Month: <span>June 2020</span>

Home / 2020 / June
New nanoparticle drug combination for atherosclerosis
Post

New nanoparticle drug combination for atherosclerosis

THE KOREA ADVANCED INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (KAIST) CREDIT: PROFESSOR JI-HO PARK, KAIST Physicochemical cargo-switching nanoparticles (CSNP) designed by KAIST can help significantly reduce cholesterol and macrophage foam cells in arteries, which are the two main triggers for atherosclerotic plaque and inflammation. The CSNP-based combination drug delivery therapy was proved to exert cholesterol-lowering, anti-inflammatory,...

Researchers identify potent antibody cocktail with potential to treat COVID-19
Post

Researchers identify potent antibody cocktail with potential to treat COVID-19

by Deborah Kotz, University of Maryland School of Medicine Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) evaluated several human antibodies to determine the most potent combination to be mixed in a cocktail and used as a promising anti-viral therapy against the virus that causes COVID-19. Their research, conducted in collaboration with scientists...

Post

CAR T cell therapy: potential for considerable savings

GERMAN CANCER RESEARCH CENTER (DEUTSCHES KREBSFORSCHUNGSZENTRUM, DKFZ) Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is a new and in some cases highly effective form of immunotherapy to treat certain types of cancer of the blood and lymph system. This promising treatment comes at a cost, however: The manufacturers charge up to EUR 320,000 for the...

Hot ring produces microwave-powered ultrasound pulses wirelessly
Post

Hot ring produces microwave-powered ultrasound pulses wirelessly

Innovative wireless split-ring resonator concentrates microwaves into a hot-spot for ultrasound emission SPIE–INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR OPTICS AND PHOTONICS Ultrasound imaging is one of the workhorses in a modern hospital. It hits the trifecta of being relatively cheap, portable, and non-invasive. The ability to cause future parents to get a bit emotional over fetus images is...

New drug candidate reawakens sleeping HIV in hopes of functional cure
Post

New drug candidate reawakens sleeping HIV in hopes of functional cure

by Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute have created a next-generation drug called Ciapavir (SBI-0953294) that is effective at reactivating dormant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The research, published in Cell Reports Medicine, aims to create a functional HIV cure by activating and then eliminating all pockets of...

Star-shaped brain cells may play a critical role in glaucoma
Post

Star-shaped brain cells may play a critical role in glaucoma

by NYU Langone Health After a brain injury, cells that normally nourish nerves may actually kill them instead, a new study in rodents finds. This “reactive” phenomenon may be the driving factor behind neurodegenerative diseases like glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness. Led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the study examined what...

Existing drugs may limit damage caused by HIV
Post

Existing drugs may limit damage caused by HIV

by Yale University Yale researchers have identified four drugs that may help minimize the long-term health effects of HIV infection, they report June 23 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. Antiretroviral therapy has proved to be a life-saving treatment for those infected with HIV. Yet even after treatment, most patients still harbor latent HIV in...

Cancer drug: New treatment halts tumour growth
Post

Cancer drug: New treatment halts tumour growth

By Rachel Schraer Health reporter A drug that could stop cancer cells repairing themselves has shown early signs of working. More than half of the 40 patients given berzosertib had the growth of their tumours halted. Berzosertib was even more effective when given alongside chemotherapy, the trial run by the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR)...

Skin cancer: men are genetically more prone
Post

Skin cancer: men are genetically more prone

As COVID-19 restrictions loosen this summer, Canadians will spend more time outdoors and make the most of the sunshine. A new study from McGill University suggests why men may be more genetically prone to develop skin cancer. The research led by Professor Ian Watson of McGill’s Goodman Cancer Research Centre (GCRC), published in the journal...

Blocking sugar metabolism slows lung tumor growth
Post

Blocking sugar metabolism slows lung tumor growth

by Emily Packer, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Blocking a pair of sugar-transporting proteins may be a useful treatment approach for lung cancer, suggests a new study in mice and human cells published today in eLife. Cancer cells use a lot of sugar to fuel their rapid growth and spread. This has led scientists to...