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Archive for December, 2020

Gut microbiota: How does it interact with the brain? – Medical News Today

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Through studies in mice, researchers find evidence that having a healthful balance of gut microorganisms is important for good health.

Researchers from the Institut Pasteur, French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), and Inserm have found evidence that gut microbiota also plays a role in mood regulation and brain function.

Gut microbiota is the community of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that live in the digestive tract.

These findings in mice suggest that changes to gut bacterial communities may lead or contribute to depression. If humans have a similar mechanism, doctors might be able to use bacteria strains to treat mood disorders, such as depression.

A group of 16 researchers from several prominent French research institutions conducted the study, which appears in Nature Communications.

Studies have found that some people with depression experience dysbiosis, which is an imbalance or change in their intestinal microbiota.

Research conducted on rodents also shows that gut dysbiosis has associations with neurological changes linked with depression, such as:

Animal studies also show that gut microbiota helps regulate anxiety. It may also influence the development of neurological conditions caused by circuit dysfunctions, such as Parkinsons disease, Alzheimers disease, depression, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Researchers think this is because gut bacteria release metabolites, tiny bits of food broken down by digestion that influence brain function. Metabolites may impact mood regulation by acting on the endocannabinoid system.

The endocannabinoid system is a complex cell-signaling system consisting of lipid (fat)-based neurotransmitters and their receptors.

It is found throughout the body and plays a role in important aspects of health, such as immune and nervous system function and cellular communication in the nervous system. It also regulates emotions, moods, and stress responses by activation of the systems main receptor, CB1.

Previous research supports the idea that restoring gut microbial health may help treat depression. In animal studies, prebiotic treatment influenced emotional behavior. In human studies, prebiotic supplementation also improved mood in people with depression.

But despite educated theories, researchers still do not know precisely how gut bacteria impact brain function.

Researchers in the recent study set out to find the mechanisms linking gut microbiota and mood disorders. A team of researchers from some of these same French institutions published a report earlier this year, which found that stress-induced changes in gut microbiota reduced the efficacy of the antidepressant fluoxetine in mice.

In the study, researchers submitted genetically identical mice to unpredictable chronic mild stress (UCMS), a mouse model of stress-induced depression, for 8 weeks.

This treatment caused the mice to develop depressive-like behaviors, such as reduced eating, grooming, weight loss, and hippocampal neurogenesis. The hippocampus is responsible for learning and memory and is heavily affected by several psychiatric and neurological conditions.

Researchers then transplanted fecal samples containing gut microbiota from control and UCMS-exposed mice into healthy mice. To serve as a control, mice that received fecal transplants were germ-free mice or received treatment with antibiotics for 6 days.

After 8 weeks, mice that received transplants from UCMS mice developed depression-like symptoms. The mice also experienced a reduction in the number of new brain stem cells and neurons in their hippocampus.

These findings show that transferring gut microbiota from stress-induced depressive mice to healthy mice induced depression-like behaviors.

Surprisingly, simply transferring the microbiota from an animal with mood disorders to an animal in good health was enough to bring about biochemical changes and confer depressive-like behaviors in the latter.

Pierre-Marie Lledo, head of the Perception and Memory Unit at the Institut Pasteur (CNRS/Institut Pasteur), joint last author of the study

To figure out how this occurred, researchers explored the possibility that UCMS-exposed microbiota may trigger depression by altering metabolism. They found that mice with UCMS microbiota had significantly reduced levels of certain fatty acids in their blood and brain.

The reduced fatty acids included monoacylglycerols (MAG), diacylglycerols (DAG), polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), and linoleic acid. monoacylglycerols (MAG), diacylglycerols (DAG), polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), and linoleic acid. Variations of two of these fatty acids, DAD and PUFA, are converted into endocannabinoids (eCB).

The researchers speculate that gut dysbiosis may cause these changes in fatty acid levels. Studies link the dysregulation of the endocannabinoid system and its central receptor, CB1, with depression in both UCMS-model mice and humans.

