embedded compliance intelligence and messaging tools. Today at KMSF, MedAptus serves as the central hub for operational charge management, reconciling and scrubbing charges entered directly by providers as well as charges passed from systems that include an outpatient EMR and computer-assisted coding from 3M.

In late 2014 MedAptus announced the Enroll offering as a front-end complement to its Charge capabilities. As payer enrollment requirements and policies continue to become more stringent, the risk of revenue loss associated with late and denied applications is a very real threat, particularly to larger organizations like KMSF. Groups that accept provider enrollment as a revenue cycle issue needing to be tightly managed with key performance metrics are better positioned to respond to regulatory changes and the emergence of new plan types as opposed to groups that view enrollment as a human resources function.

“MedAptus has been a valuable partner to KMSF and as someone who has prior experience with Newport Credentialing Solutions and its offerings, which comprise the Enroll solution, I am confident that the combined effort will produce the revenue cycle effect we are seeking,” said Motti Edelstein, chief revenue officer, UK HealthCare. He added that, “While we are delighted that more of our patients have coverage today, the explosion of new plans has increased the administrative overhead of provider enrollment, making the Enroll solution a critical part of how we will manage operational effectiveness.”

“Our relationship with KMSF has evolved tremendously over the past seven years. As their needs have changed and grown more complex with the addition of new technologies, we have responded accordingly. As it became apparent to us that customers such as UK HealthCare and Kentucky Medical Services Foundation are facing more opportunities for revenue loss due to increased payer requirements, we took a look at the earliest phase of the revenue cycle and found one administrative task that could cause much downstream loss – provider enrollment. Adding Newport’s software and service capabilities to our portfolio to address that issue was an easy decision given the company’s reputation and outstanding ROI results. We are happy that we could bring this offering to KMSF and help the organization improve enrollment timeliness and overall financial performance,” said Eugene Schneider, MedAptus president and CEO.

About MedAptus
MedAptus solutions streamline the process of delivering patient care. From simplifying pre-care clinical workforce needs, to automating administrative tasks at the point-of-care, our offerings provide customers with a foundation for improved operational efficiency, personal productivity and ultimately, optimized financial performance. Adoption of the MedAptus suite enables providers to spend their time where it matters most: with patients. For more information, visit www.medaptus.com, call 617.896.4000 or follow us on Twitter @MedAptus.

About Newport Credentialing Solutions
Newport Credentialing Solutions is the nation’s premier provider of cloud based software and IT enabled services dedicated to the credentialing life cycle. Newport provides cloud based workflow, analytics, and business intelligence credentialing software and IT enabled credentialing services to some of the largest academic medical centers, health systems, and multi-specialty group practices in the United States. Newport helps clients “Take Control” over their credentialing life cycle by streamlining operations, reducing credentialing related denials, and generating more cash for their organizations. For more information, please visit www.newportcredentialing.com, or call 516.593.1380.

MedAptus Contact:
Jennifer Crowley
p. 617.896.4030
Email

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SOURCE MedAptus

Nektar and MD Anderson Cancer Center Announce Phase 1/2 Clinical Research Collaboration for NKTR-214, a CD122-Biased Immuno-Stimulatory Cytokine

New collaboration to include translational research into predictive biomarkers

SAN FRANCISCO, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Nektar Therapeutics (NASDAQ:NKTR) and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center today announced a research collaboration that includes a Phase 1/2 clinical study to evaluate NKTR-214, a CD122-biased cytokine designed to preferentially stimulate production of CD8-positive T cells, which are tumor killing cells found naturally in the body. CD122, which is also known as the Interleukin-2 receptor beta sub-unit, is a key signaling receptor that is known to increase proliferation of these effector T cells.(1)

“We are certain that cytokines are an essential pillar of immunotherapy, along with checkpoint inhibitors, adoptive T cell therapy and cancer vaccines,” said Patrick Hwu, M.D., Division Head of Cancer Medicine at MD Anderson. “Through clinical studies, we will explore this new cytokine’s potential to preferentially activate an established target, the IL-2 receptor beta or CD122, in order to stimulate tumor cell killing within the tumor microenvironment. Collaborations with industry allow MD Anderson to pursue new treatment regimens that could dramatically improve patient treatment in the future.”

The agreement covers a Phase 1/2 study to evaluate NKTR-214 in a variety of tumor types as a monotherapy and in combination with other therapies, including PD-1 pathway inhibitors. Nektar and MD Anderson expect to initiate the first dose-escalation clinical study later this year. The two organizations will also conduct translational research to identify predictive biomarkers that can be used in the future development of NKTR-214.

“Nektar is pleased to collaborate with MD Anderson, a recognized leader in immuno-oncology, for clinical development of our lead immunotherapy candidate, NKTR-214,” said Ivan Gergel, M.D., Senior Vice President and Chief Medical Officer of Nektar. “We believe NKTR-214 has great potential in different tumor types, both as a single agent and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors and other inhibiting agents. This new alliance with MD Anderson will significantly advance the development of NKTR-214 and help us to potentially offer a new and important therapeutic option for cancer patients.”

In preclinical studies, NKTR-214 demonstrated a mean ratio of 450:1 within the tumor micro-environment of CD8-positive effector T-cells, which promote tumor killing, compared with CD4-positive regulatory T-cells, which are a type of cell that can suppress tumor killing.(2 )Furthermore, although NKTR-214 is a cytokine, it is designed to be dosed on an antibody-like schedule similar to the dosing schedules for PD-1 and CTLA-4 agents.

About NKTR-214
NKTR-214 is a CD122-biased immune-stimulatory cytokine, which is designed to stimulate the patient’s own immune system to kill tumor cells. By biasing activation to the CD122 receptor, NKTR-214 enhances CD8+ memory effector T cells (tumor-killing cells) in the tumor. In preclinical studies, a single dose of NKTR-214 resulted in a 400-fold AUC exposure within the tumor compared with an equivalent dose of the existing IL-2 therapy, enabling, for the first time, an antibody-like dosing regimen for a cytokine.(3) In dosing studies in non-human primates, there was no evidence of low blood pressure or vascular leak syndrome with NKTR-214 at predicted clinical therapeutic doses.(4) NKTR-214 is currently completing final IND-enabling studies and is expected to begin clinical testing in the second half of 2015.

About Nektar
Nektar Therapeutics has a robust R&D pipeline in pain, oncology, hemophilia and other therapeutic areas. In the area of pain, Nektar has an exclusive worldwide license agreement with AstraZeneca for MOVANTIK(TM) (naloxegol), the first FDA-approved once-daily oral peripherally-acting mu-opioid receptor antagonist (PAMORA) medication for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation (OIC), in adult patients with chronic, non-cancer pain. The product is also approved in the European Union as MOVENTIG® and is indicated for adult patients with OIC who have had an inadequate response to laxatives. The AstraZeneca agreement also includes NKTR-119, an earlier stage development program that is a co-formulation of MOVANTIK(TM) and an opioid. NKTR-181, a wholly-owned mu-opioid analgesic molecule for chronic pain conditions, is in Phase 3 development. NKTR-171, a wholly-owned new sodium channel blocker being developed as an oral therapy for the treatment of peripheral neuropathic pain, is in Phase 1 clinical development. In hemophilia, BAX 855, a longer-acting PEGylated Factor VIII therapeutic is in Phase 3 development conducted by partner Baxter. A BLA for BAX 855 was filed by Baxter to the US FDA in December, 2014 and is currently under review. In anti-infectives, Amikacin Inhale is in Phase 3 studies conducted by Bayer Healthcare as an adjunctive treatment for intubated and mechanically ventilated patients with Gram-negative pneumonia.

Nektar’s technology has enabled nine approved products in the U.S. or Europe through partnerships with leading biopharmaceutical companies, including AstraZeneca’s MOVANTIK(TM), UCB’s Cimzia® for Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis, Roche’s PEGASYS® for hepatitis C and Amgen’s Neulasta® for neutropenia.

Nektar is headquartered in San Francisco, California, with additional operations in Huntsville, Alabama and Hyderabad, India. Further information about the company and its drug development programs and capabilities may be found online at http://www.nektar.com.

MOVANTIK(TM) is a trademark of the AstraZeneca group of companies.

About MD Anderson
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the world’s most respected centers focused on cancer patient care, research, education and prevention. MD Anderson is one of only 41 comprehensive cancer centers designated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). For the past 25 years, MD Anderson has ranked as one of the nation’s top two cancer centers in U.S. News & World Report’s annual “Best Hospitals” survey. MD Anderson receives a cancer center support grant from the NCI of the National Institutes of Health (P30 CA016672).

Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements which can be identified by words such as: “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “expect,” “believe,” “should,” “may,” “will” and similar references to future periods. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements we make regarding the therapeutic potential of NKTR-214, the anticipated start of NKTR-214 clinical studies, and the potential of our technology and drug candidates in our research and development pipeline. Forward-looking statements are neither historical facts nor assurances of future performance. Instead, they are based only on our current beliefs, expectations and assumptions regarding the future of our business, future plans and strategies, anticipated events and trends, the economy and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of our control. Our actual results may differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Therefore, you should not rely on any of these forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements include, among others: (i) prior to commencing clinical studies for NKTR-214, Nektar must successfully finalize and submit an Investigational New Drug application to the FDA and such application must become effective; (ii) NKTR-214 is in early-stage research and there are a number of hurdles, including the successful completion of preclinical toxicology studies and successful manufacture of drug product, prior to the commencement of clinical studies for NKTR-214; (iii) our drug candidates and those of our collaboration partners are in various stages of clinical development and the risk of failure is high and can unexpectedly occur at any stage prior to regulatory approval for numerous reasons including safety and efficacy findings even after positive findings in previous preclinical and clinical studies; (iv) the timing of the commencement or end of clinical trials and the commercial launch of our drug candidates may be delayed or unsuccessful due to regulatory delays, slower than anticipated patient enrollment, manufacturing challenges, changing standards of care, evolving regulatory requirements, clinical trial design, clinical outcomes, competitive factors, or delay or failure in ultimately obtaining regulatory approval in one or more important markets; (v) scientific discovery of new medical breakthroughs is an inherently uncertain process and the future success of applying our technology platform to potential new drug candidates (such as NKTR-214) is therefore highly uncertain and unpredictable and one or more research and development programs could fail; and (vi) certain other important risks and uncertainties set forth in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 1, 2015. Any forward-looking statement made by us in this press release is based only on information currently available to us and speaks only as of the date on which it is made. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.

Contact:
Investors
Jennifer Ruddock of Nektar Therapeutics
415-482-5585

Media
Ryan Flinn of WCG
415-946-1059
[email protected]

    1. Boyman, J., et al., Nature Reviews Immunology, 2012, 12, 180-190.
    2. Charych, D., et al., Cancer Res. 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 482 and
       Data on file.
    3. Hoch U, at al. AACR; Mol Cancer Ther. 2013;12(11 Suppl):Abstract nr B296.
    4. Data on file.  Nektar Therapeutics.

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SOURCE Nektar Therapeutics

Perrigo To Acquire Portfolio Of Leading OTC Brands From GSK

— Portfolio includes well-established European brands in the areas of nicotine replacement therapy, cold and flu, and cold sore management

DUBLIN, June 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Perrigo Company plc (“Perrigo”) (NYSE: PRGO; TASE) today announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire a portfolio of well-established over-the-counter (“OTC”) brands from GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare (“GSK”), in connection with GSK’s commitments to the European Commission and other regulators to divest these businesses in the context of the formation of a consumer health joint venture between GSK and Novartis International AG (“Novartis”). Perrigo will acquire the following assets in an all-cash transaction in which the purchase price was not disclosed.

http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnvar/20120301/DE62255LOGO

    --  GSK's NiQuitin nicotine replacement therapy ("NRT") business, primarily
        in the European Economic Area ("EEA") and Brazil, and Novartis's legacy
        Australian NRT business, including the Nicotinell brand;
    --  Several assorted OTC brands including Coldrex (cold and flu treatment)
        across the EEA, and Panodil (pain relief), Nezeril (nasal decongestant),
        and Nasin (nasal decongestant) in Sweden; and
    --  Novartis's legacy cold sore management products primarily in the EEA,
        marketed under the brand names Vectavir, Pencivir, Fenivir, Fenlips and
        Vectatone.

Perrigo Chairman, President and CEO Joseph C. Papa commented, “This acquisition demonstrates Perrigo’s ability to execute on our ‘Base Plus Plus Plus’ strategy, in which we make selective, accretive transactions to expand our durable base business. We are building on the global platform we established with the Omega Pharma acquisition to capture an even greater share of the $30 billion European OTC market opportunity with several well-established, complementary brands that bolster our OTC product portfolio. We are committed to making investments in these brands to grow their market positions in key geographies, by following Omega Pharma’s proven approach to brand building.

“Perrigo is uniquely positioned to maximize the potential of these brands by leveraging Omega Pharma’s leading European commercial infrastructure, pan-European distribution network, strong brand-building capabilities, and exceptional management team. This announcement comes on the heels of our recent acquisition of European OTC dermatological product, Vitasil, which recently closed. With our global platform in place and our robust balance sheet, we are ideally positioned to execute immediately accretive deals, such as this one, that will have a multiplier effect on our growth.”

The acquisition is expected to be immediately accretive to Perrigo’s calendar 2015 adjusted earnings per share, excluding estimated intangible amortization and transaction-related costs. The transaction has been unanimously approved by the Boards of Directors of Perrigo and GSK, and is expected to close in the third quarter of 2015, pending approval by the European Commission, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, and Brazil’s Council for Economic Defense, as well as the satisfaction of customary closing conditions.

Conference Call AT 8:00 AM EDT, June 2, 2015:

Perrigo will host a conference call and live webcast on Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 8:00 a.m. (ET) to discuss the strength of the Omega Pharma platform and the highlights of this acquisition. Interested parties can access the webcast in the investor relations section of the Perrigo website at http://perrigo.investorroom.com/events-webcasts or by phone at (877) 248-9413, International (973) 582-2737, and reference ID# 57067677. A taped replay of the call will be available beginning at approximately 11:00 a.m. (ET) Tuesday, June 2, 2015 until midnight Tuesday, June 16, 2015. To listen to the replay, dial (855) 859-2056, International (800) 585-8367, and use access code 57067677.

((1)) Translated at current exchange rates

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements in this press release are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and are subject to the safe harbor created thereby. These statements relate to future events or the Company’s future financial performance and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, levels of activity, performance or achievements of the Company or its industry to be materially different from those expressed or implied by any forward-looking statements. In some cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by terminology such as “may,” “will,” “could,” “would,” “should,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential” or other comparable terminology. The Company has based these forward-looking statements on its current expectations, assumptions, estimates and projections. While the Company believes these expectations, assumptions, estimates and projections are reasonable, such forward-looking statements are only predictions and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the Company’s control. Such risks include the possibility that the acquired assets may not perform as well as expected and that the Company may not achieve the value creation contemplated by the transaction. These and other important factors, including those discussed under “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Form 10-K for the year ended June 28, 2014, as well as the Company’s subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, may cause actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements in this press release are made only as of the date hereof, and unless otherwise required by applicable securities laws, the Company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Irish Takeover Rules

The directors of Perrigo accept responsibility for the information contained in this announcement. To the best of the knowledge and belief of the directors of Perrigo (who have taken all reasonable care to ensure such is the case), the information contained in this announcement is in accordance with the facts and does not omit anything likely to affect the import of such information.

No statement in this announcement is intended to constitute a profit forecast for any period, nor should any statements be interpreted to mean that earnings or earnings per share will necessarily be greater or lesser than those for the relevant preceding financial periods for Perrigo. No statement in this announcement constitutes an asset valuation.

A person interested in 1% or more of any class of relevant securities of Perrigo or Mylan may have disclosure obligations under Rule 8.3 of the Irish Takeover Panel Act, 1997, Takeover Rules, 2013 (“Irish Takeover Rules”).

A disclosure table, giving details of the companies in whose “relevant securities” “dealings” should be disclosed can be found on the Irish Takeover Panel’s website at ww.irishtakeoverpanel.ie. “Interests in securities” arise, in summary, when a person has long economic exposure, whether conditional or absolute, to changes in the price of securities. In particular, a person will be treated as having an “interest” by virtue of the ownership or control of securities, or by virtue of any option in respect of, or derivative referenced to, securities. Terms in quotation marks are defined in the Irish Takeover Rules, which can be found on the Irish Takeover Panel’s website.

If you are in any doubt as to whether you are required to disclose a “dealing” under Rule 8, please consult the Irish Takeover Panel’s website at www.irishtakeoverpanel.ie or contact the Irish Takeover Panel on telephone number +353 1 678 9020; fax number +353 1 678 9289.

About Perrigo

Perrigo Company plc, a top five global over-the-counter (OTC) consumer goods and pharmaceutical company, offers consumers and customers high quality products at affordable prices. From its beginnings in 1887 as a packager of generic home remedies, Perrigo, headquartered in Ireland, has grown to become the world’s largest manufacturer of OTC products and supplier of infant formulas for the store brand market. The Company is also a leading provider of branded OTC products, generic extended topical prescription products and receives royalties from Multiple Sclerosis drug Tysabri®. Perrigo provides “Quality Affordable Healthcare Products®” across a wide variety of product categories and geographies primarily in North America, Europe, and Australia, as well as other key markets including Israel and China. Visit Perrigo online at (http://www.perrigo.com).

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SOURCE Perrigo Company plc

Element of surprise can trigger autistic behavior

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

The authors of a new study, recently completed at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), claim that their work will radically change the way that autism is viewed and treated by suggesting that predictability may help prevent or limit symptoms.

In the study, co-author Professor Henry Markram (himself the father of an autistic child) and his colleagues report that social and sensory overstimulation can drive autistic behavior, and that by presenting a child that with an enriched environment that is structured, safe, and tailored to his or her unique sensitivities, parents can help kept these behaviors at bay.

Professor Markram’s team exposed rats to a known autism risk factor, the anticonvulsant and mood-stabilizing drug valproate, and raised them in a home environment that is predictable and offers little in the way of surprise, without being devoid of sensory or social engagement. They found that these rats did not develop fear, anxiety, or social withdrawal.

Diagnosing hyper-brain early could open up new treatment options

These observations support the somewhat unconventional view that the brains of autistic people are hyperfunctional, and that providing these patients with consistent and non-surprising surroundings could prevent such symptoms. They also claim that these results show that autistic brains are not necessarily damaged and in need of extensive stimulation.

In a statement, Markram called the valproate model used in the research “highly relevant for understanding autism, because children exposed to valproate in the womb have an increased chance of presenting autism after birth.” His team found that rodents who were exposed to the chemical compound early on in their embryonic development began to demonstrate behavioral, anatomical, and neurochemical abnormalities comparable to the traits of human autism.

“We were amazed to see that environments lacking predictability, even if enriched, favored the development of hyper-emotionality in rats exposed to the prenatal autism risk factor,” Markram added. The findings indicate that, at least in some individuals, non-predictable environments can lead to the development of an array of negative symptoms, including sensory abnormalities and social withdrawal.

What this means, according to the researchers, is that if brain hyper-function can be diagnosed shortly after birth, at least some of the negative effects associated with this trait can be combated by providing the child with a specialized environment that is safe, controlled, consistent, and only subject to change at a gradual pace set forth by the child.