In the study, the researchers found that mice with UCMS microbiota had greatly reduced levels of eCBs in their hippocampus and blood. They also found that mice with UCMS microbiota had reduced levels of Lactobacillus bacteria.

The researchers were able to reduce the depressive impact of the UCMS microbiota by enhancing CB1 levels and giving the mice a strain of Lactobacillus bacteria orally.

These findings suggest that chronic stress, diet, and the gut microbiota contribute to the development of depression-like behaviors via the endocannabinoid system.

This discovery shows the role played by the gut microbiota in normal brain function, says Grard Eberl, Head of the Microenvironment and Immunity Unit (Institut Pasteur/Inserm) and joint last author of the study.

More specifically, imbalances in the gut bacterial community that reduce fatty acid levels vital to the endocannabinoid system and brain function seem to encourage the development of depression-like behaviors.

These findings mean certain bacteria could act as a natural antidepressant, treating mood disorders by restoring gut microbial health. And this is promising news, considering the slew of potential adverse side effects and relatively low efficacy rate of most current antidepressants.

To confirm their results, the researchers will need to test their findings in humans. The researchers say that new research will also need to explore whether changes to the gut microbiota impact other brain targets of the endocannabinoid system in the same way.

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Gut microbiota: How does it interact with the brain? - Medical News Today

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Vitality Beyond 50 Targets a Specific Niche in the Wellness Industry – Small Business Trends

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Peoples health needs can change with age. But many wellness brands today focus mainly on young adults. Luckily, Vitality Beyond 50 is there to provide guidance specifically geared toward women in a different age group. Read more about the company below in this weeks Small Business Spotlight.

Provides nutritional guidance for women over 50.

Founder Kristine Bahr told Small Business Trends, I am an Integrative Functional Medicine nutritionist. I help women over 50 regain their energy and vitality with a personalized treatment plan including nutritional services and supplements.

Bringing scientific testing and experience to clients.

Bahr says, I have 20 years of experience as an Integrative Functional Medicine Nutritionist. I do scientific testing to determine the root cause of any illness.

By niching down another venture.

Bahr explains, Vitality Beyond 50 is an offshoot of my present business, Cutting Edge Wellness.

Seeing results with clients.

Bahr says, In my business history, I have helped thousands of clients, all ages achieve optimal health.

She adds, The best gifts I have received are women having babies after being they were infertile. It is a joy to my heart.

Setting up in a new area.

Bahr says, The biggest risk is when I moved from the Berkshires to Boston. I had to develop my business in a new location.

Exploring new areas and continuing to serve clients, just in new ways.

Bahr explains, I would travel more (excluding COVID restrictions) and write a book.

It is a time of Great Awakening. A time for waking up to who you are, not who others think you are. Abraham Hicks

* * * * *

Image: Vitality Beyond 50, Kristine Bahr

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Loyola College researchers find that Kabasura Kudineer’s 145 compounds are extremely potent in controlling COVID-19 – EdexLive

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Researchers from Loyola College have found that herbal concoction Kabasura Kudineer, which has extracts from 15 medicinal plants, is vital in the prevention of COVID-19 and they have proved through a docking study that it can be used either to block the host cell receptor or to inactivate 3CLpro, the protease that controls the replication of the virus.

Dr Savariar Vincent, research supervisor and former Dean of Research at Loyola College and research scholar Dr Manoj Dhanraj teamed up with Dr Muthupandian Saravanan from Mekelle University in Ethiopia and Dr Selvaraj Arokiyaraj from Sejong University, South Korea for the research. Their paper was published in Frontiers Molecular Bioscience, a reputed journal in the field.

Another paper published in Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine stated that Kabasura Kudineer could be used for effective treatment of COVID-19 but the study only analysed 37 compounds while the Loyola College study worked on 145, Dr Vincent told Edex. "We analysed 145 compounds and 15 of them are extremely powerful and if we were to create medicine with it, it could prove to be a powerful medication against COVID-19. We have also used a different software for the study. Our paper has also been published in a Q1 journal which ensures worldwide reach," he added.

Tamil Nadu's recovery rate is quite high at 97 per cent and one of the reasons is that people here have been consuming Kabasura Kudineer, said Dr Vincent. "Even at times when antibiotics don't work, Kabasura Kudineer is shown to always work," he said. "We did a docking study using the gene structure of COVID and the various medicinal plants that are in Kabasura Kudineer. We have only been saying that it is a preventive measure. If we keep drinking it on a regular basis, then it will prevent COVID from spreading in the body. It is very effective when consumed for 14 days at a time," he added.

Kabasura Kudineer, an official Siddha Formulation, comprises of 15 medicinal plants Adhatoda vasica, Andrographis paniculata, Anacuclus pyrethrum, Coleus ambonicus Cypreus rotundus, Clerodendrum serratum, Hyfrophila auriculata, Saussurea lappa, Sida acuta, Syzgium aromaticum, Terminalia chebula, Tinospora cordifolia, Tragia involuerta, Zingiber officinale and Piper longum. "When we studied those 145 compounds in it, we found that all of them had the power to bind with the Coronavirus and stop it from propagating. It also ensures that the virus doesn't affect the receptors in the cells," added the professor. "Siddha, Ayurveda and Unani medicine should be brought into the mainstream and its power harnessed along with mainstream medicine. We need to do a lot more research into traditional medicine into it. Ministry of AYUSH has recommended it all across India and that has contributed to keeping the infection rate low. There are 29 Siddha COVID centres in Tamil Nadu," he said.

The researchers also said that this study is important because there was no scientific validation for Kabasura Kudineer before this. "Even Nilavembu Kudineer is very potent against dengue but there have been no scientific validations against it. That is why we decided to do this study. We have shared the findings with ICMR and they have acknowledged it. We will be submitting it to the TN government and the Siddha College soon," he said.

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Loyola College researchers find that Kabasura Kudineer's 145 compounds are extremely potent in controlling COVID-19 - EdexLive

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Comprehensive Report on Health Coaching Market 2021 | Size, Growth, Demand, Opportunities & Forecast To 2027 | Aetna, National Consortium for…

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Health Coaching Market research report is the new statistical data source added by A2Z Market Research.

Health Coaching Market is growing at a High CAGR during the forecast period 2021-2027. The increasing interest of the individuals in this industry is that the major reason for the expansion of this market.

Health Coaching Market research is an intelligence report with meticulous efforts undertaken to study the right and valuable information. The data which has been looked upon is done considering both, the existing top players and the upcoming competitors. Business strategies of the key players and the new entering market industries are studied in detail. Well explained SWOT analysis, revenue share and contact information are shared in this report analysis.

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Top Key Players Profiled in this report are:

Aetna, National Consortium for Credentialing of Health & Wellness Coaches, Wellcoaches School of Coaching, National Society of Health Coaches, Duke Integrative Medicine, Humana.

The key questions answered in this report:

Various factors are responsible for the markets growth trajectory, which are studied at length in the report. In addition, the report lists down the restraints that are posing threat to the global Health Coaching market. It also gauges the bargaining power of suppliers and buyers, threat from new entrants and product substitute, and the degree of competition prevailing in the market. The influence of the latest government guidelines is also analyzed in detail in the report. It studies the Health Coaching markets trajectory between forecast periods.

Global Health Coaching Market Segmentation:

Market Segmentation: By Type

Health EducatorsHealth CoachesWellness Coaches

Market Segmentation: By Application

Day spasCorporationsMedical centersNatural health food storesPhysician officesWellness centersSchools

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Regions Covered in the Global Health Coaching Market Report 2021: The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt) North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada) South America (Brazil etc.) Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.) Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

The cost analysis of the Global Health Coaching Market has been performed while keeping in view manufacturing expenses, labor cost, and raw materials and their market concentration rate, suppliers, and price trend. Other factors such as Supply chain, downstream buyers, and sourcing strategy have been assessed to provide a complete and in-depth view of the market. Buyers of the report will also be exposed to a study on market positioning with factors such as target client, brand strategy, and price strategy taken into consideration.