—–

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Jewelry Television® to Debut La Capilla Prasiolite

Rare Green Gemstone Will Launch during Annual Jewelry Fest Event

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (PRWEB) June 01, 2015

Jewelry Television (JTV) announced that the single Uruguayan mine that has produced some of the finest amethyst and citrine in existence has yielded yet another important gemstone, decadent green prasiolite. The 24/7 jewelry and gemstone shopping network will debut La Capilla Prasiolite™, during its annual Jewelry Fest event May 30 through June 7, 2015.

La Capilla Prasiolite™, which derives its name from the tall and slender amethyst crystals resembling the chapel steeples of Uruguay-Brazil, begins life as amethyst but is transformed into deeply saturated green prasiolite after a carefully monitored enhancement process. Once the rough crystals are mined and processed, they make their way to Brazil to be fashioned into stunning gems by renowned Brazilian lapidaries. Each gem has been examined and hand selected as worthy of carrying the La Capilla™ brand name, which is proprietary to JTV.

“Each gem personifies the finest qualities of prasiolite and is sure to surpass the expectations of the most discriminating gem lover,” said Jill Johnson, vp of marketing for JTV. “While a majority of the prasiolite gems in the market are a lighter, minty green color, our La Capilla™ gems are among those with the deepest color in the market today. It is only fitting that this gorgeous gemstone debuts as part of the tradition of our annual Jewelry Fest event,” noted Johnson.

“Less than 2% of prasiolite from this mine yields gems of such saturated color after enhancement,” explained Tim Matthews, Graduate Gemologist and CEO of JTV. “From 200 kilograms (roughly 440 lbs.) of rough material, only 3 kilos (6.6 lbs.) are designated La Capilla Prasiolite™ quality.”

For more information on prasiolite and other gemstones, visit JTV’s extensive Gemopedia.

About Jewelry Television® (JTV)

Jewelry Television® (JTV) is one of the largest multichannel retailers of jewelry and gemstones in the U.S. appealing to fashion-conscious women, jewelry-making enthusiasts and private collectors. The privately-held shopping network broadcasts high definition programing, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to more than 80 million U.S. households. Committed to consumer education, the network employs numerous Graduate Gemologists and Accredited Jewelry Professionals. JTV.com offers the most comprehensive jewelry and gemstone Learning Library on the Internet, and is the third largest jewelry website according to Internet Retailer’s Top 500 Guide for 2012.

# # #

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/05/prweb12756541.htm

Sildenafil Industry in China 2019 Investigation Report Now Available at ChinaMarketResearchReports.com

ChinaMarketResearchReports.com adds “Investigation Report on China Sildenafil Market, 2010-2019” to its online library.

DALLAS, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire-iReach/ — Hundreds of millions of adult men suffer from erectile dysfunction (ED) throughout the world and there are also over 50 million ED patients in China. It is shown that among men aged above 35, over 60% suffer from different degrees of ED, among which 50% is due to pure organogenic pathogeny, 30% pure psychogenic factors and 20% both of the former two. Men with ED are prone to sense of inferiority and depression, which influence their emotions and life gravely. Therefore, the sexual dysfunction of adult men can’t be ignored. Hence many drug makers’ close attention to the drug market of ED. Complete report on Sildenafil Market Published in May 2015 of 20 pages is available at http://www.chinamarketresearchreports.com/115067.html .

Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150601/219723

Sildenafil, developed by Pfizer, has a main indication of ED and other indications like pulmonary hypertension and altitude sickness.

Pfizer sought patent for Viagra from China’s State Intellectual Property Office in 1994 and succeed. The Patent Law of China formulates that the valid term for a patent is 20 years, therefore, Viagra’s patent shall expire in 2014. During the 20 years, Sildenafil (trade name Viagra) basically monopolized Chinese market. With the expiry of Virgra patent, Sildenafil made by local enterprises is expected to get a slice of Chinese market. According to survey on sample hospitals, after entering China in 1998, Viagra showed no sudden explosion with a CAGR of about 13.1% during the period of 20062014. According to the main reason lies in this: since Viagra could also be bought without prescription in many pharmacies despite its status as prescription drug as a result of loose control, its sales growth mainly comes from pharmacies instead of hospitals. Viagra has occupied an important position among drugs for sexual dysfunction for a long time in China, therefore many local firms start to make generic drugs in succession. Although Viagra’s price will drop as generic drugs start to appear in the Chinese market, Pfizer’s market share will still go down for the price of generic drugs made by local firms is lower.

According to this survey, the retail price of Viagra made by Pfizer in China exceeds 100 CNY/pill (100 ml), but that in America is about 8 USD/pill which is equivalent to less than 50 CNY/pill.

In 2004, Pfizer’s Viagra was qualified to enter Chinese retail pharmacies. Similar drugs in the market like Bayer’s Levitra (Vardenafil) got such qualification in 2006 and Lilly’s Cialis (Tadalafil) in 2007. Order a copy of the China Sildenafil Market report at http://www.chinamarketresearchreports.com/contacts/purchase.php?name=115067 .

As the patent protection of Viagra all over the world start to expire, its market share will gradually decrease. A good case in point is the Korean market where up to 28 kinds of generic drugs with different forms and dosages appeared the day after the expiry of Viagra’s patent in Korea on May.17, 2012. Since the price of such generic drugs equals only one third of Viagra’s price, the sales value of Viagra in that month fell by more than 40% compared with the same period of last year. After Viagra’s patent expired, pharmaceutical companies can produce Sildenafil as long as they get complete approval. In Oct. 2014, sildenafil citrate (trade name Jin Ge) made by Guangzhou Bai Yun Shan Pharmaceutical General Factory hit the market. According to the statistics by May 2015, Jiangsu Lianhuan Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd, Sichuan Yuanji Pharmaceutical Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd, the Biochemical Pharmaceutical Factory of Zhuhai SEZ and Beijing Midsky Kangda Medicine Technology Co., Ltd have all applied for the approval of generic drugs of Viagra.

With the economic development, the change of life styles and the increased psychological pressures, the number of ED patients will keep growing in the next few years in China. Besides, as Sildenafil is estimated to add new indications to current ones, its market size will keep growing in the next few years in China.

Readers can get at least the following information through this report:

    --  ED incidence in China
    --  sales status of Sildenafil in China
    --  price of Sildenafil in Chinese hospitals
    --  market outlook of Sildenafil in China

The author suggests the following groups of people purchase this report:

    --  manufacturers of ED drugs
    --  medical institutions
    --  investors/ research institutions interested in ED drug market

Explore more reports on “Life Sciences” market at http://www.chinamarketresearchreports.com/cat/life-sciences.html .

About Us:

China Market Research Reports is a database of selected syndicated market reports for global and China industries including but not limited to life sciences, information technology & telecommunications, consumer goods, food and beverages, energy and power, automotive and transportation, manufacturing and construction, materials and chemicals, public sector as well as business and financial services. We provide 24/7 online and offline support to our customers. Call +1 888 391 5441 with your research requirements or email the details on [email protected] This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it and we would be happy to help you find the business intelligence that you need.

Media Contact: Ritesh Tiwari, China Market Research Reports, +1 888 391 5441, [email protected]

News distributed by PR Newswire iReach: https://ireach.prnewswire.com

SOURCE China Market Research Reports

BakerHostetler Adds 32-Lawyer Group in Atlanta, Including 12 New Partners

Addition includes large healthcare team plus corporate group; Arrivals mark substantial enhancement to national healthcare/life sciences practice as well as firm’s Southeast presence

ATLANTA, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — BakerHostetler has made a significant expansion to its Atlanta office with the addition of a 32-member team from McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP. The incoming group adds 27 attorneys to BakerHostetler’s national Healthcare Industry team and includes lawyers who concentrate on healthcare-related litigation, real estate, transactional, and regulatory matters. The team now totals more than 80 attorneys nationally. Also joining the Atlanta office from McKenna are five corporate attorneys.

The new Atlanta group comprises 12 partners, 5 counsel, and 15 associates.

BakerHostetler established its Atlanta office in 2014, when it combined with intellectual property boutique Woodcock Washburn. The firm’s significant investment in Atlanta reflects the steady growth the city has experienced in recent years as a key hub for business, banking, finance, education, and healthcare.

“The 32 lawyers joining us present a great opportunity to further grow our national healthcare team while quickly expanding our presence in Atlanta and the Southeast,” said BakerHostetler Chairman Steven Kestner. “Having a strong, diverse platform for healthcare and life sciences work is an important part of the firm’s growth strategy. The fact that most of our new attorneys have been practicing together for many years and bring experience in healthcare-related litigation, corporate transactions, regulatory affairs, and real estate is an obvious plus. We’re excited by their arrival.”

Leading the incoming healthcare group is partner Jim Rawls, a noted litigator who is also recognized for his First Amendment work and media law experience. He joins Partners Christopher Swift, Scott McBride, and Noah Rosenberg as a co-leader of the national Healthcare team. Rosenberg, who joined the firm in April, is recognized as one of the country’s preeminent managed care attorneys representing leading hospitals, health systems, physician groups, and employers. He has advised on the innovative development of more than 200 physician groups and integration models among hospitals, physicians, and purchasers of healthcare.

BakerHostetler’s Healthcare team includes attorneys with multiple practice strengths impacting healthcare entities. The group handles matters involving corporate transactions, managed care, federal and state regulatory compliance, False Claims Act defense, white collar representation, antitrust, labor and employment, data breach and compliance, litigation, licensing, business formation, tax, government policy, restructuring and bankruptcy, and intellectual property. The firm’s healthcare clients include major hospitals and health systems, academic medical centers, pharmaceutical and medical device companies, long-term care facilities, home health, hospice and niche providers, as well as venture capital investors operating in the sector.

The healthcare practice also encompasses significant intellectual property, transactional, regulatory, and litigation work, with a large contingent of lawyers working out of the firm’s Washington, D.C. office that includes significant antitrust and FDA regulatory assignments. The firm’s prominence in healthcare was given an added boost following last year’s merger with Woodcock Washburn, which brought in a large number of lawyers experienced in sophisticated patent counsel and litigation work on behalf of leading life sciences, pharmaceutical, and medical device companies.

“BakerHostetler has built one of the largest and most versatile healthcare legal teams in the U.S.,” said Swift. “We have the lawyers and the experience to match the challenges our clients face. From regulatory and policy changes to headline privacy incidents and market-altering collaborations – industry players demand strategic direction at every turn. Our lawyers help anticipate these challenges for our healthcare clients and we’re proud to be an integral part of delivering the best in patient care.”

BakerHostetler’s healthcare industry stature is also reflected in the firm’s annual Legislative Seminar, bringing together a bipartisan group of elected officials from both the U.S. Congress and Senate to discuss key legislative and policy issues coming out of the federal government, with a keen focus on national healthcare matters. The Washington Times has called the program a “Who’s Who in Politics.” This year’s session – the 26th annual event – will be held on Wednesday, June 10, at the Hyatt Regency in Washington, D.C. More information can be found here. In concert with the seminar, BakerHostetler will host clients at a briefing by congressional staffers on the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in King v. Burwell and the potential impact on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The attorneys joining BakerHostetler’s Atlanta office include:

Partners
Jim Rawls
S. Derek Bauer
David K. Brown (joined on May 1)
Clayton W. Coley (joined on May 7)
Charlotte A. Combre
Emily C. Crosby (joining June 5)
Amy E. Fouts
Joann Gallagher Jones
Wendy W. Markham
Charlene L. McGinty
Kathlynn Butler Polvino
Robert M. Rozier

Counsel
Vimala Devassy
Lynn S. Garson
Shannon A. Kidwell
Kristi A. Lange
Kimberly S. Ruark

Associates
Anna E. Altizer
Ian K. Byrnside
Christopher L. Cottrell Jr.
Payal P. Crame
Stephen M. Floyd
Gregory E. Fosheim
W. Christopher Hart
Laura M. Haskins
Josiah B. Heidt
Laurice Rutledge Lambert
Kristi K. North
Darrell J. Solomon
Erica Svoboda
Jennifer P. Whitton
Kristen McDermott Woodrum

About BakerHostetler

One of the nation’s leading law firms, BakerHostetler helps clients around the world to address their most complex and critical business and regulatory issues. With five core national practice groups – business, employment, intellectual property, litigation, and tax – the firm has more than 900 lawyers located in 14 offices coast to coast. Recognized for its role as court-appointed counsel to the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA) Trustee in the recovery of billions of dollars in principal lost in the Ponzi scheme perpetrated by Bernard L. Madoff, BakerHostetler is widely regarded as having one of the country’s top 10 tax practices, a nationally recognized litigation practice, data privacy practice, and an industry-leading business practice. For more information, visit www.bakerlaw.com.

Contact:
Tracy Hager
303.764.4090
[email protected]

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/bakerhostetler-adds-32-lawyer-group-in-atlanta-including-12-new-partners-300091827.html

SOURCE BakerHostetler

Jason’s Deli, MD Anderson "Strike Through Cancer" Alliance Continues with New Healthy Salad

Charitable Campaign Benefitting MD Anderson Cancer Center Also Features In-Store Tributes to Loved Ones Affected by the Disease

BEAUMONT, Texas, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Approximately one third to one half of all cancers are preventable. That’s why Jason’s Deli and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center are expanding their healthy alliance by introducing a new, nutrient-rich Quinoa, Shrimp & Mango Salad as part of the “Strike Through Cancer” campaign.

Jason’s Deli’s Quinoa, Shrimp & Mango Salad
Jason’s Deli chefs and MD Anderson dieticians and cancer prevention researchers collaborated over several months to develop the salad, specifically designed with nutrition in mind. The chefs worked with different combinations of nutrient-dense ingredients identified by the MD Anderson team until they landed on a taste and presentation they knew would delight Jason’s Deli guests.

“Our alliance with Jason’s Deli extends far beyond fundraising. It is based on our mutual interest in providing people with accessible and healthy dining options, especially promoting a diet that is largely plant based and may have the potential to reduce the risk of cancer,” said Therese Bevers, M.D., professor, Clinical Cancer Prevention at MD Anderson Cancer Center. “This collaboration is a great reminder that there are steps we can take every day to reduce the chances of a future diagnosis.”

The nutrient-rich salad is specifically designed as a convenient and healthy dining option in accordance with the American Institute of Cancer Research’s and World Cancer Research Fund’s guidelines for cancer risk reduction.

Not only is the salad packed with flavor and fresh ingredients such as fruit, vegetables and whole grains, it only contains approximately 310 calories for an entree portion.

Watch the trailer for the salad here. Nutritional information can be found here.

“Strike Through Cancer”
In addition to co-creating the new salad, Jason’s Deli is hosting the “Strike Through Cancer” campaign during the month of June in stores throughout the country to raise money for cancer research and prevention at MD Anderson. Guests who contribute one dollar to the campaign will receive a Sharpie® marker at the point of purchase. They can use the marker to create a tribute for a loved one on the in-store display. Guests are also invited to photograph their tributes and share via social media using #EndCancer.

“We are deeply honored to continue the ‘Strike Through Cancer’ campaign with MD Anderson,” said Joe Tortorice Jr., CEO of Jason’s Deli. “No one is immune to cancer and many of our employees and their families have been touched by it. Supporting cancer prevention through high-quality menu options and funding cancer research through generosity of spirit is a deeply meaningful pursuit for us.”

The “Strike Through Cancer” campaign was originally launched in 2013 after several Jason’s Deli employees and their family members rebounded from cancer thanks to the care and expertise provided by MD Anderson experts.

Jason’s Deli helped expand MD Anderson’s research efforts by donating money from in-store bottled water sales to the world-renowned cancer center. Specially designed labels on Jason’s Deli-branded water bottles called attention to the effort by featuring stories and photos of Jason’s Deli employees and their families touched by cancer. The water bottle campaign, which is ongoing at Jason’s Deli, has raised more than $300,000 to date and was recently honored by the Cause Marketing Forum (CMF) with a Golden Halo nomination for excellence in health-related campaigns. Awards will be announced May 28 at the annual CMF conference in Chicago.

About Jason’s Deli
A family-owned deli restaurant chain, Jason’s Deli was founded in Beaumont, Texas, in 1976 by Joe Tortorice, Jr. and now has more than 250 locations in 29 states. In 2005, Jason’s Deli was the first major restaurant concept to ban artificial trans fats in the U.S. and later became the first to eliminate high-fructose corn syrup. At Jason’s Deli, regardless if you seek gluten-free or vegetarian options, healthy kids’ meals, or if you would like to build your own salad at their famous salad bar, you will be delighted by the bigger choices of better food, from healthy to indulgent. For more information, please visit www.jasonsdeli.com

About MD Anderson
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the world’s most respected centers focused on cancer patient care, research, education and prevention. MD Anderson is one of only 41 comprehensive cancer centers designated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). For the past 25 years, MD Anderson has ranked as one of the nation’s top two cancer centers in U.S. News & World Report’s annual “Best Hospitals” survey. MD Anderson receives a cancer center support grant from the NCI of the National Institutes of Health (P30 CA016672).

https://photos.prnewswire.com/prnvar/20150601/219818

Media Contact:
Meghan Butler
1-512-657-4548
[email protected]

Video – https://youtu.be/RZSvyPKeBM0
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SOURCE Jason’s Deli

Sleeping problems could lead to Alzheimer’s disease

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Poor sleep quality may play an important role in Alzheimer’s disease, as a lack of the deep, restorative sleep through which memories are preserved could cause the beta-amyloid protein associated with the onset of the neurodegenerative condition to begin accumulating.

In the study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, a team of researchers from the University of California, Berkeley explained that their finding reveals a new pathway through which Alzheimer’s could cause memory decline later on in life.

Excessive amounts of the beta-amyloid process have previously been suggested as playing a key role in the pathology of this form of dementia, and the new research demonstrates that one of the potential causes of this accumulation is something that is treatable.

As Dr. Matthew P. Walker, senior author of the study, a neuroscience and psychology at UC Berkeley and director of their Sleep and Neuroimaging Laboratory, told redOrbit via email, the findings “reveal a new piece in solving the puzzle of Alzheimer’s disease, one that is contributing to memory impairment in later life.”

“We know that sleep, and specifically deep sleep, effectively ‘hits the save button’ on new memories, preventing you from forgetting,” he added. “Our discovery indicates that the toxic protein associated Alzheimer’s disease results in the loss deep sleep, one consequence of which is memory impairment and forgetting in the elderly.”

Emphasizing the importance of good, quality sleep

UC Berkeley neuroscientist and co-lead investigator Dr. Bryce Mander explained that the research suggests that at least part of the reason that the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease causes memory loss that it disrupts the deep sleep rhythms essential for creating a more permanent record of a person’s memories.

“Because of this,” he told redOrbit, “a significant implication of this work is that enhancing deep sleep could lessen the memory decline associated with Alzheimer’s disease pathology, or delay onset into Alzheimer’s disease. This identifies a new target for future treatments for individuals at risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease.”

As the study authors noted, poor sleep can be treated, and sleep quality can be improved through regular exercise, behavioral therapy, and through electrical stimulation that amplifies brain waves during sleep when needed – a technology which has been demonstrated to effectively increase the overnight memory in young adults.

“This discovery offers potential hope,” Dr. Walker said to redOrbit. “Sleep disruption is a potentially treatable target, and we are fast developing new ways to enhance deep sleep. Using these new sleep therapies, soon we may be able to restore quality deep sleep in older adults and even those with dementia, salvaging memory.”

“Sleep is important for your cognitive health, and sleeping poorly could put you at greater risk for cognitive decline and even developing neurodegenerative dementias later in life,” added Dr. Mander. “If you have a sleep problem, tell your physician about it, and seek treatment. If you have a cognitive disorder, make sure you are screened for sleep disorders. Having an untreated sleep disorder may exacerbate the symptoms of your cognitive disorder. Most of all, don’t short-change your sleep, because your brain needs it to stay healthy.”

—–

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New research provides evidence for origin of life

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

According to the abiogenesis theory, the first amino acids formed into the proteins that served as the building blocks of all living cells nearly four billion years ago; and now a pair of studies published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has revealed more about the processes behind this transition.

In the papers, University of North Carolina scientists Dr. Richard Wolfenden and Dr. Charles Carter, discuss two key stages of the process which brought life out of the primordial soup and ultimately resulted in the formation of plants and animals. These are the two primary stages through which the genetic code was first developed and how chemicals evolved into cells.

As Dr. Carter, a professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the UNC School of Medicine, explained in a statement, “Our work shows that the close linkage between the physical properties of amino acids, the genetic code, and protein folding was likely essential from the beginning, long before large, sophisticated molecules arrived on the scene. This close interaction was likely the key factor in the evolution from building blocks to organisms.”

Unlike the “RNA World” theory, which claims that the molecule that is currently involved in the coding, regulation, and expression of genes, elevated itself from the primordial soup before going on to form short proteins known as peptides (and eventually single-celled organisms), the authors of the new study argue that RNA did not act on its own. It had help.

Early interactions between amino acids and nucleotides

Approximately 3.6 billion years ago, there was a life form known as the last universal common ancestor (LUCA) of all living things that currently exist on Earth, the UNC scientists explained. This entity was likely a single-celled organism that had a few hundred genes, and it already had complete how-to guides for DNA replication, protein synthesis, and RNA transcription.

LUCA also already had all of the basic components that modern organisms possess (including lipids). From this point on, the evolutionary processes that resulted in modern-day life are easy to see. However, there is no concrete evidence detailing how LUCA’s predecessors formed from chemicals into amino acids, then into proteins, then into cells.

“We know a lot about LUCA and we are beginning to learn about the chemistry that produced building blocks like amino acids, but between the two there is a desert of knowledge,” Dr. Carter explained. He added that Dr. Wolfenden was able to determine the physical properties of the 20 amino acids, and found a link between those traits and the genetic code.

“That link suggests to us that there was a second, earlier code that made possible the peptide-RNA interactions necessary to launch a selection process that we can envision creating the first life on Earth,” Dr. Carter added. Thus, RNA did not invent itself out of the primordial soup. Instead, there were most likely early interactions between amino acids and nucleotides that resulted in the co-creation of proteins and RNA.

Protein folding differed during Earth’s primordial era

In one of the new PNAS studies, Dr. Wolfenden and his colleagues showed that the way amino acids distribute between water and oil (their polarities) and their sizes help explain the complex processes in which proteins fold themselves to function properly. They found that the polarities of amino acids consistently change based on temperature, but not in a way that disrupts the core relationship between genetic coding and protein folding.

This discovery was important because it shows that the hot temperatures that existed when the Earth was young and still forming would not have radically altered how amino acids behave. In a series of experiments, Dr. Wolfenden’s team showed how these amino acids would have acted in folded proteins that existed in the extreme temperatures of the planet four billion years ago.

In the other study, Dr. Carter and his colleagues examined how a specific type of enzyme called aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (which translate the genetic code) was able to recognize tRNA, or transfer ribonucleic acid. According to Dr. Carter, tRNA is like “an adapter,” in that one end of it carries a specific amino acid and the other reads that amino acid’s genetic blueprint in messenger RNA. Each synthetase matches an amino acid with its own adapted to build proteins.

Their research revealed that the two different ends of the L-shaped tRNA molecule each had an independent set of rules that governed which amino acid to select, and that the end which carried the amino acid itself sorted them based on their size. The other end of this molecule is called the tRNA anticodon, and it reads codons (or sequences of three RNA nucleotides found in genetic messages that select amino acids based on their polarity), the study authors explained.

Together, the findings of these studies suggest that the link between tRNA and the physical traits of amino acids (size and polarity) played an essential role during the Earth’s primordial era. Combined with previous research, the results imply that selection by size preceded selection based on polarity, meaning that the very first proteins did not fold into specific shapes, and that the ability to form these unique structures evolved later.

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Women more likely to cheat when man is breadwinner

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

A surprising new study, published in the June edition of the American Sociological Review, has found that both men and women are increasingly likely to cheat on their spouses if they are more economically dependent upon those significant others. What the heck, people?!

The study authors, who used data collected between 2001 and 2011, looked at more than 2,750 married people between the ages of 18 and 32. They found that there is a five-percent chance that a woman who is completely economically dependent upon her husband will cheat, and that there is a 15-percent change that a man who relies upon his wife for money will have an affair.

“You would think that people would not want to ‘bite the hand that feeds them’ so to speak, but that is not what my research shows. Instead, the findings indicate people like feeling relatively equal in their relationships. People don’t like to feel dependent on another person,” study author Christin L. Munsch, a sociologist at the University of Connecticut, said in a statement.

Threats to masculinity play a key role

Munsch’s analysis revealed that economic dependency increases the likelihood of engaging in infidelity for both men and women, and that there seems to be something that makes men who are not the primary wage-earners in their family more likely to have an affair than women that are not the primary breadwinners.

Males can perceive earning less than their wives as a threat to their masculinity, she explained, and extramarital affairs provide them with an outlet to exercise that masculinity. In men of all ages, but particularly in younger males, sexual conquest in the form of multiple partners can be perceived as a way to combat threats to their manhood.

“Thus, engaging in infidelity may be a way of reestablishing threatened masculinity,” Munsch said, adding that infidelity also provides husbands with a way to “distance themselves from, and perhaps punish, their higher earning spouses.” Conversely, with women, the professor found that those who earned a larger percentage of combined martial income were less likely to cheat.

“Women who out earn their husbands challenge the status quo,” she explained, noting that when females earn 100 percent of their family’s total income, they are least likely to cheat. In previous research, women who are primary breadwinners were “acutely aware” of the ways in which they defied cultural expectations, and as a result, often suffer from insomnia, high levels of anxiety, and increase their own workload to strengthen their husband’s masculinity.

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Memorial Hermann Breaks Ground on $650 Million Texas Medical Center Renovation and Expansion Project

HOUSTON, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Memorial Hermann broke ground Wednesday, May 27 on the $650 million expansion and renovation of its Texas Medical Center (TMC) Campus. As the Houston region’s only full-service health system, this expansion will enable Memorial Hermann to stay ahead of the fast-growing advances in medicine, keep pace with the extraordinary growth of the city and, most importantly, meet the health needs of the community for years to come.

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Local dignitaries, community leaders, affiliated UTHealth physicians and Memorial Hermann leadership all gathered Wednesday night to celebrate the official groundbreaking event. In attendance were: Rep. Al Green; President and CEO of the Texas Medical Center, Dr. Robert Robbins; Houston City Council Members Jack Christie and Ellen Cohen; numerous staff representatives of local, state and federal officials; Dr. Giuseppe Colasurdo, President of UTHealth and Dean of UTHealth Medical School; Memorial Hermann Health System Board Chairman Will Williams and several other Memorial Hermann System and Foundation board members; and key representatives of Memorial Hermann leadership including President and CEO Dan Wolterman.

“I am proud to stand with the leadership of Memorial Hermann as they begin the $650 million expansion and renovation of the Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center Campus,” said Rep. Green. “For nearly a century, Memorial Hermann-TMC has diligently served the community and remained a leader in the fields of medical technology, research and innovation. With the completion of this additional 1.34 million square feet, Memorial Hermann-TMC will be able to be better address the growing healthcare needs of the Greater Houston Metropolitan Region as well as continue to provide access to quality health care for countless individuals.”

At the event, Rep. Green presented Memorial Hermann-TMC with a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition that saluted the hospital’s “continued commitment to providing the latest medical innovations and procedures for treating patients as well as your dedication to exceptional patient care.”

The Breaking New Ground expansion and renovation project began in fall 2014 and is expected to be completed in 2019. Highlighting the project will be the construction of a new patient care building and an additional building that will include parking and infrastructure capabilities to support the new growth.

“With this renovation and expansion project, we are ensuring that the communities we serve have access to a critical care infrastructure that Memorial Hermann uniquely provides,” said Wolterman. “We are taking a forward-looking approach to establishing this infrastructure that will effectively meet the health needs of future generations.”

Founded in 1925 as the first hospital in the now world-renowned Texas Medical Center, the original facility was only 200,000 square feet. Today, Memorial Hermann’s flagship hospital encompasses more than 2.5 million square feet. With this expansion, the Campus will grow to 3.84 million square feet.

“For nearly a century, our staff and affiliated physicians have set new standards of care in Texas and the nation through advances in medicine and surgery,” said Craig Cordola, Regional President for Memorial Hermann. “This project will add to our legacy by supporting our ongoing drive to be a leader in the industry while delivering the highest-quality and safest healthcare to our community for many decades to come.”

The Memorial Hermann Health System board unanimously approved the Breaking New Ground expansion in March 2014, which builds upon the tremendous growth at Memorial Hermann-TMC over the last year. The expansion will also provide: 160 additional beds (plus 71 replacement beds); 24 operating rooms (19 replacement and five new); 16 additional emergency room bays; 750 new parking spaces; and a 335-seat café.

The 15-story patient care tower will also house the Memorial Hermann Texas Trauma Institute and Memorial Hermann Life Flight(®), including the John S. Dunn Helistop and the dispatch center, as well as the John S. Dunn Burn Center – the only comprehensive burn center in Houston verified by the American Burn Association – which will expand to 20 beds. In addition, seven shelled floors and six shelled operating rooms will be constructed to accommodate future growth with the potential of adding 264 beds.

Memorial Hermann is investing significant resources into this expansion and renovation project but is also seeking the partnership of the philanthropic community to assist in these efforts. Associated with Breaking New Ground is a $200 million philanthropic campaign to support this effort. The campaign includes $150 million for renovation and expansion, with the additional $50 million earmarked for programmatic needs associated with the Texas Trauma Institute.

Speaking at the groundbreaking, Councilwoman Cohen – whose district includes a portion of the Texas Medical Center – noted that “it takes a monumental amount of resources, both private and public, to ensure our community has the level of care necessary for those who need it.” She added that “this investment and expansion by Memorial Hermann will help support the growth necessary to best serve the Southeast Texas region and I’m grateful for their commitment to our community.”

Part of the Memorial Hermann Health System, Memorial Hermann-TMC is one of few hospitals in the country to provide a full continuum of expert critical care services for both adults and children. Internationally recognized for treating the highest-acuity patients, Memorial Hermann-TMC is home to Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital and the most advanced and comprehensive intensive care units (ICUs) in the Greater Houston region. Patients recovering from a critical illness or injury may also benefit from one of the country’s leading rehabilitation hospitals – TIRR Memorial Hermann. The ability to provide this full spectrum of care for the critically ill or injured is a distinguishing feature that sets Memorial Hermann-TMC apart from other providers.

About Memorial Hermann

An integrated health system, Memorial Hermann is known for world-class clinical expertise, patient-centered care, leading edge technology, and innovation. The system, with its exceptional medical staff and more than 20,000 employees, serves to advance health in Southeast Texas and the Greater Houston community. Memorial Hermann’s 13 hospitals include four hospitals in the Texas Medical Center: an acute care hospital which houses the Texas Trauma Institute and a Level I trauma center of which Life Flight® air ambulance is a part, a hospital for children, a rehabilitation hospital and an orthopedic and spine hospital; eight suburban hospitals; and a second rehabilitation hospital in Katy. The system also operates three Heart & Vascular Institutes, the Mischer Neuroscience Institute, three IRONMAN Sports Medicine Institute locations, joint replacement centers, cancer centers, imaging and surgery centers, sports medicine and rehabilitation centers, outpatient laboratories, a chemical dependency treatment center, a home health agency, a retirement community and a nursing home. As an Accountable Care Organization, the system also offers employers health solutions and health benefit plans through its wholly owned Memorial Hermann Health Insurance Company.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Kathryn Klein / 713-704-5577
[email protected]

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SOURCE Memorial Hermann Health System

Genesis Rehab Services Partners with Bang-Er to Bring Post-Acute Rehabilitation Services to 11 Hospitals in China

KENNETT SQUARE, Pa., May 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Genesis Rehab Services (GRS), a division of Genesis HealthCare (NYSE: GEN), one of the nation’s largest providers of post-acute care, today announced a groundbreaking partnership with Zhejiang Bang-Er Medical Group (Bang-Er), an orthopedic hospital system in China.

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In April, 2015, GRS signed a memorandum of understanding with Bang-Er to bring its successful US-based model of evidence-based rehabilitation services to Bang-Er’s 11 orthopedic hospitals in China. GRS plans to start operation of in-patient and out-patient rehab services in two Bang-Er hospitals in the third quarter of 2015 and three additional sites in the fourth quarter of 2015.

Unlike the post-acute care infrastructure in the United States, China has limited post-acute care options for patients requiring rehabilitation after their hospital stay. As a result, patients tend to stay at the hospital for the duration of their recovery. With this new partnership, patients will not only receive high-quality orthopedic care from Bang-Er hospitals, but now they will also receive the best possible in-patient and out-patient rehabilitation care to get them back home as quickly and safely as possible.

GRS entered the China market in the fourth quarter of 2014 when it opened its first GRS Health Services Vitality Center in Phoenix City, a community 30 minutes from Guangzhou and two hours from Hong Kong. This health and wellness Vitality Center is the first of its kind in China and effectively introduced the people of China to the Western model of disease prevention, disease management, wellness, and rehabilitation care–including physical, occupational, speech and respiratory therapy.

To staff its Vitality Center in Phoenix City, GRS developed a rigorous training curriculum and certification process, providing education to nurses and other medical professionals. With this new Bang-Er hospital-based partnership, Genesis and China-based GRS Health Services (www.grs-hs.com) can now apply this same certification process to hire and train rehabilitation specialists which act as practice extenders for the physical therapists in China, in order to provide inpatient rehabilitation and help orthopedic patients regain their strength, function and independence using proven treatments and modalities never before seen in China.

“This is an exciting time for Genesis and our first expansion outside of the United States,” notes George V. Hager, Jr., Chief Executive Officer of Genesis HealthCare. “With 14.8% of the Chinese population over the age of 60 and 70 million people in need of rehabilitation services(1), there is huge market potential in China. As one of the largest and most experienced post-acute providers in the United States, it was a natural fit to take our expertise to this new market.”

Dong Cheng, Chairman and CEO of Bang-Er, agrees. “We are very lucky to know GRS through some special channels, and we quickly recognized that we have common ground for future collaboration. The demand in China for rehab services is tremendous. I’m very confident that–through this joint venture–we can create new healthcare models and deliver world class health services to the people, especially in the lower tier cities in China.”

Looking ahead to the third quarter of 2015, GRS Health Services will bring a new business line, Spring of Power Center, to Qinhuangdao, providing in-patient rehabilitation services with the potential for 300 licensed beds. This center will also house the GRS Aging2.0 China Chapter which will help to identify, incubate and accelerate technologies focused on healthcare products.

About Genesis HealthCare
Genesis HealthCare (NYSE: GEN) is a holding company with subsidiaries that, on a combined basis, comprise one of the nation’s largest post-acute care providers with more than 500 skilled nursing centers and assisted/senior living communities in 34 states nationwide. Genesis subsidiaries also supply rehabilitation and respiratory therapy to more than 1,600 healthcare providers in 46 states, the District of Columbia and China. References made in this release to “Genesis,” “the Company,” “we,” “us” and “our” refer to Genesis HealthCare and each of its wholly-owned companies. Visit our website at www.genesishcc.com.

About Genesis Rehab Services
Genesis Rehab Services (GRS) is the leading provider of physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, respiratory therapy and wellness services for the older adult population. As one of the largest and strongest rehab organizations in the country, GRS partners with skilled nursing centers, assisted living facilities, independent living facilities, hospitals, home health companies, adult day care programs and outpatient clinics to provide comprehensive therapy services. For more information, visit www.genesisrehab.com.

(1) ICAIA Research. Geriatric Rehabilitation Training in China. September 2014

Genesis Contact:
Jeanne Moore
484-949-5647

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SOURCE Genesis Rehab Services

Richard M. Weissman joins Diomics Board of Directors

SAN DIEGO, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Diomics, an innovator in DNA capture technology, today announced that Richard M. Weissman, global financial executive, has joined Diomics’ board of directors, effective immediately.

Mr. Weissman has more than 25 years of industry experience in broad global financial investment banking. Prior to Diomics, he served as a managing director at Credit Suisse and JP Morgan, and held executive positions at UBS and Morgan Stanley/Dean Witter.

“Diomics is on the forefront of innovation,” said Mr. Weissman. “Diomat(TM) technology, with its ability to capture and release DNA from even the most scant samples, promises to revolutionize forensics and diagnostics. I’m excited to contribute to Diomics as it develops tools for these very important applications.”

“We are thrilled to welcome Mr. Weissman to our board of directors,” said Mr. John Steel, CEO of Diomics. “He brings a proven track record in guiding companies to commercial success. His global financial expertise will greatly benefit Diomics as we expand and grow the business.”

Mr. Weissman graduated from Dartmouth College with a BA in economics/government, where he was captain of the varsity football team. He served as President of Dartmouth Football Alumni Association from 1997-2009, and board member of various other entities at the College and businesses.

About Diomics, Inc.

Diomics is focused on life sciences, specifically diagnostics, forensics, integrated DNA analysis, and genetic solutions. Our proprietary Diomat(TM) technology platform has the ability to efficiently pick up biologic materials from a variety of surfaces and release the majority of the DNA from the sample into the solution. The versatile characteristics of Diomat(TM) make it applicable to a variety of product formats, including swabs, films, and fibers. Today based in San Diego, California, Diomics has developed numerous products, tools, and services for the molecular diagnostic and forensic industries.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/richard-m-weissman-joins-diomics-board-of-directors-300091707.html

SOURCE Diomics, Inc.

Nuovo Biologics, LLC Announces Academic-Biotech Collaboration with Auburn University’s Research Initiative in Cancer

DAVIE, Fla., June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Researchers from South Florida based Nuovo Biologics LLC and Auburn University’s Research Initiative in Cancer (AURIC), have announced an exciting partnership to develop new therapies for cancer. Initially targeting canine malignant melanoma, or skin cancer, a deadly tumor that affects many dogs, the team will be testing Nuovo’s innovative anti-cancer peptide drug MMX(TM) for its ability to treat these tumors.