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Market Penetration: Comprehensive information on the product portfolios of the top players in the Health Coaching market.

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Global Health Coaching Market Research Report 2021 2027

Chapter 1 Health Coaching Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 10 Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 11 Market Effect Factors Analysis

Chapter 12 Global Health Coaching Market Forecast

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Dont let the winters eat up your fitness regime – Hindustan Times

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Come winter and the hardest task is to get out of thewarmth of the blanket and go for that run.As soon as temperatures dip, even the most motivated and dedicated fitness enthusiasts start to press thesnooze icon on the mobile clock.If you are struggling to maintain theexercise schedule which you acedat during the summer months,you are not alone.

Dr Anjali Hooda Sanghwan, says, Winters are a great time to lose weight! The metabolic rate of the body is at its best, the calories we consume are utilised better in the winter.

She adds, The best way to stay fit and find motivationin the cold season is to remember that when summer approaches one can look forward to coming out of those heavy clothes to a super fit body that waskept under wraps for the time being. Its actually the best time to focus on fitness, the good part is youend up sweating less and yet can shed weight too.

We all would be kidding if we thought it was just as easy to get outside and run in the winter as it is in the summer. Sometimes, it can take more effort to actually get out of the bedthan it does to complete a run itself! But training outside will give you a boost mentally and physically.

As Luke Coutinho, Holistic Lifestyle Coach- Integrative Medicine,says, Daily exercise also gives us a regular dose of endorphins, ahappy hormone, which can go a long way in combating seasonal affective disorder, depression and anxiety, which is real and especially seen in areas where temperatures drop sub-zero. Exercise also helps keep immunity up so you can better fight off the flu, activates circulation which usually slows down and initiates a process of sweating, which is one of the most natural ways to throw toxins out of our body. And of course, it can avoid the winterweight gain, which most people fear about.

Swapneel Hazare, Strength and Conditioning Coach,Founder - Shield Fitness, says, Unfortunately, during winters people feel it is necessary to spendmost of their time indoors to avoid the cold. On the contrary activities like jogging, walking,running or cycling outside is vital to get you the much-required dose of Vitamin D. This willbuild your immunity and will protect you against any illness caused by the change inweather.

Though its cold, but its time to embrace a strict workout schedule. We are sure these tips would help you.

1. Get the right kit

Though sounds the most banal advice but itwould make a big difference. Gloves and a headband to cover your ears will reduce the risk of catching a cold.

2. Set a goal

Focusing on a goal is the key to keep yourselfmotivated. Create your fitness goals and remember just how you will feel when you complete your kilometers.

3. Find a workout buddy

With friends, everything becomes easier. Even if itmeans running or jogging in the morning. Apart from accountability, you could chatand then enjoy a hot cup of chai after the workout.

4. Make it interesting

Keep in mind to make your workouts diversified, include body weight/strength training orgrounding practices like Hatha Yoga. You can complement your exercise routine withmassage therapies to balance Vata Dosha, says Namita Piparaiya, Yoga, and Ayurveda Lifestyle Specialist, Founder - Yoganama

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North Central West Virginia experts give tips on sticking to popular New Year’s resolutions – WV News

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

CLARKSBURG, W.Va. (WV News) With New Years Day right around the corner, many people are contemplating and committing to resolutions that help promote healthier lifestyles while they put 2020 behind them.

Getting in shape and weight loss remain among the most popular resolutions, and Dr. Elizabeth H. Hess, MD, United Hospital Center Family Medicine Residency Associate Program director and Integrative Medicine director, said its important to take some things into account in order to be successful.

I think its important when you think about a New Year/New You theme that its not limited to resolutions about a specific weight loss goal. We often focus on numbers on the scale but a new you should start with a mindset and emphasize how you accept yourself and choose to take steps that will help you feel better and stronger and more empowered as you reduce your risk of many chronic diseases like hypertension, diabetes and heart disease, she said.

When setting goals, its important to be realistic and not set them too out of reach in the beginning. Smaller goals can help people stick to their plans, she said.