The National Institutes for Health recently awarded a grant funded by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to support a clinical trial of the new peptide treatment at Auburn University. According to Dr. Bruce Smith, Director of AURIC and leader of the Auburn component of the research effort, the clinical trial will begin to recruit patients as early as June or July of this year.

According to Dr. Jay Yourist, C.E.O. of Nuovo Biologics, “this clinical trial represents the next step in moving MMX(TM) forward to FDA approval.”

Dr. Yourist further stated that he was excited about Nuovo’s collaboration with AURIC because they were pursuing a wide variety of interdisciplinary cancer research, ranging from identifying the basic mechanisms that make normal cells become cancerous to a variety of new approaches to treating cancers.

Both AURIC and Nuovo Biologics take a one-health/one-medicine approach to cancer treatment, allowing discoveries in one species to be translated to other species. This latest collaboration builds on a unique collaborative approach Nuovo has implemented with academic institutions, researchers, and veterinarians across the country.

Founded in Davie, Florida in 2010, Nuovo Biologics is focused on developing a unique set of therapeutic protein drugs. Extensive in-vitro and animal model studies have shown these new peptide drugs to be promising in the oncology sphere, but also to have broad anti-viral application. Nuovo’s business model leverages strong collaborations to test animal products, which serve as models for the human market moving forward.

www.nuovobiologics.com

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SOURCE Nuovo Biologics, LLC

Boston Biomedical Data at ASCO 2015 Highlights Potential of Novel Investigational Cancer Stem Cell Pathway Inhibitors BBI608 and BBI503 in Multiple Cancer Types

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Boston Biomedical, an industry leader in the development of novel compounds designed to target cancer stem cell (CSC) pathways, will present clinical data today on the investigational compounds BBI608 and BBI503 in multiple tumor types at the 2015 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago.

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Data presented at ASCO highlight the potential of BBI608 — an orally-administered investigational agent that targets STAT3, leading to inhibition of the critical genes for maintaining cancer stemness — for anti-cancer activity when used in combination with other chemotherapeutics across varying advanced cancers, including gastric and colorectal. Additionally, as part of the “trials in progress” program, the study protocol from the BRIGHTER study, a phase 3 clinical trial currently underway to investigate cancer stem cell pathway inhibition, is also showcased.

“Recurrence and metastasis remain clinically challenging for oncologists, and require novel treatment advancements to ensure more durable and sustained responses for cancer patients,” said Manish A. Shah, M.D., the Director of Gastrointestinal Oncology at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, Weill Cornell Medical College. “The BBI608 data indicate encouraging early signs of clinical activity, and support the expansive BBI608 clinical development plan including the phase 3 BRIGHTER trial in advanced gastric/gastroesophageal junction cancer.”

Additional data featuring BBI503 — an orally-administered investigational agent designed to inhibit Nanog and other cancer stem cell pathways by targeting kinases — showed encouraging early signs of anti-cancer activity for patients with advanced colorectal cancer.

Boston Biomedical poster presentations include:

Abstract #4069, Poster #179: BBI608-201: Phase 1b/2 study of cancer stemness inhibitor BBI608 combined with paclitaxel in advanced gastric and gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma

    --  Data from the study showed BBI608 and weekly paclitaxel can be combined
        in patients with advanced pre-treated gastric/GEJ cancer. Lesion
        regression, objective responses, and prolonged stable disease were
        observed in heavily pre-treated patients.In evaluable patients who had
        not previously received a taxane in the metastatic setting, and who
        received one prior line of therapy (n=6), namely the patients that meet
        the enrollment criteria for the BRIGHTER trial, an objective response
        rate (ORR) of 50% was observed. In heavily pretreated patients (failed
        average >2 lines of prior therapies) who had not previously received a
        taxane in the metastatic setting (n=16), the ORR was 31% in the
        per-protocol population. The disease control rate (DCR) was 75%; median
        progression-free survival (mPFS) was 20.6 weeks and median overall
        survival (mOS) was 39.3 weeks. Most common adverse events were grade 1
        to 2 diarrhea, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. Grade 3 adverse
        events included vomiting (8.7%), diarrhea of 5 days or longer (6.5%),
        fatigue (6.5%), abdominal and gastrointestinal pain, nausea,
        dehydration, anorexia, white blood cell decrease and acute kidney injury
        (2.2% each).Continued evaluation of this combination and patient
        population, specifically in those patients who received one prior line
        of therapy, is currently underway in the phase 3 BRIGHTER study

Abstract #TPS4139, Poster #247a: The BRIGHTER trial: A phase 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of first-in-class cancer stemness inhibitor BBI608 plus weekly paclitaxel versus placebo plus weekly paclitaxel in adult patients with advanced, previously treated gastric and gastro-esophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma

    --  The goal of the BRIGHTER trial (NCT02178956) is to determine if BBI608
        given together with paclitaxel as second-line therapy will extend
        survival compared to treatment with paclitaxel alone. Enrollment is
        ongoing at multiple sites in North America, Europe, Australia and Japan.
        BBI608 blocks cancer stem cell renewal and survival by suppressing
        stemness pathways, including STAT3, beta-catenin and immune checkpoint
        gene expression.

Abstract #3616, Poster #109: BBI608-246: A phase 1b study of first-in-class cancer stemness inhibitor BBI608 in combination with FOLFIRI with and without Bevacizumab in patients with advanced colorectal cancer

    --  Data from the study showed that BBI608 at 240 mg BID can be combined
        with FOLFIRI, with or without bevacizumab, in patients with advanced and
        heavily pretreated colorectal cancer (CRC). Disease control, measured by
        partial response and stable disease, was observed in 100% of evaluable
        patients (n=9), including 6 patients who had failed FOLFIRI previously,
        with partial response in 2/9 patients and stable disease in 7/9
        patients, all of whom (9/9 patients) experienced signs of tumor
        regression. Prolonged stable disease (more than or equal to 6 months)
        was observed in 5/9 patients (55.6%) of evaluable patients. The median
        progression-free survival was 23.7 weeks. Most common adverse events
        included grade 1 and 2 diarrhea, fatigue, anorexia, nausea, vomiting and
        abdominal pain. Grade 3 diarrhea was observed in two patients, and
        resolved with a brief BBI608 dose holiday or dose reduction and
        anti-diarrheal medications, respectively. Additionally, self-resolving
        grade 3 fatigue lasting 4-8 days as well as dehydration was observed in
        one patient.

Abstract #3617, Poster #110: BBI608-224: A phase 1b/2 study of cancer stemness inhibitor BBI608 administered with Panitumumab in KRAS wild-type patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

    --  Results from the study found that BBI608 and bi-weekly panitumumab can
        be combined at the full dose of 480-500 mg BID. Of the 24 patients
        enrolled, nine were anti-EGFR naive and 15 had previously failed
        anti-EGFR therapy. Disease control, measured by stable disease and
        partial response, was observed in 44% of anti-EGFR naive patients
        compared to 53.3% of patients who had failed anti-EGFR therapy
        previously. The median progression-free survival was 9 weeks in
        anti-EGFR naive patients.Also in this study, preliminary activity was
        observed in K-Ras wild-type mCRC patients regardless of prior anti-EGFR
        exposure, suggesting BBI608 may have re-sensitized patients to repeat
        anti-EGFR therapy.  Most common adverse events included grade 1-2
        diarrhea, nausea, fatigue, vomiting, abdominal cramping, hypokalemia and
        anorexia. Grade 3 hypokalemia and diarrhea occurred in three patients,
        as well as abdominal pain, fatigue, hypomagnesemia, hypophosphatemia and
        rash in one patient.Further studies are needed to evaluate the safety
        and efficacy of this combination and BBI608's potential to re-sensitize
        patients to anti-EGFR therapy. Encouraging signs of activity were also
        observed in anti-EGFR naive patients.

Abstract #3615, Poster #108: BBI503-101: Phase 1 extension study of BBI503, a first-in-class cancer stemness kinase inhibitor, in patients with advanced colorectal cancer

    --  The findings indicated that BBI503 as a monotherapy was tolerated at the
        recommended phase 2 dose of 300 mg once daily.Disease control rate
        (DCR), comprising complete response, partial response and stable disease
        measures, in evaluated patients with high Nanog biomarker-positive
        status was 55.6%, while DCR in biomarker-negative patients was 12.5%.
        Median overall survival in biomarker-positive patients was 38.0 weeks
        compared to 15.9 weeks in biomarker-negative patients.  At the
        recommended phase 2 dose, common adverse events were grade 1 to 2
        diarrhea, nausea, abdominal cramping, anorexia and fatigue, and grade 3
        adverse events were fatigue (n= 4), and diarrhea, nausea, and weight
        loss (n=1 each)This study underscores that further clinical evaluation
        of BBI503 alone or in combination with standard chemotherapeutic agents
        in advanced colorectal cancer is warranted.

Also, findings from a publication-only abstract are available:

Abstract #e15089: A phase 1 study of BBI608, a cancer stemness inhibitor, administered with paclitaxel (PTX) as combination therapy (Rx) for pretreated unresectable or recurrent gastric cancer in Japan

    --  This study showed that BBI608 plus paclitaxel can be combined in
        patients with advanced gastric/gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma
        (n=6).Two patients (33.3%) achieved a partial response (66.7% and 36.8%
        regression), and one of them maintained response for more than seven and
        a half months. Two additional patients achieved stable disease at 2.8
        months.Most common adverse events were grade 1 diarrhea and anorexia. No
        severe side effects were observed in this study.

“It is an exciting time for Boston Biomedical as we showcase a broad array of studies for cancer stem cell pathway inhibitors BBI608 and BBI503 and share additional details about our pioneering phase 3 BRIGHTER study,” said Chiang J. Li, M.D. FACP, the president, CEO and Chief Medical Officer of Boston Biomedical, and the Head of Global Oncology for Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Group. “The efficacy and safety results from these studies build upon the already encouraging foundation of clinical evidence, and support the need to further research these potential first-in-class treatment options.”

About Boston Biomedical

Boston Biomedical, Inc. (Founder, President, CEO and CMO: Chiang J. Li, M.D. FACP) was founded in November 2006 and is wholly owned by Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Co., Ltd. Boston Biomedical’s mission is to develop the next generation of cancer therapeutics by creating drugs designed to target cancer stem cell pathways. Boston Biomedical’s innovation in drug discovery has received a number of recognitions and awards in the United States, including the Frost & Sullivan 2010 North American Drug Discovery Technology Innovation of the Year Award, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) cancer stem cell initiative grant award in 2010, and the 2011 Biotech Pioneer Award at the Alexandria Oncology Summit. The company also received the “Company To Watch” award in the 10th Annual Team Massachusetts Economic Impact Awards in 2013. Boston Biomedical is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.

Additional information about the company and its product pipeline can be found at www.bostonbiomedical.com.

Disclaimer Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
The forward-looking statements in this document are based on management’s assumptions and beliefs in light of information presently available, and involve both known and unknown risks and uncertainties. Information concerning pharmaceuticals (including compounds under development) contained within this material is not intended as advertising or medical advice.

CONTACT: For general inquiries: Boston Biomedical, 617-674-6800, or for media inquiries: Alicia Suter, CHAMBERLAIN PR, 212-849-9448, [email protected]

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SOURCE Boston Biomedical Pharma, Inc.

‘Virgin births’ found in endangered sawfish species

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

A critically endangered species of sawfish has made an extreme adaptation in an attempt to fight off extinction, as scientists reported Monday in the journal Current Biology that female members of the sexually reproducing creatures have been observed giving birth… without having sex.

This marks the first time that living offspring from so-called “virgin births” have been found in a type of creature that usually relies on copulation to sire offspring, Dr. Demian Chapman from the Stony Brook University School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and his colleagues reported in their new study.

Previous research that vertebrates could occasionally use a process known as parthenogenesis to reproduce originated from isolated examples of captive birds, sharks, reptiles, and other types of animals. In those instances, the creatures surprised their caretakers by giving birth despite not having an opportunity to mate.

Furthermore, scientists recently reported that two free-living female snakes were both pregnant with a single parthenogen, though it was not certain if those embryos would have survived in the wild, and it remains unclear how frequently this phenomenon occurs naturally.

Save the sawfish

In their new study, the Stony Brook-led team found that vertebrate parthenogens can and do live in the wild by analyzing the DNA of smalltooth sawfish living in the wild in Florida. They found that approximately three percent of those sawfish, which face extinction due to overfishing and coastal habitat loss, were born through this unusual form of reproduction.

In parthenogenesis, a process which is common invertebrates but rare in vertebrates, unfertilized eggs absorb genetically identical sister cells in order to produce offspring with far less genetic diversity of their mothers. As a result, creatures produced in this way are unlike to survive, and the general consensus was that parthenogenesis in vertebrates was an oddity that was unlikely to produce viable offspring, the researchers explained in a statement.

Andrew Fields, the lead author of the study and a Ph. D. candidate at the School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, told redOrbit via email that he and his colleagues were surprised by their findings. “While genetically screening some sawfish samples as part of a monitoring effort,” he said, “we came across these fish which are from parthenogenic, or ‘virgin birth,’ origins.”

“Overall this shows that animals from parthenogensis is not just a weird process which happens in an aquarium, but actually in nature as well… Never before have we seen a free-living individual in the wild. Therefore, it is possible that this happens in more species be we just haven’t been looking for it. We certainly were not,” Fields continued.

He concluded that that he hoped their research would help “inspire conservation action for sawfish,” as the creatures are “on the brink of extinction thanks to humans.” Likewise, Kevin Feldheim of the Field Museum of Chicago’s Pritzker Laboratory, where the DNA was analyzed, said the research “should serve as a wake-up call that we need serious global efforts to save these animals.”

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Microbiome changes may cause eye infections in contact lens users

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

People who wear contact lenses could experience an increase in certain types of eye infections due to changes to the surface of their eye that increase the bacterial diversity in that area, a team of researchers from the NYU Langone Medical Center has discovered.

The researchers, who presented their findings Sunday at the annual conference of the American Society for Microbiology (asm2015) in New Orleans, used high-precision genetic tests to find the differences between the thousands of bacteria that comprise the human microbiome.

In the course of their work, they found a possible and somewhat surprising reason why contact lens wearers tend to get more eye infections on a daily basis: a diverse set of microoganisms in the eyes of these individuals changes to become more similar in nature to that normally found in the skin of the eyelid than the bacteria in the eyes of non-lens users.

Seeking the root cause of these microbiome changes

The study authors explained that the eye surface, also known as the conjunctiva, of contact lens users has three times as many Methylobacterium, Lactobacillus, Acinetobacter, and Pseudomonas bacteria than is typically found in the eyeballs of people who do not wear contacts.

The NYU Langone team’s findings are based on an examination and comparison of the eyes of nine men and women who regularly use contact lenses, and 11 others who do not wear them. They also found that the composition of a lens-user’s eye microbiome was more similar to that of their own skin than to the eyes of people who do not wear contacts.

“Our research clearly shows that putting a foreign object, such as a contact lens, on the eye is not a neutral act,” Dr. Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, a microbiologist and associate professor at NYU Langone and senior investigator on the study, explained in a statement. “These findings should help scientists better understand the longstanding problem of why contact-lens wearers are more prone to eye infections than non-lens wearers.”

“What we hope our future experiments will show is whether these changes in the eye microbiome of lens wearers are due to fingers touching the eye, or from the lens’s direct pressure affecting and altering the immune system in the eye and what bacteria are suppressed or are allowed to thrive,” she added.

—–

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LOL: Genetics plays key role in sense of humor

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck
If you’ve ever found yourself in a room full of people LOL-ing at a joke that you barely cracked a smile at, your genetics may be responsible, according to new research published Monday in the American Psychological Association journal Emotion.
In the study, Claudia M. Haase, an assistant professor at the Northwestern University School of Education and Social Policy, University of California, Berkeley psychology professor Dr. Robert W. Levenson and their colleagues explained that people with short alleles in the gene 5-HTTLPR tended to smile or laugh more while funny videos than those with long ones.
“One of the great mysteries in psychology is why some people are highly emotional and others are not. In this study we found that part of the answer lies in our genes,” Dr. Levenson, who was the senior author of the new paper, told redOrbit via email. “People who had one version of a gene that regulates the neurotransmitter serotonin laughed and smiled more when they saw funny cartoons and films than people who had other versions of the gene.”
“Previous research had shown that people with this genetic variant (the ‘short allele’) had stronger negative emotional expressions,” added Professor Haase. “Our study shows that people with this genetic variant also have stronger positive emotional reactions. Thus, our study helps paint a more complete picture of the emotional life of people with the short allele.”
Allele length may affect other emotions as well
In their study, Haase, Dr. Levenson, and Ursula Beermann of the University of Geneva and their fellow researchers conducted a series of experiments in which younger adults were exposed to funny cartoons, people of various ages were shown a subtly-humorous movie scene, and middle-aged and older couples were asked to discuss an area of disagreement in their marriages.
The scientists videotaped their reactions during the experiments, then used a system to track the small movements in their face to evaluate their smiling and laughing. They also collected saliva samples from the volunteers to analyze the 5-HTTLPR gene, and found that people who had the short allele displayed greater genuine smiling and laughing those with the long allele.
Dr. Levenson suggested in a statement that the allele length in 5-HTTLPR may also play a role in amplifying other emotions. He told redOrbit that previous research has found this gene is related to how upset a person gets when they see others in distress, and how embarrassed they feel when placed in socially awkward situations.
Haase added that in those studies, people watched footage of others in trouble or of themselves singing Karaoke, and that in each situation, “people with the short allele had stronger emotional reactions.” However, as Dr. Levenson noted, “Genes are only part of the story when it comes to emotional differences among people. Clearly, this is an area where both nature and nurture are important.”
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Assisi Animal Health Offers 3 Tips for Managing Horses on Spring Pasture

PINEHURST, N.C., June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire-iReach/ — Assisi Animal Health is the developer of the Assisi Loop(TM), an effective non-pharmaceutical and anti-inflammatory device (NPAID). The Loop is a PEMF treatment for horses that can treat chronic wounds without negative side effects.

Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150529/219489

Assisi Animal Health keeps equine owners informed of the latest veterinary science and news. The recent rise in pasture-related health problems has some owners afraid to let their horses graze on spring grass. Aside from laminitis, nutrient-rich grass may cause gastrointestinal and other problems. Assisi Animal Health provides horse owners with three tips to help them manage their horses on spring pasture:

1. Manage the Horse’s Grass Consumption

While spring grass is highly nutritious for horses, it presents several health risks. In many cases, horses eat too much grass far too quickly, especially when they are not used to spring pasture or have spent the winter stabled. While horses should enjoy a slow introduction to grass, 10 or 15 minutes per day in the beginning, many people successfully use grazing muzzles.

The grazing muzzle not only manages a horse’s weight, but it also provides owners with an easy way to reduce the amount of grass their horses consume without restricting drinking, breathing or socializing activities. With a muzzle on, horses still enjoy the field without gorging themselves into illness.

2. Increase Consumption of Other Forage

Another way to decrease the amount of grass horses consume is to fill their stomachs with hay before turning them to pasture. Even better, use long-stem forage to keep the horse’s digestive system full at all times. A small-hole net around the hay restricts the horse’s access to it, forcing him or her to slow down and consume the food over a longer timeframe.

Small-hole hay nets help prevent obesity-related health problems. They also supply a continual source of roughage necessary for horses with digestive upset or gastric lesions.

3. Provide Additional Support with Supplements

Some horses that graze spring pasture benefit from supplemental support, especially horses that compromise their laminar health with overconsumption of spring grass. Laminae are small, interlocking fingers that are responsible for attaching the hoof to the coffin bone. If they become inflamed, serious health problems can result over time.

Owners concerned about the laminar health of their horses can feed them supplements designed to support healthy laminae. Alternatively, supplements that support metabolic function keep your horse healthy while grazing on grass. Always discuss feeding changes and supplementation with your equine veterinarian to maintain a balanced diet for your horse.

Assisi Animal Health’s clinical solutions complete the Circle of Care(TM) — the collaboration of veterinarians and owners in animal health and healing. Our company helps veterinary professionals and owners improve the quality of life for companion animals using the Assisi Loop, the non-invasive, non-pharmaceutical healing device that is based on the same FDA-cleared technology used on humans. The device uses low-level pulses of electromagnetic energy to reduce pain and swelling, and to enhance recovery.

The Assisi Loop. Proven Science. Positive Results.(TM)

For more information, visit our website: www.assisianimalhealth.com.

Media Contact: Kaysie Dannemiller, Assisi Animal Health, 1-866-830-7342, [email protected]

News distributed by PR Newswire iReach: https://ireach.prnewswire.com

SOURCE Assisi Animal Health

Stempeutics Receives Orphan Drug Designation (ODD) in the European Union for its Novel Stem Cell Drug “Stempeucel®” for the Treatment of Thromboangiitis Obliterans

BANGALORE, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —

– The First Allogeneic Stem Cell Drug to be Granted ODD Status by European Medicinal
Agency (EMA) for Treating Thromboangiitis Obliterans

– Stempeucel Will Offer New Hope to Patients Suffering From “Thromboangiitis
Obliterans” (Also Known as Buerger’s Disease), a Major Unmet Medical Need in Europe

– Prevalence of “Thromboangiitis Obliterans” is Estimated to be 2 per 10,000 Persons
in the European Community

Stempeutics Research, a group company of Manipal Education & Medical Group and a joint
venture with Cipla Group, announced today that the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has
granted Orphan Drug Designation for its drug Stempeucel(R) for the treatment of
Thromboangiitis Obliterans. Thromboangiitis obliterans or Buerger’s Disease is a rare and
severe disease affecting the blood vessels of the legs. It is characterized by
inflammation and occlusion of the vessels of extremities resulting in reduced blood flow
to these areas, thus leading to severe pain and ulcers or necrosis, which finally may
require amputation. Stempeucel(R) treatment is designed to enhance the body’s limited
capability to restore blood flow in ischemic tissue by reducing inflammation and improving
neovascularization.

(Logo:
http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150323/735846 )

Commenting on the ODD status, Mr BN Manohar, CEO of Stempeutics, said , “Obtaining
Orphan Designation for Stempeucel(R) in the European Union (EU) is an important regulatory
milestone for Stempeutics. The benefits include 10 years of market exclusivity from
product launch in the EU, fee reductions, as well as access to the central authorization
procedure. This orphan drug designation supports Stempeutics global development strategy
for Stempeucel(R) drug and the goal of providing improved therapies for patients with
Thromboangiitis Obliterans.”

“We are pleased to have been granted the benefits of orphan drug designation in
Europe,” said Mr Chandru Chawla, Head of Cipla New Ventures . “We view this as an
important milestone to further develop our novel stem cell biological drug Stempeucel in
the EU for treating Thromboangiitis Obliterans indication. Additionally, we interpret this
as a favourable indication for how the European regulators view our therapy. This
significantly increases the commercial potential of our ground breaking therapy.”

About Thromboangiitis Obliterans:

Thromboangiitis Obliterans is a recurring progressive inflammation and thrombosis
(clotting) of small and medium arteries and veins of the feet. It is strongly associated
with use of tobacco products primarily from smoking, but also from smokeless tobacco.
Stempeucel drug is expected to address the root cause of the disease through
anti-inflammatory and immune-modulatory mechanisms. It is expected to induce angiogenesis
through release of vascular endothelial growth factors, epithelial growth factors,
angiopoietin and improve the perfusion and help the repair and regeneration of the
ischemic muscle tissue.

About Stempeutics:

Stempeutics is an advanced clinical stage biotech company based out of Bangalore. It
was founded by Manipal Education and Medical Group (MEMG) in 2006 and later entered into a
strategic alliance with Cipla in 2009. Stempeutics’ strength lies in developing innovative
stem cell products by nurturing cutting-edge research and clinical applications through
dedicated efforts of its highly qualified team. Its goal is to develop novel stem cell
drugs addressing major unmet medical needs with an India first global next approach.
www.stempeutics.com [http://www.stempeutics.com ]

About Manipal Education & Medical Group:

Manipal Education and Medical Group (MEMG) is one of the leaders in the country, in
the field of education and healthcare services, with a global footprint. MEMG, through its
subsidiaries, provides education and healthcare services in India and internationally. It
manages universities and professional institutions, including medical colleges, teaching
hospitals, and medical science and technology institutions through which it provides
bachelor’s and master’s degree programs in various streams. It also operates a facility
management company, Manipal Integrated Services (MIS) covering student accommodation &
hostel management and several other services including food and catering; engineering and
maintenance and security and housekeeping. The company also manages healthcare
institutions, super-specialty care hospitals, rural maternity and child welfare homes. In
addition, the company researches and develops stem cell technologies in various medicine
and treatment areas. Manipal Education and Medical Group International India Pvt. Ltd. was
founded in 1953 and is based in Bengaluru, India with education colleges and campuses in
Antigua, Dubai, Malaysia, and Nepal.

About Cipla Limited:

Cipla is a global pharmaceutical company which uses cutting-edge technology and
innovation to meet the everyday needs of all patients. For more than 70 years, Cipla has
emerged as one of the most respected pharmaceutical names in India as well as across more
than 150 countries. Our portfolio includes over 1500 products across wide range of
therapeutic categories with one quality standard globally.

Whilst delivering a long-term sustainable business, Cipla recognises its duty to
provide affordable medicines. Cipla’s emphasis on access for patients was recognised
globally for the pioneering role played in HIV/AIDS treatment as the first pharmaceutical
company to provide a triple combination anti-retroviral (ARV) in Africa at less than one
dollar a day and thereby treating many millions of patients since 2001.

Cipla’s research and development focuses on developing innovative products and drug
delivery systems and has given India and the world many ‘firsts’ for instance Triomune. In
a tightly regulated environment, the company’s manufacturing facilities have approvals
from all the main regulators including USFDA, UKMHRA, WHO, MCC, ANVISA, and PMDA which
means the company provides one universal standard both domestically and internationally.

        
        Stempeutics Research Media Contact:
        Vijayaraghavan
        Corporate Communications
        Mobile No.: +91-9535688118
        Email: [email protected]

        Cipla Media Contacts:
        Corporate Communications
        Charlotte Chunawala
        Mobile: +91-7506257377
        Email: [email protected]

        Pallavi Golar
        Mobile: +91-9833641788
        Email: [email protected]


    Photo: 
    http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150323/735846


SOURCE Stempeutics Research Pvt Ltd

FDA Approves Expanded Indication For Qudexy® XR (Topiramate) Extended-Release Capsules Within The Pediatric Population

Now the Only Extended-Release Topiramate Product for Initial Monotherapy in Patients Two Years and Older with Partial-Onset Seizures or Primary Generalized Tonic-Clonic Seizures

MAPLE GROVE, Minn., June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc. (Upsher-Smith) announced that it has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of a supplemental new drug application (sNDA) for Qudexy(®) XR (topiramate) extended-release capsules for use as initial monotherapy in patients two years of age and older who are experiencing partial-onset seizures (POS) or primary generalized tonic-clonic seizures.

http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnvar/20130520/NY17281LOGO

Qudexy(®) XR capsules are the only once-daily extended-release topiramate product to have received this expanded indication and to be approved for administration by sprinkling their contents onto soft food, making them a useful option for young children who may have difficulty swallowing whole capsules or tablets. Qudexy(®) XR is a once-daily, broad-spectrum antiepileptic drug specifically engineered to deliver a smooth pharmacokinetic profile.

“The expanded indication gives physicians the option to prescribe Qudexy(®) XR as initial monotherapy in patients as young as two years old,” said William Pullman, MB BS, BMedSc, PhD, FRACP, Chief Scientific Officer, Upsher-Smith. “This, combined with its ability to be sprinkled on soft food for ease of administration, makes it a viable treatment option for the pediatric patient population.”

Qudexy(®) XR was previously approved for use as initial monotherapy in patients 10 years of age and older with POS or primary generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Qudexy(®) XR is also approved as an adjunctive therapy in patients two years of age or older with POS, primary generalized tonic-clonic seizures, or seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Qudexy(®) XR has been available in the United States since June 2014.

A savings and support program is available to patients who have been prescribed Qudexy(®) XR. To find out more, please visit SaveonQudexyXR.com or call 1-800-657-7613 Monday-Friday from 8:00a.m – 8:00p.m. (EDT).

INDICATIONS

Qudexy(®) XR (topiramate) Extended-Release Capsules is a prescription medicine used to treat certain types of seizures (partial-onset seizures and primary generalized tonic-clonic seizures) and with other medicines to treat certain types of seizures (partial-onset seizures, primary generalized tonic-clonic seizures, and seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome) in adults and children 2 years and older.

IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION

What is the most important information I should know about Qudexy XR?

You should discuss the potential benefits and risks of Qudexy XR with your doctor.

Qudexy XR may cause serious eye problems that can lead to permanent loss of vision if not treated. You should call your doctor right away if you have any new eye symptoms, including any new problems with your vision. Qudexy XR may cause decreased sweating and fever, which you should monitor and call your doctor right away if you have a high fever, a fever that does not go away, or decreased sweating develops. Qudexy XR can increase the level of acid in your blood (metabolic acidosis), which can lead to complications if left untreated. Your doctor should do a blood test to measure the level of acid in your blood before and during your treatment with Qudexy XR. Do not take Qudexy(®) XR if you have been told you have a problem with your blood called metabolic acidosis and are taking a medicine called metformin at the same time.

What should I tell my doctor BEFORE starting Qudexy XR?

Before taking Qudexy XR, tell your doctor about all of your medical conditions, including if you:

    --  have had depression, mood problems, or suicidal thoughts or behavior;
    --  have kidney problems, kidney stones, or are getting kidney dialysis;
    --  have a history of metabolic acidosis (too much acid in the blood);
    --  have liver problems;
    --  have weak, brittle or soft bones (osteomalacia, osteoporosis,
        osteopenia, or decreased bone density);
    --  have lung or breathing problems;
    --  have eye problems, especially glaucoma;
    --  have diarrhea;
    --  have a growth problem;
    --  are on a diet high in fat and low in carbohydrates, which is called a
        ketogenic diet;
    --  are having surgery; are pregnant or plan to become pregnant;
    --  or if you are breastfeeding. The medicine in Qudexy XR (topiramate)
        passes into your breast milk. It is not known if the medicine,
        topiramate, that passes into breast milk can harm your baby. Talk to
        your doctor about the best way to feed your baby if you take Qudexy XR.

Also tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Especially tell your doctor if you take metformin (e.g., Glucophage); valproic acid (e.g., Depakene or Depakote); any medicines that impair or decrease your thinking, concentration, or muscle coordination; birth control pills; medicines used to prevent seizures; or any other carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (e.g., zonisamide, acetazolamide, or dichlorphenamide). Qudexy XR may make your birth control pills less effective. Ask your doctor if you are not sure if your medicine is listed above.

What should I watch for AFTER starting Qudexy XR?

Qudexy XR can cause serious side effects, including:

    --  Eye problems. Serious eye problems include blurred vision, sudden
        decrease in vision with or without eye pain and redness, and a blockage
        of fluid that may cause increased pressure in the eye (secondary angle
        closure glaucoma). If left untreated, these can lead to permanent vision
        loss.
    --  Decreased sweating and fever. People, especially children, should be
        watched for signs of decreased sweating and fever, especially in hot
        temperatures. Some people may need to be hospitalized for this
        condition.
    --  Increased acid level in your blood (metabolic acidosis). This may or may
        not cause symptoms. Symptoms may include feeling tired, decreased
        appetite, change in heartbeat, or trouble thinking clearly. If left
        untreated, metabolic acidosis can cause brittle or soft bones
        (osteoporosis, osteomalacia, osteopenia), kidney stones, can slow the
        rate of growth in children, and may harm your baby if you are pregnant.
    --  High blood ammonia levels. High ammonia in the blood can affect mental
        activities, slow alertness, cause tiredness, or cause vomiting. This can
        also happen when Qudexy XR is taken with a medicine called valproic acid
        (e.g., Depakene® and Depakote®).
    --  Kidney stones. Drink plenty of fluids when taking Qudexy XR to decrease
        your chances of getting kidney stones.
    --  Low body temperature. Taking Qudexy XR when you are also taking valproic
        acid may cause a drop in body temperature to less than 95°F, tiredness,
        confusion, or coma.
    --  Effects on thinking and alertness. Qudexy XR may affect how you think,
        and can cause confusion, and problems with concentration, attention,
        memory, or speech. Qudexy XR may cause depression or mood problems,
        tiredness, and sleepiness.
    --  Dizziness or loss of muscle coordination.

Call your doctor right away if you have any of the above symptoms.

The most common side effects of Qudexy XR include: tingling of the arms and legs (paresthesia), not feeling hungry, weight loss, nervousness, speech problems, tiredness, dizziness, sleepiness/drowsiness, slow reactions, difficulty with memory, fever, and abnormal vision. These are not all the possible side effects of Qudexy XR. For more information, ask your doctor or pharmacist.

Like other antiepileptic drugs, Qudexy XR may cause suicidal thoughts or actions in a very small number of people, about 1 in 500. Call a doctor right away if you have any of these symptoms, especially if they are new, worse, or worry you:

    --  thoughts about suicide or dying;
    --  attempts to commit suicide;
    --  new or worse depression or anxiety;
    --  feel agitated or restless;
    --  experience panic attacks;
    --  trouble sleeping (insomnia);
    --  new or worse irritability;
    --  feel or act aggressive, angry, or violent;
    --  act on dangerous impulses;
    --  an extreme increase in activity and talking (mania);
    --  other unusual changes in behavior or mood.

Qudexy XR can harm your unborn baby. All women of childbearing age should talk to their doctors about possible alternative treatments. If you take Qudexy XR during pregnancy, your baby has a higher risk for birth defects called cleft lip and cleft palate. These defects can begin early in pregnancy, even before you know you are pregnant. If the decision is made to use Qudexy XR, you should use effective birth control (contraception) unless you are planning to become pregnant. Tell your doctor right away if you become pregnant while taking Qudexy XR.

Do not stop Qudexy XR without first talking to a doctor. If you have epilepsy and you stop taking Qudexy XR suddenly, you may have seizures that do not stop. Your doctor will tell you how to stop taking Qudexy XR slowly.

What should I avoid while taking Qudexy XR?

Do not drink alcohol while taking Qudexy XR. Qudexy XR and alcohol can cause serious side effects such as severe sleepiness and dizziness and an increase in seizures.

Do not drive a car, swim, climb, or operate heavy machinery until you know how Qudexy XR affects you. Qudexy XR can slow your thinking and motor skills, and may affect vision. Even when taking Qudexy XR, some patients with epilepsy will continue to have unpredictable seizures.

How should I take Qudexy XR?

Take Qudexy XR exactly as your doctor tells you to. You may swallow Qudexy XR capsules whole or, if you cannot swallow the capsule whole, you may carefully open the Qudexy XR capsule and sprinkle the medicine on a spoonful of soft food like applesauce. Swallow the food and medicine mixture right away. Do not store the food and medicine mixture to use later or crush or chew the food and medicine mixture before swallowing.

This is the most important information to know about Qudexy XR. For more information, talk to your health care provider and read the Medication Guide for Qudexy XR. You can also visit www.upsher-smith.com or call 1-888-650-3789.

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

Please see full Prescribing Information at www.QudexyXR.com

Qudexy is a registered trademark of Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc.

All other marks are the property of their respective owners.

About Epilepsy

Epilepsy is a medical condition that is characterized by recurrent seizures. More than two million people in the U.S. are estimated to be affected by epilepsy, with about 150,000 new cases of epilepsy diagnosed each year.(1) Epilepsy can be associated with profound physical, psychological and social consequences that negatively impact people’s lives.

About Upsher-Smith

Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc., founded in 1919, is a growing, fully integrated pharmaceutical company dedicated to its mission of delivering high-value, high-quality therapies and solutions which measurably improve individuals’ lives. As a family-owned pharmaceutical company, we are able to adapt and thrive in a dynamic healthcare environment. Our world is constantly evolving, and we are continually adapting to the ever-changing needs of patients, physicians, pharmacists, and healthcare organizations. Where there is a need, we will work to deliver solutions that simplify access to treatment, deliver better health outcomes, and enhance life. Upsher-Smith has a particular focus on developing therapies for people living with central nervous system (CNS) conditions, such as seizure disorders. For more information, visit www.upsher-smith.com.

Reference

    1. Epilepsy.com. Available at:
       http://www.epilepsy.com/learn/epilepsy-statistics. Accessed May 8, 2015.

110560.01

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To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/fda-approves-expanded-indication-for-qudexy-xr-topiramate-extended-release-capsules-within-the-pediatric-population-300091512.html

SOURCE Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc.

Resverlogix Presents New Data at 52nd Annual European Renal Association – European Dialysis & Transplant Association Congress (ERA-EDTA)

RVX-208, the first selective bromodomain extra-terminal (BET) protein inhibitor, significantly reduces alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels in patients with high vascular risk

TSX Exchange Symbol: RVX

CALGARY, June 1, 2015 /CNW/ – Resverlogix Corp. (TSX: RVX) (the “Company”) today announced that new data on RVX-208 was presented at the ERA-EDTA Congress in London, England in a poster entitled: “Effects of RVX-208, a First-in-Class Epigenetic BET-Inhibitor, on Key Renal Parameters in Subjects with a History of CVD, and Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD); a Post-hoc Analysis of Patients from the ASSERT, SUSTAIN and ASSURE Clinical Trials.”

Dr. Kam Kalantar-Zadeh, Professor and Chief, Division of Nephrology and Hypertension at University of California in Irvine and Los Angeles stated, “Selective BET inhibition via RVX-208 may represent a novel approach to CKD treatment. Analyses of the data from recent clinical trials suggest that RVX-208 significantly lowers serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and improves lipid parameters in patients with CKD. Together these new findings warrant additional clinical trials for target responder CKD and/or dialysis populations who have a high burden of cardiovascular disease and risk.” Dr. Kalantar-Zadeh examined the data and contributed to this abstract at ERA-EDTA. He has also contributed to additional abstracts that have been submitted for peer review presentation.