I recommend starting with small steps, but at the same time celebrate milestones along the way. This strategy is proven to be successful, yet simple, as it focuses on small, practical changes that add up to a healthy lifestyle over time, she said.

Hess said regular physical activity is essential for good health. Incorporating it into a new routine early can aid in weight loss, and in the future, can help keep it off.

Regular physical activity is an essential part of this wellness journey, and, yes, it can aid with weight loss and more specifically help maintain weight loss but the benefits of physical activity go way beyond the waist line. Specifically, regular physical activity helps elevate your mood and has shown to be an effective treatment or add-on treatment for anxiety and depression. It also plays a role in healthy sleep patterns. Finally, it gives our immune system a natural boost, which is so essential during the COVID-19 pandemic, she said.

For adults, Hess said its recommended they get at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise a week, like fast walking, casual biking or light yard work, or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity aerobic activity a week, like jogging or swimming. Adults should also add two days of resistance training to their routine, as well as explore activities that improve flexibility, she said.

To get in those minutes, North Central West Virginia is home to several area gyms and facilities for people to pursue their resolutions, such as the Harrison County YMCA, which aside from the exercise equipment, offers several classes to keep members engaged and healthy.

Healthy eating habits, Hess said, are another important aspect when losing weight.

Most of us have developed habits of how, when and why we eat. When we want to make changes in our diet and nutrition, I think its very important to also reflect on our attitudes toward food and our relationship with food. How, when and why we eat can often have deep-seated emotional triggers and if these issues are not addressed, it can be difficult to make lasting changes to how we see and use food to nourish ourselves. A lot of patients often want to adopt a radical change or a so-called fad diet and hope to see rapid changes in weight.

Weight loss management experts often dont recommend just one way of eating or prescribed diet plan. Its important that all the nutrients and micronutrients our body requires are included or supplemented in our eating pattern, but for a starting point, I would suggest starting with a mindfulness-based eating program, she said.

Mindful eating is about using mindfulness or our full attention to learn to recognize the difference between true hunger and non-hunger triggers and to really pay attention to our experience of eating, she said.

Mindful eating involves eating slowly without distraction, learning to distinguish between true hunger or emotional or habit-eating cues and only eating until full, she said.

It also stresses engaging all the senses in the act of eating and noticing how food affects your feelings. It makes eating intentional and not automatic. This mindful act of eating will lend to any nutrition program you adopt for weight management but most importantly it will build a healthy relationship and appreciation for the food you eat, she said.

Permanently improving eating habits requires a person to reflect on their habits, replacing unhealthy habits on healthier ones and reinforcing those habits.

For those trying to improve their overall wallet health, Edward Jones financial adviser Larry Cann offered several pointers.

Sit down and create a budget, and more importantly follow it. For most folks, actually seeing, paying attention to what they are spending on a more regular basis often times helps curve some of that frivolous spending, he said.

With 2020 being a trying year for everyone, filled with job losses, cut hours and parents teaching children at home while working on their own careers, Cann said being prepared is an important focus heading into the new year.

As part of that budget, work towards having an emergency fund. Id define an emergency fund as having somewhere in the neighborhood of approximately six months worth of living expenses. That gives you that cushion for the unexpected, including the loss of a job, cutting of hours, losing overtime pay, (etc.). Having that emergency fund gives you a cushion and time to react when something bad does happen, he said.

For those paying down debt, Cann said putting focus on paying the highest interest debts is impactful, and for folks who have already started planning financially in any way, remember to establish goals, create a plan to follow and dont overreact.

For those curious, unsure or even frightened about finances, seeking the help of a financial adviser can be very beneficial, as they can help you create a plan, lay out the goals an individual would like to accomplish and help achieve them.

You dont have to have a million dollars to talk to us. Thats simply not the case. ... If you are in a position where you are confused, worried and not quite sure, if you have a goal and you dont have a plan in place to help achieve that goal, reach out to somebody. Let somebody help you create that plan, he said.