In the pooled analysis from the SUSTAIN and ASSURE trials (n=499), assessment of the metabolic biomarker ALP, revealed a significant reduction of -10.98% in all RVX-208 treated patients (n=331) compared to a reduction of -3.23% in placebo treated patients (n=168) (p<0.0001) at the combined time points of 24 and 26 weeks. In addition, several subgroup analysis were performed. In patients with a history of diabetes, a significant reduction in ALP of -13.9% was observed in the RVX-208 treated group (n=127) compared to -4.49% in the placebo treated group (n=65) (p<0.0001). Further analysis was performed on patients with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), defined by an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of below 60 mL/min/1.73 m(2). In this group, RVX-208 treated patients (n=35) had reduced ALP levels of -13.9% versus -6.28% in placebo (n=13) (p=0.008). In addition, following 6 months of RVX-208 treatment, an increase in eGFR of +3.4% (p=0.04 vs. baseline) in the RVX-208 treated group was observed compared to a decrease of -5.9% in the placebo group.

More information on CKD can be found on our blog at: http://www.resverlogix.com/blog/2015/05/28/resverlogix-our-interest-in-chronic-kidney-disease/ and http://www.resverlogix.com/blog/2015/05/29/resverlogix-further-interest-in-chronic-kidney-disease/.

About RVX-208

RVX-208 is a first-in-class, small molecule selective BET bromodomain inhibitor. BET bromodomain inhibition is an epigenetic mechanism that can turn disease-causing genes off, returning them to a healthier state. RVX-208 is the first and only BET inhibitor selective for BRD4-BD2, producing a nexus of biological effects with potentially important benefits for patients with diseases such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes mellitus (DM), Alzheimer’s disease, peripheral artery disease, and chronic kidney disease while maintaining an excellent safety profile. Resverlogix is planning to study RVX-208 in a proposed Phase 3 clinical trial in CVD patients with DM and low HDL.

About Resverlogix

Resverlogix Corp. is developing RVX-208, a first-in-class, small molecule selective BET bromodomain inhibitor for the potential treatment of patients with cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, Alzheimer’s disease, peripheral artery disease, and chronic kidney disease. RVX-208 is the only selective BET bromodomain inhibitor in clinical trials. Resverlogix’s common shares trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: RVX). For further information please visit www.resverlogix.com. We can be followed on our blog at http://www.resverlogix.com/blog and via Twitter https://twitter.com/resverlogix_rvx @Resverlogix_RVX.

This news release may contain certain forward-looking information as defined under applicable Canadian securities legislation, that are not based on historical fact, including without limitation statements containing the words “believes”, “anticipates”, “plans”, “intends”, “will”, “should”, “expects”, “continue”, “estimate”, “forecasts” and other similar expressions. In particular, this news release includes forward looking information relating to research and development activities and the potential role of RVX-208 in the treatment of atherosclerosis. Our actual results, events or developments could be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. We can give no assurance that any of the events or expectations will occur or be realized. By their nature, forward-looking statements are subject to numerous assumptions and risk factors including but not limited to those associated with the success of research and development programs, clinical trial programs including possible delays in patient recruitment, the regulatory approval process, competition, securing and maintaining corporate alliances, market acceptance of the Company’s products, the availability of government and insurance reimbursements for the Company’s products, the strength of intellectual property, financing capability, the potential dilutive effects of any financing, reliance on subcontractors and key personnel and additional assumptions and risk factors discussed in our Annual Information Form and most recent MD&A which are incorporated herein by reference and are available through SEDAR at www.sedar.com. The forward-looking statements contained in this news release are expressly qualified by this cautionary statement and are made as of the date hereof. The Company disclaims any intention and has no obligation or responsibility, except as required by law, to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Company Contacts:

Donald J. McCaffrey
President and CEO
Resverlogix Corp.
Phone: 403-254-9252
Email: [email protected]

Kenneth Lebioda
Senior Vice President Business & Corporate Development
Resverlogix Corp.
Phone: 403-254-9252
Email: [email protected]

Sarah Zapotichny
Director of Investor Relations & Corporate Communications
Resverlogix Corp.
Phone: 403-254-9252
Email: [email protected]

SOURCE Resverlogix Corp.

Veeva Systems Expands Healthcare Professional and Organisation Data Offering with Veeva OpenData for France

BARCELONA, Spain, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —

Veeva OpenData offers customer reference data and services in France – the

second European market in six months

Veeva Systems announced the availability of Veeva OpenData
[http://eu.veeva.com/opendata ] in France – the second European market in just six months –
delivering a new approach to data that is open, easy, and global. Veeva OpenData provides
customer reference data and services for the life sciences industry and delivers millions
of comprehensive healthcare professional (HCP), healthcare organisation (HCO), and
affiliations profiles with consistent standards of quality. Veeva OpenData offers simple
pricing, and eliminates complex and restrictive three-party agreements that limit usage
and access to customer data.

(Logo:
http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120425/527164 )

“Life sciences companies have been seeking a more efficient, streamlined solution for
accessing customer data across markets and platforms,” said Guillaume Roussel, director of
strategy for Veeva OpenData in Europe. “Our new approach to customer data makes
comprehensive customer records fully accessible across the organisation and, because it’s
open, eliminates contractual complications and limitations.”

The Veeva OpenData Partner Program [http://www.veeva.com/meet-veeva/partners/data ]
makes it easy for companies to access and maximise their customer data through Veeva’s
growing partner ecosystem that includes Axtria, BMI SYSTEM, Crossix Solutions, Decision
Resources Group, HighPoint, LiquidHub, OpenQ, Symphony Health Solutions, Qlik, and Zephyr
Health.

To best support customer needs globally, Veeva OpenData is being developed for all
major markets, and available today in Australia, China, France, the US, and the UK.
Availability in other major European countries is expected in 2015, with additional
regions to follow in 2016. Veeva’s rapidly expanding European data business is led by
Guillaume Roussel and Francesca D’Angelo
[http://eu.veeva.com/resources/industry-leaders-join-veeva-to-lead-veeva-network-in-europe ]
, two highly experienced industry experts with more than 25 years combined experience in
life sciences data management and compliance.

Roussel will discuss the importance of open, easy, and global customer data in
complying with the EFPIA transparency code during Veeva’s upcoming life sciences
transparency seminar on 2 June in Paris, co-hosted with BMI SYSTEM and Simmons & Simmons.
Learn more about this seminar here [http://bit.ly/1J6VZyJ ].

Today, the company also announced that Sobi, a specialty life sciences company
dedicated to rare diseases, has selected Veeva Commercial Cloud
[http://eu.veeva.com/commercial-solutions ], including Veeva OpenData in the UK and France
to support its global commercial organisation across sales, marketing, and medical. Sobi
joins a growing list of life sciences companies, including Kythera, Medac Pharma, and
Keryx, in establishing end-to-end commercial operations with Veeva Commercial Cloud. Read
[http://eu.veeva.com/resources/sobi-harmonises-global-commercial-ops-in-the-cloud ] the
full announcement.

Additional Information:

        
        - For more on Veeva OpenData, please visit: http://eu.veeva.com/opendata
        - Stay updated on the latest Veeva news on LinkedIn:
          http://www.linkedin.com/company/veeva-systems
        - Follow @veevasystems on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/veevasystems
          [https://twitter.com/veevasystems ]
        - Like Veeva on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/veevasystems

About Veeva Systems

Veeva Systems Inc. is a leader in cloud-based software for the global life sciences
industry. Committed to innovation, product excellence, and customer success, Veeva has
more than 275 customers, ranging from the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies to
emerging biotechs. Veeva is headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area, with offices in
Europe, Asia, and Latin America. For more information, visit http://www.veeva.com.

Forward-looking statements

This release contains forward-looking statements, including the market demand for and
acceptance of the Veeva OpenData products and related services, plans for expanding the
geographic coverage of the Veeva OpenData products and related services, the results from
use of the Veeva OpenData products and related services, and general business conditions,
particularly in the life sciences industry. Any forward-looking statements contained in
this press release are based upon Veeva’s historical performance and its current plans,
estimates, and expectations, and are not a representation that such plans, estimates, or
expectations will be achieved. These forward-looking statements represent Veeva’s
expectations as of the date of this press announcement. Subsequent events may cause these
expectations to change, and Veeva disclaims any obligation to update the forward-looking
statements in the future. These forward-looking statements are subject to known and
unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially.
Additional risks and uncertainties that could affect Veeva’s financial results are
included under the captions, “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in the company’s filing on Form 10-K for
the period ended January 31, 2015. This is available on the company’s website at
http://www.veeva.com under the Investors section and on the SEC’s website at
http://www.sec.gov. Further information on potential risks that could affect actual
results will be included in other filings Veeva makes with the SEC from time to time.


    Photo: 
    http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120425/527164


SOURCE Veeva Systems

Sobi Establishes Global Commercial Operations in the Cloud with Best-in-Class Veeva Commercial Cloud

BARCELONA, Spain, June 1, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —

Sobi, a specialty life sciences company dedicated to rare diseases, has selected Veeva
Commercial Cloud to support its global commercial organisation across sales, marketing,
and medical. A complete solution, Veeva Commercial Cloud
[http://eu.veeva.com/commercial-solutions ] brings together customer data, multichannel
interactions, and compliant content to provide a comprehensive view of customers for more
efficient and effective commercial execution.

(Logo:
http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120425/527164 )

Veeva Commercial Cloud includes Veeva CRM to orchestrate customer engagement across
channels, Veeva Vault PromoMats for promotional materials management, Veeva Network
customer master data management software, and Veeva OpenData for customer data. It all
works in concert to enable timely, compliant, and personalised customer interactions.

Sobi joins a growing list of life sciences companies, including Kythera, Medac Pharma,
and Keryx, in establishing end-to-end commercial operations with Veeva Commercial Cloud.
With a new foundation, companies are uniting customer interactions across channels,
enabling a holistic commercial strategy based on a complete customer view – including
crucial data on preferences and behaviour. This insight allows companies to coordinate
ongoing communications, whether in person or through digital channels.

“New channels of communication are empowering life sciences companies to more
effectively engage customers and key stakeholders,” said Eric Newmark, program director at
IDC Health Insights. “Advanced cloud technology, integrated commercial platforms, and
higher customer quality data are enabling more orchestrated multichannel customer
communication that will usher in a new wave of transformation separating the leaders from
the laggards.”

Sobi is leveraging Veeva OpenData, the newest addition to Veeva Commercial Cloud, in
the UK and France. Veeva OpenData is a new approach to customer reference data for life
sciences that is open, easy, and global. It provides comprehensive healthcare professional
(HCP), healthcare organisation (HCO), and affiliations data across major markets with
consistent standards for quality and service. Customer records are continuously updated
from authoritative industry sources for the best and most timely information, including
digital profile data crucial to today’s multichannel engagement. The highest standards of
quality and completeness are ensured through rigorous, automated, and steward-led
validation. Veeva OpenData removes traditional data barriers by making it easy for
companies to access and maximise their customer data with a large and growing partner
ecosystem.

About Veeva Systems

Veeva Systems Inc. is a leader in cloud-based software for the global life sciences
industry. Committed to innovation, product excellence, and customer success, Veeva has
more than 275 customers, ranging from the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies to
emerging biotechs. Veeva is headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area, with offices in
Europe, Asia, and Latin America. For more information, visit veeva.com
[http://www.veeva.com ].

Additional Information:

– For more on Veeva Commercial Cloud, please visit:
http://eu.veeva.com/commercial-solutions

– Stay updated on the latest Veeva news on LinkedIn:
http://www.linkedin.com/company/veeva-systems

– Follow @veevasystems on Twitter: https://twitter.com/veevasystems

– “Like” Veeva on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/veevasystems

Forward-looking Statements

This release contains forward-looking statements, including statements regarding
benefits from the use of Veeva’s solutions, demand for Veeva’s solutions, and general
business conditions. Any forward-looking statements contained in this press release are
based upon Veeva’s historical performance and its current plans, estimates, and
expectations and are not a representation that such plans, estimates, or expectations will
be achieved. These forward-looking statements represent Veeva’s expectations as of the
date of this press announcement. Subsequent events may cause these expectations to change,
and Veeva disclaims any obligation to update the forward-looking statements in the future.
These forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties
that may cause actual results to differ materially. Additional risks and uncertainties
that could affect Veeva’s financial results are included under the captions “Risk Factors”
and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations,” in the company’s filing on Form 10-K for the period ended January 31, 2015,
which is available on the company’s website at http://www.veeva.com under the
Investors section and on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. Further information
on potential risks that could affect actual results will be included in other filings
Veeva makes with the SEC from time to time.


    Photo: 
    http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120425/527164


SOURCE Veeva Systems

Heart disease drug shows asthma treatment promise

Pravastatin, a drug known to prevent or stall the progress of heart disease may also be able to alleviate symptoms of asthma according to promising results in lab trials.

The drug is known to regulate cholesterol production in the body, but new research shows that it may also modulate immune responses for a number of diseases.

A new delivery method, a new treatment

The drug showed some promise for treating asthma while taken orally, but researchers wanted to target the respiratory system in hopes of improving the disease. Researchers pursued inhalation because Pravastatin is water soluble and easily converted to an aerosol.

Pravastatin is only approved for oral ingestion in humans, but researchers tested an inhalable version of the drug on lab mice. According to Futurity, the results showed that this use could improve airway health without creating problems in other areas of the body or causing toxic effects.

The treatment lowered airway over-sensitivity that can lead to bronchospasm, it also had some anti-inflammatory effects, and reduced mucus produced in the airway lining.

“Our ultimate goal is to reduce the onset of bronchospasms that make asthma dangerous and can lead to hospitalizations and death,” says Amir Zeki, assistant professor of internal medicine at the UC Davis Health System and lead author of the study who specializes in treating asthma. “While we can’t cure the disease yet, we might be able to improve symptoms and make it much easier to live with”

Pravastatin is the latest in a line of drugs that changes usage midway through its life. Viagra was once intended to be a drug that treated treat angina, a disease of the heart. During testing, some other potential uses for Vagra manifested themselves. Pravastatin isn’t the first drug to do this, and it won’t be the last.

—–

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Researchers find new species of beaver

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Oregon is nicknamed “The Beaver State,” so it’s no surprise that paleontologists recently unearthed a new species of beaver and several other never-before-seen creatures at the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.

According to the Associated Press, the experts recovered the fossilized skull and teeth from a new type of beaver, which they believe lived 28 million years ago. Palentologist Dr. Joshua Samuels stated that this new animal appears to be a distant relative of the modern beaver.

The new species has been named Microtheriomys brevirhinus, and according to reports, it was less than half the size of a modern beaver. The creature is believed to be a relative of the beavers that crossed the Bering land bridge from Asia to North America roughly seven million years ago, and it likely lived during the Oligocene period.

The new beaver, along with fossils of 20 other rodent species, were reported in a recent edition of the journal Annals of Carnegie Museum. Along with Dr. Samuels, Dr. William Korth of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the Rochester Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology was involved in the research.

One out of many

In an email to the wire service, University of Oregon paleontologist Samantha Hopkins said that it would be exciting to take a closer look at the fossils in an evolutionary framework. Hopkins said that there is “relatively little castorid (beaver species) diversity today,” but noted this wasn’t always the case.

“There are hundreds of species (many of which are really important members of their faunal communities) in the fossil record of the Northern Hemisphere, and a better understanding of their diversity and evolutionary relationships has a lot to tell us about processes driving mammalian evolution over the last 40 million years,” she told the AP.

In addition to Microtheriomys brevirhinus, other new species discovered at the site include a dwarf tree squirrel (Miosciurus covensis) smaller than any living in North America today, an early pocket mouse (Bursagnathus aterosseus), and a birch mouse (Plesiosminthus fremdi) named in honor of a retired colleague, the Monument said in a statement.

“This study fills some substantial gaps in our knowledge of past faunas, specifically smaller mammals,” said Dr. Samuels. “Some of the new species are really interesting in their own right, and will ultimately help improve our understanding of the evolution of beavers and pocket mice. These finds show that despite this area being studied for well over 100 years, new discoveries continue to be made. Each new discovery helps to give us a fuller picture of Oregon’s past.”

—–

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AbbVie Presents Results from Phase 1 Studies of Investigational Compound Venetoclax in Patients with Multiple Myeloma at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting

– Phase 1 studies evaluating safety and pharmacokinetics of venetoclax in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma

NORTH CHICAGO, Ill., May 31, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — AbbVie (NYSE:ABBV), a global biopharmaceutical company, today announced that results from a Phase 1b trial of investigational venetoclax, a novel inhibitor of the B-cell lymphoma-2 (BCL-2) protein that is being developed in partnership with Genentech and Roche, in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone, showed an 83 percent overall response rate (n=5/6) in bortezomib-naive patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) multiple myeloma, including two patients who achieved complete responses.(1 )These data will be presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting on Sunday, May 31, in Chicago.

AbbVie will also present during ASCO a separate Phase 1 monotherapy study in heavily pre-treated patients with R/R multiple myeloma, which showed an overall response rate of 29 percent (n=2/7) in patients with t(11;14) chromosomal abnormality.(2)

Multiple myeloma is the second most common blood cancer and begins in plasma cells in the bone marrow.(3 )When plasma cells in the marrow become cancerous, they can grow uncontrollably and form tumors, typically developing in the bone. When a patient has multiple plasma cell tumors, they have multiple myeloma.

“Multiple myeloma remains a high area of unmet medical need and additional research to identify new therapies is important,” said Cyrille Touzeau, M.D., Department of Hematology, University of Nantes, France. “The response rates shown in these studies suggest potential of venetoclax in this patient population and warrant further evaluation.”

“We are extremely encouraged by these results and will continue evaluating this compound in a variety of tumor types, including additional studies in patients with multiple myeloma,” said Gary Gordon, M.D., vice president, oncology clinical development, AbbVie.

Investigation of venetoclax in several additional blood cancers is currently ongoing.

About the Combination Study – Abstract #8580

The Phase 1b multicenter, international clinical trial was designed to determine the safety, pharmacokinetics, preliminary efficacy and maximum tolerated dose of venetoclax in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma. The 32 patients enrolled in the study were segmented by their sensitivity to bortezomib. The median time on study for both the bortezomib-sensitive and bortezomib-naive patients was five months, compared to 1.3 months for bortezomib-refractory patients.

In the study, venetoclax used in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone showed an 83 percent overall response rate (ORR) (n=5/6) in bortezomib-naive patients–including two complete responses–and a 63 percent ORR (n=10/16) in bortezomib-sensitive patients. An overall response rate was not seen in patients who were bortezomib-refractory. A complete response (CR) is sometimes called complete remission.

The most common adverse events in this study (>= 20% of patients) included constipation (41%), diarrhea (38%), peripheral edema (28%), thrombocytopenia (31%), peripheral neuropathy (28%), insomnia (28%), dyspnea (25%) and anemia (22%). Grade 3 and 4 adverse events (>= 10% of patients) included thrombocytopenia (25%) and anemia (13%).

About the Monotherapy Study – Abstract #8576

The Phase 1 multicenter, international clinical trial was designed to determine the safety, pharmacokinetics, preliminary efficacy and maximum tolerated dose of venetoclax as a monotherapy in patients with R/R multiple myeloma. Of the 28 patients enrolled in the study, 10 were t(11;14)-positive, the most common chromosomal abnormality in patients with multiple myeloma.(4 )The ORR in t(11;14)-positive patients evaluable for assessment was 29 percent (n=2/7), including one CR and one partial response. Additionally, t(11;14)-positive patients had a median time on study of 5.1 months compared to 1.9 months for t(11;14)-negative patients.