{span}Staff writer Steven Baublitz can be reached at (304)626-1404 or sbaublitz@theet.com.{/span}

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What Are Biodynamic Wines? – Why Biodynamic Wines Are the Most Green – Esquire.com

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

There is a certain type of tea (not the kind you drink) made from manure that was once stuffed inside a cow horn, buried on a farm for a season or two, dug up, and diluted with water. That tea is stirred in a bucket until a vortex, which absorbs the energy of the environment around it, forms. Every few minutes, the vortexs direction is switched. After the mixture absorbs its share of environmental energy, it is sprayed, arbitrarily, over grape vines in a vineyard.

The spraying takes place according to a calendar that follows the phases of the moon and alignment of the stars to determine four types of daysroot, leaf, flower, fruitand the plants you should be cultivating on these days. It also dictates the types of wine you should be drinking on these days. Wines shine brightest on fruit days, although you can get away with a lighter white wine on flower days, too. If youre drinking a Pinot Noir on a root day, you have made a huge mistake.

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The label "biodynamic" is often attached to this intensive practice of winemaking, but its a type of farming in generalpart practice, part philosophy. Biodynamics were first theorized a century ago by Rudolf Steiner, an Austrian philosopher and beekeeper who hosted a series of lectures in the 1920s decrying the creep of synthetic fertilizers and chemicals into farming. To this day, the biodynamic protocol refuses conventional additives, follows specific preparations for composting, and plans by that biodynamic calendar.

"We people tend to think we can control things," says Rex Farr, co-owner of Farrm Wine, a biodynamic vineyard on Long Island, New York. "But we cant control anything. Biodynamic farming is about giving up control. Its the PhD of organics. It includes energies that are not just in the soil but aboveground, too: how the moon affects the tides, how the stars and planets all play a part in the energy cycle that we here on terra firma are part of."

Biodynamic wines arent new, but as the reality of climate change sets in and younger generations look to spend money on brands paying attention to it, they have been newly attended to, whether wine drinkers understand them or not.

The big idea in biodynamics is self-sustaining agriculture: The biodynamic farm is symbiotic with its plants, soil, animals, and process. It does not take away from the earth, and it does little to disrupt the natural environment of the, albeit manmade, farm with human intervention and destruction. It predates the organic movement by about 15 years. But because biodynamic farming also follows the energy of the cosmos, an idea that has no basis in fact, the decision to drink biodynamic wine becomes a question not of taste or quality but one of integrity. Its not about what kind of wine we like, but what our values are when we go to buy a bottle.

"A lot of consumers walk into the store and want a natural or biodynamic wine because theyve heard the word around," says Jane Arbogast, assistant wine buyer at Eastside Cellars in New York City. "But when I push them, they usually dont know exactly what it means. What theyre usually looking for is something with morals that match their own."

If you are seeking the biodynamic label, youll likely find it at your local wine store and definitely at the closest Whole Foods, in the non-conventional wine aisle full of other green-sounding words like natural, sustainable, and regenerative, nestled among low-intervention wines and dry-farmed wines. These seemingly eco-friendly words are not bound by any USDA (or even colloquial) definition and can easily misrepresent environmental responsibility to the wine-drinking masses. Natural might appeal to the psyche, but it has no real claim to health, despite the health food industrys insistent usage. Natural is not inherently good. Arsenic is natural. It can also kill you.

"We call it 'greenwashing,'" says Ed Field, co-owner of Natural Merchants, an importer of organic and biodynamic wine for places like Whole Foods. "Natural, sustainablethose are like nails on a chalkboard. If you throw in terms that are undefined, it [all] becomes a marketing gimmick."

Part of the draw toward biodynamics is the sense that natural, sustainable, even organic, are not enough. "On a scale from the most green to the least green, biodynamic is the most extreme," says Arbogast. "Its the most dedicated to preserving the earth's resources."

Biodynamic practices havent been updated since Steiners first call to them in 1924, and although any product with a biodynamic label is certified as such from an international governing body called Demeter, in the U.S., the USDA stamp of organic approval is the closest thing we have to a legally bound manifestation of the idea. But where organics focus on what we dont addchemicals, synthetics, and the likebiodynamics also emphasize not taking anything away.

"Say a plant is sick," says Farr. "The Western approach would be: Lets go treat it with Roundup. We ask, 'Why is the plant sick?' Im not just going to eliminate the problem but look at the sourcethe plant, the roots, the soil."

In this way, biodynamic winemaking sounds a lot like integrative medicine: If a person has a chronic skin rash, you dont just prescribe a topical antibiotic and move along. You look at their stress levels, their food intake, their bloodwork. But biodynamics get real hippie, real quick. Some farmers believe in it like a religion. Steiner, for example, doesnt just have modern-day students of the practice, but zealots. They live and breathe the idea that we as people and as an earth are all interconnected with the soil and stars, and we must limit the damage we do to the natural order of things. Wine is not just good or bad based on taste, but right or wrong, ethical or unethical.

That intangible, philosophical way of behaving might be what draws both farmers and wine drinkers to a century-old hypothesis. Its a poetic ideal, which makes it impossible to study, impossible to quantify. If, ultimately, you want to know if biodynamic wine is quantifiably better than other green-sounding wines, youre out of luck. Maybe thats the point.

"Science compiles proof through controlled experiments," says Anna Katharine Mansfield, associate professor of enology at Cornell Universitys College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. "But biodynamics wouldnt fit that frame. They believe you cant replicate a system." You cant test biodynamic wine in a lab, because it matters what day of the week and month and year you drink it on. It matters who you are with and how it is shared and why it is experienced at all. In Mansfield's opinion, if a farmer takes care of the overall, holistic health of a vineyard system, that's good. "But that also happens in organic growing. When you move to relying on the tides of the moon and all that, it probably isn't better than organic."

Wine is not just good or bad based on taste, but right or wrong, ethical or unethical.

Viticulture and enology, the studies of winemaking, are built inside the scientific framework of falsifiability: We test ideas that have the capacity to be proven wrong. In this way, biodynamics seem more like religion than science. We cant prove that the hypothesis is true, but we also cant prove that its not true.

"I have no degree in agriculture, but I have 30 years of farming experience," says Farr. "We are just caretakers of what we do out here. We are not trying to control nature. Theres certainly more spirituality in biodynamics than organics. You can just feel something different. You really can."

Belief in holistic farming aside, some are driven to the biodynamic label by the perception that non-conventional wines are "healthier." It is probably more accurate to say that certain types of wine are less damaging or have fewer additivesthat some wines are less bad than others.

"I have to laugh when people ask for wine without chemicals," says Mansfield. "Everything that makes wine taste good are chemicals. Wine is chemicals. Humans are chemicals. The most toxic thing in any bottle of wine is the alcohol. Let's just agree that we are ingesting a toxin because we like it."

For the record, a casual wine consumer cannot usually tell the difference between a biodynamic wine and other winesnatural, organic, and sometimes even straight-up conventional. Just tastes like good ole fermented grape juice. And no winenot biodynamic, organic, nor naturalis a health food. But what you think, your perception of the wine, is really what ends up defining how good it is. If you think that the wine you bought is a moral investment, that youre supporting sustainable farming, that you are a healthy person who buys healthy things, then youll probably have a better experience drinking that wine.

We have stories about wines because it has never been compelling to reduce the earth and our time on it into data in a lab. Thats why philosophies of farming and cosmic calendars and belief in something beyond what is here right now exist. Science can only arm us with so much.

Biodynamic wine is about those stories. Wine is not just wine. One thing is never, can never be, just one thing. Everything is connected. To some, it is impossible to separate wine from its former life as a grape, the grape from the tea-sprayed vine, or the tea on the vine from its energy in the vortex of space. The wine can't be stripped from its context, just as we cant strip ourselves from the earth and our space in the stars, our morals from our wines.