Common adverse events in this study (>= 20% of patients) included diarrhea (32%), nausea (32%), neutropenia (21%) and fatigue (21%). Grade 3 and 4 adverse events (>= 10% of patients) included thrombocytopenia (18%), anemia (14%) and neutropenia (14%).

About Venetoclax

Venetoclax is an investigational oral B-cell lymphoma-2 (BCL-2) inhibitor being evaluated for the treatment of patients with various cancer types. The BCL-2 protein prevents apoptosis of some cells, including lymphocytes, and can be expressed in some cancer types. Venetoclax is designed to selectively inhibit the function of the BCL-2 protein. Venetoclax is being developed in collaboration with Genentech and Roche. Together, the companies are committed to BCL-2 research with venetoclax, which is currently being evaluated in Phase 3 clinical trials for the treatment of first-line and relapsed/refractory CLL, along with studies in several other cancers. In 2015, the FDA granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation to venetoclax for the treatment of CLL in previously treated (relapsed/refractory) patients with the 17p deletion genetic mutation. Venetoclax is an investigational compound and its safety and efficacy have not been evaluated by the FDA or any other health authority.

About AbbVie Oncology

AbbVie’s oncology research is focused on the discovery and development of targeted therapies that work against the processes cancers need to survive. By investing in new technologies and approaches, we are breaking ground in some of the most widespread and difficult-to-treat cancers, including glioblastoma multiforme, multiple myeloma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia. AbbVie’s oncology pipeline includes multiple new molecules in clinical trials being studied in more than 15 different cancers and tumor types. For more information on AbbVie Oncology and AbbVie’s oncology portfolio, please visit http://oncology.abbvie.com.

About AbbVie

AbbVie is a global, research-based biopharmaceutical company formed in 2013 following separation from Abbott Laboratories. The company’s mission is to use its expertise, dedicated people and unique approach to innovation to develop and market advanced therapies that address some of the world’s most complex and serious diseases. Together with its wholly-owned subsidiary, Pharmacyclics, AbbVie employs more than 28,000 people worldwide and markets medicines in more than 170 countries. For further information on the company and its people, portfolio and commitments, please visit www.abbvie.com. Follow @abbvie on Twitter or view careers on our Facebook or LinkedIn page.

Forward-Looking Statements

Some statements in this news release may be forward-looking statements for purposes of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “project” and similar expressions, among others, generally identify forward-looking statements. AbbVie cautions that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the likelihood that the transaction is consummated, the expected benefits of the transaction, challenges to intellectual property, competition from other products, difficulties inherent in the research and development process, adverse litigation or government action, and changes to laws and regulations applicable to our industry. Additional information about the economic, competitive, governmental, technological and other factors that may affect AbbVie’s operations is set forth in Item 1A, “Risk Factors,” in AbbVie’s 2014 Annual Report on Form 10-K, which has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. AbbVie undertakes no obligation to release publicly any revisions to forward-looking statements as a result of subsequent events or developments, except as required by law.


    1 Touzeau, C. et al. Abstract 8580. Phase 1b Interim Results: Venetoclax
     (ABT-199/GDC-0199) in Combination with Bortezomib (BTZ) and
     Dexamethasone (Dex) in Relapsed/Refractory (R/R) Multiple Myeloma
     (MM). Accepted for presentation at the 51st American Society of Clinical
     Oncology Annual Meeting; May 29-June 2, 2015, Chicago.

    (2) Kumar, S. et al. Phase I Interim Safety and Efficacy of Venetoclax
     (ABT-199/GDC-0199) Monotherapy for Relapsed/Refractory (R/R)
     Multiple Myeloma (MM). Accepted for presentation at the 51st American
     Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting; May 29-June 2, 2015,
     Chicago.

    (3) The Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation website. "About Multiple
     Myeloma" http://www.themmrf.org/multiple-myeloma/. Accessed April,
     2015

    4 An, G. et al. (2013) "t(11;14) multiple myeloma: a subtype associated
     with distinct immunological features, immunophenotypic characteristics
     but divergent outcome." Leuk Res. 37(10):1251-7

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/abbvie-presents-results-from-phase-1-studies-of-investigational-compound-venetoclax-in-patients-with-multiple-myeloma-at-the-american-society-of-clinical-oncology-annual-meeting-300091265.html

SOURCE AbbVie

Amgen Initiates Phase 3 Study Evaluating Once-Weekly Kyprolis® (carfilzomib) in Patients With Relapsed And Refractory Multiple Myeloma

Data from Once-Weekly CHAMPION Phase 1/2 Study Presented at ASCO

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif., May 31, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Amgen (NASDAQ:AMGN) today announced the initiation of the ARROW trial, a global Phase 3 study evaluating the benefit of Kyprolis(®) (carfilzomib) for Injection administered once-weekly with dexamethasone versus the current U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved twice-weekly administration schedule in patients with relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma who have received prior treatment with bortezomib and an immunomodulatory agent (IMiD). The trial was initiated based on results from the Phase 1/2 CHAMPION study, which were presented (abstract no. 8527) at the 51(st) Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) on Sunday, May 31 at 8 a.m. CT.

Results from the Phase 1 and 2 portions of CHAMPION were presented for 104 patients (Phase 1, n=15; Phase 2, n=89) with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who had received one to three prior treatment regimens at the determined maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of 20/70 mg/m(2). In the Phase 2 portion of the study, the overall response rate (ORR; defined as the percentage of patients achieving a partial response or better) was 77 percent. The clinical benefit rate (CBR; defined as the percentage of patients with minimal response or better) was 84 percent; the median time to response for patients who achieved a partial response or better was 1.6 months (range, 0.7-7.2); Kaplan-Meier median duration of response (DOR) was 15 months (95 percent CI 9-not estimable); and the Kaplan-Meier median progression-free survival (PFS) was 10.6 months (95 percent CI 9.0-16.1).

“The results from the CHAMPION Phase 1/2 study form the basis of the Phase 3 ARROW study with the goal of potentially providing patients and physicians greater convenience with a once-weekly dosing schedule of Kyprolis,” said Sean E. Harper, M.D., executive vice president of Research and Development at Amgen. “The initiation of this trial underscores our commitment to addressing the needs of patients with multiple myeloma through the entire treatment continuum.”

The most common hematologic treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) of any grade were anemia (24 percent), thrombocytopenia (22 percent) and neutropenia (8 percent). The most common non-hematologic treatment-emergent AEs of any grade were fatigue (52 percent), nausea (35 percent), headache and diarrhea (31 percent each). The most commonly occurring grade >=3 hematologic treatment-emergent AEs were thrombocytopenia (6 percent), anemia (5 percent) and neutropenia (4 percent). The most common non-hematologic grade >=3 treatment-emergent AEs were fatigue (11 percent), pneumonia (7 percent), acute renal failure and hypertension (6 percent each). Adverse events grade >=3 included cardiac failure (2 percent) and peripheral neuropathy (1 percent).

A total of 36 patients (35 percent) had at least one serious AE. Sixteen patients (15 percent) treated at the MTD had at least one carfilzomib dose reduction due to AEs, and 10 patients (10 percent) discontinued study treatment due to AEs. Ten patients (10 percent) discontinued treatment due to investigator’s discretion, 12 patients (12 percent) discontinued due to patient decision and 34 patients (33 percent) discontinued due to progressive disease. A total of five patients died during the study, all of which were in the Phase 2 portion of the study: one patient each had cause of death reported as cardiopulmonary arrest, pneumonia, disease progression, acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute kidney injury.

About CHAMPION
The CHAMPION (Community Harmonized Assessment of Myeloma Patients via an Integrated Oncology Network) trial is a Phase 1/2, multicenter, single-arm, non-randomized, open-label and dose-escalation study of weekly Kyprolis with dexamethasone for patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. The primary objective of the Phase 1 portion of the study was to determine the MTD of once-weekly Kyprolis with dexamethasone. The primary objective of the Phase 2 portion of the study was to determine the ORR. Secondary endpoints were to evaluate the CBR, PFS, time to progression and DOR. Patients who received one to three prior treatment regimens were eligible to enroll. The last patient was enrolled in September 2014, and the data cutoff date for analyses presented at ASCO was May 1, 2015. A total of 48 percent of enrolled patients were bortezomib-refractory, 28 percent were lenalidomide-refractory and 16 percent were refractory to both bortezomib and lenalidomide. In the Phase 1 portion, patients received Kyprolis as a 30-minute intravenous (IV) infusion on days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle using a standard 3+3 dose-escalation scheme. Patients received Kyprolis at 20 mg/m(2) on day 1 of cycle 1. Subsequent doses started at 45 mg/m(2) and were escalated to 56, 70 or 88 mg/m(2) beginning on day 8 of cycle 1 until the MTD of 20/70 mg/m(2) was reached for use in the Phase 2 portion. Patients received dexamethasone 40 mg (IV or oral) on days 1, 8, 15 and 22 of cycles 1-8; dexamethasone was omitted on day 22 beginning in cycle 9. Treatment was administered until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity was observed.

For more information about CHAMPION, please visit www.clinicaltrials.gov under trial identification number NCT01677858.

About ARROW
The ARROW (RAndomized, Open-label, Phase 3 Study in Subjects with Relapsed and Refractory Multiple Myeloma Receiving Carfilzomib in Combination with Dexamethasone, Comparing Once-Weekly versus Twice-weekly Carfilzomib Dosing) trial is evaluating approximately 460 patients with relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma who have received at least two but no more than three prior therapies, including bortezomib and an IMiD. Those included in the study will be randomized to receive once-weekly Kyprolis (20 mg/m(2) on day 1 of cycle 1, 70 mg/m(2) on days 8 and 15 of cycle 1 and 70 mg/m(2) on days 1, 8 and 15 of subsequent cycles) with dexamethasone (40 mg) versus twice-weekly Kyprolis (20 mg/m(2) on days 1 and 2 of cycle 1, 27 mg/m(2) on days 8, 9, 15 and 16 of cycle 1 and 27 mg/m(2) on days 1, 2, 8, 9, 15 and 16 of subsequent cycles) with dexamethasone (40 mg). The primary endpoint of the trial is ORR, defined as the proportion of subjects achieving a best overall response of partial response, very good partial response, complete response or stringent complete response based on the International Myeloma Working Group Uniform Response Criteria. Secondary endpoints include PFS, overall survival and safety and tolerability. The trial is being conducted in approximately 100 sites worldwide. For more information about this trial, please visit www.clinicaltrials.gov under trial identification number NCT02412878.

About Multiple Myeloma
Multiple myeloma is the second most common hematologic cancer and results from an abnormality of plasma cells, usually in the bone marrow.(1,2) Worldwide, nearly 230,000 people are living with multiple myeloma and approximately 114,000 new cases are diagnosed annually.(3) In the U.S., there are nearly 96,000 people living with, or in remission from, multiple myeloma. The estimated number of new cases of multiple myeloma in 2014 was more than 24,000 and the estimated number of deaths was 11,090.(4) In Europe, approximately 89,000 people are living with the disease and in 2012 there was an estimated 39,000 newly diagnosed cases and 24,000 deaths.(3)

Amgen Post-ASCO Summary Webcast
Amgen will hold a post-ASCO summary webcast on Tuesday, June 2 at 1 p.m. CT. Sean E. Harper, M.D., executive vice president of Research and Development at Amgen, along with members of Amgen’s clinical development team and clinical investigators will participate to discuss data presented at ASCO and Amgen’s broader oncology portfolio of products.

Live audio of the event will be simultaneously broadcast over the Internet and will be available to members of the news media, investors and the general public.

The webcast, as with other selected presentations regarding developments in Amgen’s business given by management at certain investor and medical conferences, can be found on Amgen’s website, www.amgen.com, under Investors. Information regarding presentation times, webcast availability and webcast links are noted on Amgen’s Investor Relations Events Calendar. The webcast will be archived and available for replay for at least 90 days after the event.

About Kyprolis(®) (carfilzomib) for Injection
On July 20, 2012, the U.S. FDA granted accelerated approval of Kyprolis(®) (carfilzomib) for Injection for the treatment of patients with multiple myeloma who have received at least two prior therapies including bortezomib and an immunomodulatory agent (IMiD) and have demonstrated disease progression on or within 60 days of completion of the last therapy. Approval was based on response rate. Clinical benefit, such as improvement in survival or symptoms, has not been verified. Kyprolis is also approved for use in Argentina, Israel and Mexico.

Kyprolis is a product of Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Onyx Pharmaceuticals is a subsidiary of Amgen and holds development and commercialization rights to Kyprolis globally, excluding Japan. For more information about Kyprolis, visit www.kyprolis.com.

Important Safety Information Regarding Kyprolis(®) (carfilzomib) for Injection
This safety information is specific to the current U.S. approved indication, which is based on Phase 2 studies.

Safety data have been evaluated in 526 patients with relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma who received single-agent Kyprolis. There were 37 deaths in the Phase 2 studies, or 7 percent of patients. The most common causes of death, other than disease progression, were cardiac (5 patients), end-organ failure (4 patients) and infection (4 patients). Important warnings and precautions include cardiac arrest, congestive heart failure, myocardial ischemia, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary complications, infusion reactions, tumor lysis syndrome, thrombocytopenia, hepatic toxicity and embryo-fetal toxicity.

Death due to cardiac arrest has occurred within a day of Kyprolis administration. Patients with New York Heart Association Class III and IV heart failure, myocardial infarction in the preceding 6 months and conduction abnormalities uncontrolled by medications were not eligible for the clinical trials. These patients may be at greater risk for cardiac complications.

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) was reported in 2 percent of patients treated with Kyprolis and was Grade 3 or greater in less than 1 percent of patients. Dyspnea was reported in 35 percent of patients enrolled in clinical trials. Grade 3 dyspnea occurred in 5 percent; no Grade 4 events and 1 death (Grade 5) was reported.

Infusion reactions, characterized by a spectrum of systemic symptoms including fever, chills, arthralgia, myalgia, facial flushing, facial edema, vomiting, weakness, shortness of breath, hypotension, syncope, chest tightness, or angina can occur immediately following or up to 24 hours after administration of Kyprolis. Administration of dexamethasone prior to Kyprolis reduces the incidence and severity of reactions. Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) occurred following Kyprolis administration in <1 percent of patients. Patients with multiple myeloma and a high tumor burden should be considered to be at greater risk for TLS.

Thrombocytopenia following Kyprolis administration resulted in a dose reduction in 1 percent of patients and discontinuation of treatment with Kyprolis in <1 percent of patients.

Cases of hepatic failure, including fatal cases, have been reported (<1 percent). Kyprolis can cause elevations of serum transaminases and bilirubin.

Cases of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura/hemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP/HUS) including fata outcome have been reported. Treatment with Kyprolis should be discontinued if signs and symptoms of TTP/HUS occur.

Cases of posterior reversible encephlophay syndrome (PRES) have been reported. Treatment with Kyprolis should be discontinued if PRES is suspected.

There are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women using Kyprolis. Females of reproductive potential should be advised to avoid becoming pregnant while being treated with Kyprolis.

The most common serious adverse reactions were pneumonia, acute renal failure, pyrexia and congestive heart failure. The most common adverse reactions (incidence of 30 percent or greater) observed in clinical trials of patients with multiple myeloma were fatigue, anemia, nausea, thrombocytopenia, dyspnea, diarrhea and pyrexia. Serious adverse reactions were reported in 45 percent of patients.

Full prescribing information is available at www.kyprolis.com.

About Amgen

Amgen is committed to unlocking the potential of biology for patients suffering from serious illnesses by discovering, developing, manufacturing and delivering innovative human therapeutics. This approach begins by using tools like advanced human genetics to unravel the complexities of disease and understand the fundamentals of human biology.

Amgen focuses on areas of high unmet medical need and leverages its biologics manufacturing expertise to strive for solutions that improve health outcomes and dramatically improve people’s lives. A biotechnology pioneer since 1980, Amgen has grown to be one of the world’s leading independent biotechnology companies, has reached millions of patients around the world and is developing a pipeline of medicines with breakaway potential.

For more information, visit www.amgen.com and follow us on www.twitter.com/amgen.

Forward-Looking Statements

This news release contains forward-looking statements that are based on the current expectations and beliefs of Amgen Inc. and its subsidiaries (Amgen) and are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are statements that could be deemed forward-looking statements, including estimates of revenues, operating margins, capital expenditures, cash, other financial metrics, expected legal, arbitration, political, regulatory or clinical results or practices, customer and prescriber patterns or practices, reimbursement activities and outcomes and other such estimates and results. Forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties, including those discussed below and more fully described in the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reports filed by Amgen Inc., including Amgen Inc.’s most recent annual report on Form 10-K and any subsequent periodic reports on Form 10-Q and Form 8-K. Please refer to Amgen Inc.’s most recent Forms 10-K, 10-Q and 8-K for additional information on the uncertainties and risk factors related to Amgen’s business. Unless otherwise noted, Amgen is providing this information as of May 31, 2015, and expressly disclaims any duty to update information contained in this news release.

No forward-looking statement can be guaranteed and actual results may differ materially from those Amgen projects. Discovery or identification of new product candidates or development of new indications for existing products cannot be guaranteed and movement from concept to product is uncertain; consequently, there can be no guarantee that any particular product candidate or development of a new indication for an existing product will be successful and become a commercial product. Further, preclinical results do not guarantee safe and effective performance of product candidates in humans. The complexity of the human body cannot be perfectly, or sometimes, even adequately modeled by computer or cell culture systems or animal models. The length of time that it takes for Amgen and its partners to complete clinical trials and obtain regulatory approval for product marketing has in the past varied and Amgen expects similar variability in the future. Amgen develops product candidates internally and through licensing collaborations, partnerships and joint ventures. Product candidates that are derived from relationships may be subject to disputes between the parties or may prove to be not as effective or as safe as Amgen may have believed at the time of entering into such relationship. Also, Amgen or others could identify safety, side effects or manufacturing problems with Amgen’s products after they are on the market. Amgen’s business may be impacted by government investigations, litigation and product liability claims. If Amgen fails to meet the compliance obligations in the corporate integrity agreement between Amgen and the U.S. government, Amgen could become subject to significant sanctions. Amgen depends on third parties for a significant portion of its manufacturing capacity for the supply of certain of its current and future products and limits on supply may constrain sales of certain of its current products and product candidate development.

In addition, sales of Amgen’s products (including products of Amgen’s wholly-owned subsidiaries) are affected by the reimbursement policies imposed by third-party payers, including governments, private insurance plans and managed care providers and may be affected by regulatory, clinical and guideline developments and domestic and international trends toward managed care and healthcare cost containment as well as U.S. legislation affecting pharmaceutical pricing and reimbursement. Government and others’ regulations and reimbursement policies may affect the development, usage and pricing of Amgen’s products. In addition, Amgen competes with other companies with respect to some of its marketed products as well as for the discovery and development of new products. Amgen believes that some of its newer products, product candidates or new indications for existing products, may face competition when and as they are approved and marketed. Amgen’s products may compete against products that have lower prices, established reimbursement, superior performance, are easier to administer, or that are otherwise competitive with its products. In addition, while Amgen and its partners routinely obtain patents for their products and technology, the protection of Amgen’s products offered by patents and patent applications may be challenged, invalidated or circumvented by its competitors and there can be no guarantee of Amgen’s or its partners’ ability to obtain or maintain patent protection for Amgen’s products or product candidates. Amgen cannot guarantee that it will be able to produce commercially successful products or maintain the commercial success of its existing products. Amgen’s stock price may be affected by actual or perceived market opportunity, competitive position and success or failure of its products or product candidates. Further, the discovery of significant problems with a product similar to one of Amgen’s products that implicate an entire class of products could have a material adverse effect on sales of the affected products and on Amgen’s business and results of operations. Amgen’s efforts to integrate the operations of companies it has acquired may not be successful. Amgen may experience difficulties, delays or unexpected costs and not achieve anticipated cost savings from its recently announced restructuring plan. Amgen’s business performance could affect or limit the ability of Amgen’s Board of Directors to declare a dividend or their ability to pay a dividend or repurchase Amgen common stock.

The scientific information discussed in this news release relating to new indications for Amgen’s products is preliminary and investigative and is not part of the labeling approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the products. The products are not approved for the investigational use(s) discussed in this news release and no conclusions can or should be drawn regarding the safety or effectiveness of the products for these uses.

CONTACT: Amgen, Thousand Oaks
Kristen Davis, 805-447-3008 (Media)
Trish Hawkins, 805-447-5631 (Media)
Arvind Sood, 805-447-1060 (Investors)

    References

            1. Dimopoulos, M.A. Multiple Myeloma. Annals of Oncology 21 (Supplement 7): vii143-vii150, 2010.

            2. National Cancer Institute. SEER Stat Fact Sheets: Myeloma. Available at: http://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/mulmy.html. Accessed May 2015.

            3. International Agency for Research on Cancer, GLOBOCAN 2012 database. Available at http://globocan.iarc.fr/. Accessed May 2015.

            4. Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Facts 2014-2015. Available at: http://www.lls.org/content/nationalcontent/resourcecenter/freeeducationmaterials/generalcancer/pdf/facts.pdf. Accessed May 2015.

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SOURCE Amgen

Announcing Ground-Breaking Technology for Anti-Aging, FDA Approved, Venus Viva.

After clinical trials with Dr. F. Victor Rueckl of Lakes Dermatology, Las Vegas, the FDA approved this revolutionary skincare system. Venus Viva was proven to be safe and effective in improving skin appearance.

Las Vegas, Nevada (PRWEB) May 30, 2015

Venus Viva has proven to work in the effective treatment of acne scars, large pores, deep wrinkles, stretch marks, pigmentation irregularities, and uneven texture when used by a licensed medical professional, such as Dr. F. Victor Rueckl of Lakes Dermatology in Las Vegas who conducted some of the clinical trials in Las Vegas. This body image solution combines NanoFractional Radio Frequency (RF) and SmartScan technology into a system that delivers proven results through a skin heating process that offers minimal discomfort to the patient. Venus Viva devices feature 160 pins per tip with 62mj per pin, as well as a smaller footprint per pin (150×20 Microns), that results in a minimal downtime for the patient undergoing the procedure. (2)

It's a never-ending struggle for people to maintain a healthy and youthful appearance as they get older. Nature can be quite unkind as one ages, with skin starting to sag and lines and wrinkles marching across one's face. Then there's the issue of common skin ailments such as acne and rosacea that inflict millions of people of every age. Now dermatologists have another tool at their disposal in this fight to turn back the ravages of time as the FDA has recently approved the use of Venus Viva as an effective and safe treatment for facial remodeling and resurfacing. In fact, nonsurgical skin tightening procedures have become increasingly popular over the last few years. In 2014 alone, there were 283,259 women and 14,964 men who underwent such procedures to enhance their appearance. (1)

Another important feature of Venus Viva is that it is skin color blind, meaning that it can be safely and effectively used for all skin types. There is minimal downtime to using this FDA-approved product as treatment to one area can be done in as little as fifteen to thirty minutes, thus allowing the patient to get on with their day. Patients can start seeing younger and clearer skin in as few as three treatments, although the manufacturer suggests a full course of six treatments for the face and anywhere from eight to ten treatments on the body to obtain optimal results. As always, such procedures should always be carried out by a licensed dermatologist, such as Dr. F. Victor Rueckl of Lakes Dermatology, as that while the procedure is non-invasive, there is always the risk of complications.

Venus Viva is both portable and easy to use to help achieve a youthful, healthy skin tone. Dr. F. Victor Rueckl of Lakes Dermatology in Las Vegas conducted the FDA trial for Venus Viva, and he notes, "I was very pleased to be part of the testing of Venus Viva as it earned full FDA approval. This product is another useful tool that my office can use to help our clientele turn back the clock by improving skin appearance by tightening the skin and reducing the appearance of common problems such as acne scarring and rosacea. Venus Viva is for dermatological procedures requiring ablation and resurfacing of the skin, but it is much less ablative or dangerous than CO2. It could also have other possible uses in the future, such as the treatment of melasma, a common skin problem that affects women more than men. Our work has shown encouraging signs in the use of Venus Viva to reduce and minimize the effects of melasma. Since Venus Viva was recently approved by the FDA, very few dermatology offices currently have it in their inventory, but my office of Lakes Dermatology in Las Vegas has it, and we're quite experienced in using it to its fullest potential." (3)

The reality of life is that we age as we get older, but people now have options available to them to help turn back the tide of time and regain a youthful, healthy appearance. Venus Viva has shown that it is a safe and effective tool to be used to reduce wrinkles, tighten skin, reduce stretch marks and acne, and much more as it earned FDA approval. As is always the case when considering any cosmetic procedure, consult with an experienced medical professional, such as Dr. F. Victor Rueckl of Lakes Dermatology in Las Vegas, before undergoing any treatments. They can fully explain all the options available to the patient, any associated risks, and what results are most likely expected.

References:

1) http://www.smartbeautyguide.com/procedures/skin-hair/nonsurgical-skin-tightening

2) http://www.venusconcept.com/products/venus-viva/

3) Quote from Dr. F. Victor Rueckl, dermatologist at Lakes Dermatology

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/05/prweb12754506.htm

Barry Haarde Cycles 4,000 Miles Across the USA for Hemophilia

49-Year-Old Texan with Hemophilia and HIV Makes His Fourth Cross-Country Tour to Raise Awareness and Support for Save One Life

Georgetown, MA (PRWEB) May 30, 2015

Cyclist Barry Haarde will commence his fourth cross-country bike tour, “Wheels for the World 2015: Piles of Miles” near San Francisco, California on May 30 to raise awareness about hemophilia and encourage individuals to support needy hemophilic children through Save One Life.

Save One Life supports nearly 1,200 impoverished children and adults with hemophilia in eleven developing countries through direct sponsorships, scholarships and micro-enterprise grants. Hemophilia is a rare genetic disorder that prevents blood from forming an effective clot. Estimated to occur in one out of every 5,000 male births, untreated hemophilia can cause prolonged internal bleeding, painful joint deformities, crippling and death.

In 2012 Barry became the first person with hemophilia and HIV to cycle across the United States. He rode 3,667 miles from Ashland, Oregon through eleven states and Canada to Portsmouth, New Hampshire in 50 days. Two more cross-country trips in 2013 and 2014 have raised that total to over 10,000 miles. Through these efforts, Wheels for the World has secured $130,000 for Save One Life.

Barry dedicates each day of his ride to a person with hemophilia who has lost his life to hepatitis or AIDS and posts their photos and names on Facebook. This includes Ryan White, the teenager who became the face of HIV/AIDS in the late 1980s when he was expelled from his school due to his infection.

For many years Barry hid his own HIV-positive status. But, after surviving a grueling multi-year treatment to cure his hepatitis in his early forties, Barry decided to make his disorder public. Since then Barry has been symbol of courage, determination and endurance for people with hemophilia around the world.

Barry is an outstanding example of his favorite motto, attributed to musician Bob Marley, “You don't know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have.”

“Having survived over thirty years with HIV, and also having cured hepatitis C—from which I’d developed liver cirrhosis—I have a very strong sense of gratitude and appreciation,” says Barry. “Not only have I survived, I am able to maintain the physical health and conditioning required to ride a bike across America. I can at least honor our lost and help those who still struggle by dedicating my rides to them.”

Barry will ride through 13 states in 52 days to dip his wheel in the Atlantic Ocean in Portsmouth, New Hampshire on July 21. The first two weeks of his journey will take him from San Francisco to Sacramento, then north of Lake Tahoe to skirt along Interstate 80 in Nevada. He will stop for a rest day in Salt Lake City, Utah, before continuing along to Provo and Green River on his way to Colorado.

This year Barry aims to secure 130 child sponsorships—10 for each state he rides through—in addition to raising $40,000 for his favorite charity. To learn more about Barry and his Wheels for the World campaign, visit http://www.SaveOneLife.net.

Baxter International, Inc. is the gold sponsor of “Wheels for the World 2015: Piles of Miles.” Biogen, Emergent, George King Bio-Medical, Hemophilia of Indiana, OptumRx and The Alliance Pharmacy are also supporting this event.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/05/prweb12754438.htm

OncLive’s 2015 Giant of Cancer Care™ Awards Announced

National Leaders in Cancer Treatment and Research Honored at Chicago Ceremony

Chicago, Ill. (PRWEB) May 30, 2015

Twelve of the nation’s leading oncology physicians, researchers and academicians were recognized by their peers as the 2015 Giants of Cancer Care at a ceremony hosted by OncLive® at the Chicago Illuminating Company last night. The awardees included medical pioneers selected by a panel of eminent oncologists for landmark achievements in translational research, gene therapy, immuno-oncology and other groundbreaking work that has changed the course of cancer treatment.

Honorees were introduced and celebrated during the third annual Giants of Cancer Care ceremony, which was attended by international leaders in cancer treatment and research, journalists and executives from OncLive and parent company Michael J. Hennessy Associates, Inc.

The 2015 honorees, affiliated with medical centers across the U.S., were carefully chosen from hundreds of nominees to join the roster of world-class clinicians and research scientists who have been honored by OncLive’s Giants of Cancer Care™ Awards since the program began in 2013. The 2015 Giants program is sponsored by Novartis, Merck & Co., Inc., and Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

“Our third annual Giants of Cancer Care ceremony celebrates those physicians and researchers who have devoted their time, talent and resources to improving care for patients and families affected by cancer,” said Jack Lepping, vice chairman at Michael J. Hennessy Associates, Inc., parent company to OncLive/Giants of Cancer Care. “We applaud and appreciate their compassion and dedication to understanding this disease and developing life-changing treatments. By shining a spotlight on their work today, we not only honor their achievements but also hope to inspire more discoveries tomorrow.”

The 2015 Giants of Cancer Care are:

  • Breast Cancer – Gabriel N. Hortobagyi, MD, FACP, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
  • Community Outreach/Education – Harold P. Freeman, MD, The Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Care and Prevention, New York, N.Y.
  • Gastrointestinal Cancer – Robert J. Mayer, MD, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
  • Genitourinary Cancer – Maha H. Hussain, MB, ChB, University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor, Mich.
  • Gynecologic Malignancies – Robert C. Bast, Jr., MD, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
  • Immuno-Oncology – Carl H. June, MD, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.
  • Lung Cancer – John Minna, MD, University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
  • Lymphoid Neoplasms – Emil J. Freireich, MD, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas
  • Melanoma/Skin – Antoni Ribas, MD, PhD, UCLA School of Medicine, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, Calif.
  • Myeloid Neoplasms – Clara Bloomfield, MD, Ohio State University, Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio
  • Scientific Advances – Robert A. Weinberg, PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Whitehead Institute, Boston, Mass.
  • Supportive/Palliative Care – Charles Loprinzi, MD, Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, Rochester, Minn.

(Their full bios appear on http://giants.onclive.com/recipients/2015)

OncLive’s Giants of Cancer Care Awards reflect today’s new and dynamic world of cancer care and research. In 2015, more than 1.6 million new cases of cancer are expected to be diagnosed in the United States—and nearly 590,000 people will die from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute. The most common cancers are projected to include breast cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer, colon and rectum cancer, bladder cancer, melanoma of the skin, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and leukemia. Research scientists and clinicians honored as Giants of Cancer Care are leading the battle against these devastating diseases.

The 2015 Giants of Cancer Care Selection Committee, chaired by Dr. Hope S. Rugo, an oncologist and hematologist specializing in breast cancer research and treatment, includes an exclusive group of oncologists, clinicians and researchers. The nomination process was open to a national audience. The Selection Committee then considered each final nominee’s body of work, including clinical impact, significant contributions and overall accomplishments in order to select 12 honorees from 8 tumor-specific categories and 4 specialty categories. For more information about the Selection Committee, visit http://giants.onclive.com.

About OncLive

OncLive.com is the official website for Intellisphere’s Oncology Specialty Group, which publishes Oncology & Biotech News, OncologyLive, Oncology Nursing News and Contemporary Oncology. OncLive offers oncology professionals resources and information they need to provide the best care for their patients. Intellisphere, LLC, a leading provider of healthcare publishing, research and education, is part of the Michael J. Hennessy Associates, Inc. family of businesses, based in Plainsboro, N.J. MJH also includes the acclaimed CURE Media Group, which combines science and humanity to make cancer understandable. Its flagship product is CURE™ magazine, the largest consumer publication in the U.S. focused entirely on cancer, reaching cancer patients, cancer centers and advocacy groups. To learn more, please visit http://www.OncLive.com.

Media inquiries: please contact Becky Taylor at becky(at)btaylorpa(dot)com or at 609.240.6886

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015GiantsofCancerCare/Winners_VIDEO/prweb12757292.htm

New lab creates indoor hurricane conditions

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Anybody who has ever seen images of the devastation caused by Katrina, and especially people who have experienced such catastrophic events first-hand, know the force with which a hurricane is capable of striking. But what causes ordinary storms to become so powerful?

That’s what experts at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science are trying to find out with their new laboratory, called the Surge-Structure-Atmosphere Interaction (SUSTAIN) facility. There, scientists are studying the physics and the dynamics of hurricanes that make landfall, as well as aspects of these catastrophic coastal storms.

Indoor storms

According to the Associated Press, the facility contains a 75-foot-long, 6.5-foot-high acrylic tank that is capable of holding 38,000 gallons of water. In the tank, this water is agitated using a 1,700 horsepower fan capable of creating simulated Category 5 hurricane conditions and winds of up to 157 miles per hour. Sensors mounted on the ceiling monitor atmospheric changes in the lab.

“SUSTAIN addresses a significant gap in the existing research infrastructure available to support the development of disaster resistant and resilient coastal communities,” the university explained on its website, adding that the lab “provides an innovative experimental test-bed” to evaluate the development of “high-resolution coupled wind-wave-surge forecast models” and “computational fluid dynamics models for hurricane impacts on coastal structures.”

Working to improve forecasts

In the laboratory, Rosenstiel School scientists study the impact caused by the severe wind-driven and wave-induced storm surges typically generated by hurricanes can have on coastal cities and other structures. SUSTAIN’s experiments feature hurricane force winds paired with wind-waves and storm surges combine to create a complex model of coastal topography.

The sensors used to monitor the experiments, lab director Brian Haus told the AP, will gather data to help fine-tune satellites used to monitor actual hurricanes. Such probes, he said, are typically sensitive to small things on the surface, and even though they have to cover big areas, experts aren’t certain what they actually see during extreme weather events.

Haus and his SUSTAIN colleagues also hope that they can enhance the quality of weather-focused observational equipment, the wire service said. Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, told the AP that the research will play a key role in improving storm intensity forecasts, particularly near the coastline.

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ALMA telescope finds red giant solar flare

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Using the ALMA telescope in Chile, researchers from the Chalmers University of Technology have detected what appears to be a gigantic flare on the surface of one of the closest, most well known red giants in the universe – the red giant Mira.

As they explained recently in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, ALMA not only allowed them to see the two stars in the system, Mira A and Mira B, in greater detail than ever before, it also revealed surprising activity similar to that observed on the sun when it emits solar flares.

These observations may help them explain how winds from giant stars contribute to the overall ecosystem of our galaxy, lead author and Chalmers University astronomer Wouter Vlemmings, co-author and Uppsala University astronomer Sofia Ramstedt and their colleagues explained.

Why is this important?

Due to ALMA’s incredible capabilities, Vlemmings said that he and his fellow researchers were able to view details on the star’s surface, and they noticed a very bright region that varies in luminosity. They have concluded that this must be a giant flare, and they believe it is related to another flare observed several years ago by X-ray telescopes.

Red giants, the study authors explained, are critical parts of the galactic ecosystem. As they start dying, they begin losing their outer layers in the form of smoke-like winds that carry heavy elements out into other parts of the universe. These elements can form new celestial objects.

Mira is one of the brightest variable stars in the sky and can be seen with the naked eye when it is at its brightest. The star, located 420 light years away in the Cetus, is actually a binary system comprised of two stars of similar mass (one a red giant and the other a white dwarf) orbiting each other at much the same distance that Pluto orbits the sun.

Ramstedt called Mira “a key system for understanding how stars like our sun reach the end of their lives, and what difference it makes for an elderly star to have a close companion,” and Vlemmings added that observing a flare on the system’s red giant “suggests that magnetic fields also have a role to play for red giants’ winds,” just as they do with solar wind.

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Can MDMA help anxiety for autistic adults?

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

Could MDMA, the active ingredient in the psychoactive drug Ecstasy, be used to treat social anxiety in autistic adults? That’s what researchers from the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center are trying to discover in a new study.

According to the New York Daily News, the substance has already been shown to increase a person’s confidence level, make them more likely to bond with one-another and improve their understanding of social cues. These combined factors could reduce overall social anxiety, co-author Alicia Danforth and her colleagues told the newspaper on Tuesday.

Danforth emphasizes that her team’s research is “not another quack treatment” for autism and related conditions, nor is it an attempt to find a miracle cure for the condition. Rather, they are hoping to measure MDMA’s effect on social anxiety, and are using a purified version of the substance that is much safer than what is found in street drugs.

How the experiment works

In a US Food and Drug Administration-approved pilot study, the researchers began screening autistic adults to find a dozen subjects, all of whom were over the age of 21 and had attended college for at least two years.

Approved subjects are then asked to attend multiple therapy sessions to prepare for the “shift in consciousness” that will result from taking the drug, Danforth said. The MDMA is then given to eight subjects, under supervision, twice per month while the other four receive a placebo. They are then either allowed to listen to music or asked to interact with research-team members.

After a period of six months, the participants and the researchers review how the drug has affected participants, and then members of the placebo group are allowed to begin taking MDMA. Thus far, seven people have been given either MDMA or a placebo in the study, according to the newspaper. A paper discussing the research in more detail appears in the journal Progress and Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry.

As the authors explain in that paper MDMA “catalyzes shifts toward openness and introspection that do not require ongoing administration to achieve lasting benefits,” and using it in adults with autism “may provide a significant advantage over medications that require daily dosing.” Use of the substance, they added, could allow doctors to “employ new treatment models” for anxiety in “the context of a supportive and integrative psychotherapy protocol.”

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