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Global Health Coaching Market Research Report focuses on key applications and growth rates and outlooks till 2026 – Factory Gate

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Globa Health Coaching Market Research Report uses definitions, classifications, and market scopes to give a detailed estimate of the current status of the Health Coaching industry. Basics of the Health Coaching industry are being studied, such as the competitive landscape structure, prominent players in the industry, and the size and value of the Health Coaching market. Health Coaching Market growth trends, development plans, dynamic market drivers, and risk assessments are implemented. All Health Coaching Industry traders, dealers, and distributors are being investigated globally. This study describes the strategies and business plans implemented by the main players in the Health Coaching market.

Key Players:

AetnaAmerican Association for Health EducationAmerican Council of Exercise (ACE)CignaCleveland ClinicDr. Dears Wellness InstituteDuke Integrative MedicineHealth Coach InstituteHumanaInternational Coach Federation

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Health Coaching Industry report Provides useful information on market geography, revenue analysis, market share, and value. First, we look at implementation, operability, product classification, scope, and maturity. The main players of the Health Coaching industry as a whole and their presence in different regions and countries are evaluated. Development plans, Health Coaching growth tactics, and a complete industry overview are presented from 2015-2019 and Forecast Analysis from 2020-2026.Interview with key opinion leaders in the market to get an estimate of the Health Coaching Market size and the market numbers. The top regions surveyed for their presence in the Health Coaching industry include North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, the Asia Pacific region, Southeast Asia, and South America. At the national level, the Health Coaching market analysis includes the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, China, Japan, India, South Korea, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia, Egypt, South Africa, Turkey, and more.

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In addition to the market size and value of Health Coaching, supply and supply statistics, usage, gross profit structure, and price analysis are performed. The study also covers capacity, existing and emerging segments of the Health Coaching industrial market, and new business plans, Health Coaching industry competitive analysis. This research study is divided based on Health Coaching product types, applications in different industries, and research areas for concise understanding.The major factors which are driving the Health Coaching industry growth and the factors which are limiting the growth of the market are assessed. In-depth research on development activities, market coverage, new product releases, and mergers and acquisitions in the Health Coaching industry. The Health Coaching industry dimension is based on production and market value to assess revenue and growth. Upstream raw material suppliers and downstream buyers of the Health Coaching market in-depth study. The traders, distributors, dealers, and manufacturers involved in Health Coaching on a global scale is offered.The SWOT analysis is conducted for every region and Health Coaching Market players. The industry barriers, risks, and analysts opinions are structured. This study describes the growth trajectory, company structure, risk assessment, and comprehensive outlook for the Health Coaching industry. The analysis of production, value, and demand defines the scope of the market. Market stability, Health Coaching business plans and policies, and SWOT analysis of industry players lead to strategic planning.

Global Health Coaching Market segments:

Global Health Coaching Market By Type:

Type IType II

Global Health Coaching Market By Application:

Application IApplication II

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Kevin Harvick Earns Driver of the Year Honors for Fourth Time – World Sports Network

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

The pandemic-interrupted racing season produced several exceptional candidates for the Richard Petty Driver of the Year award, conferred by vote of the National Motorsports Press Association. Kevin Harvick led NASCARs premier division with nine victories. Chase Elliott claimed his first Cup Series title.

Scott Dixon won the first three races on the IndyCar Series on the way to his sixth championship. Denny Hamlin led the Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyotas flagship team, with seven triumphs and 18 top-five finishes in NASCARs top series. Kyle Larson won 46 of the 92 dirt races he entered, taking checkered flags in four different types of race cars.

Ultimately, it was Kevin Harvick who was named Richard Petty Driver of the Year with 45 percent of the vote from the NMPA membership. In a season interrupted for 10 weeks by the coronavirus pandemic, Harvick won the first race after the resumption of competitionMay 17 at Darlingtonand went on to claim eight more trophies for a career-best nine victories.

Harvick finished fifth in the final standings after narrowly failing to qualify for the Championship 4 race, which Elliott won to secure his maiden championship. But the NMPA rewarded Harvick for his body of work, which elevated his career total to 58 wins, most among active drivers now that Jimmie Johnson has left the Cup Series to race IndyCars next year.

It was the fourth such award for Harvick, who earned the distinction for the first time in 2001 when he was thrust into the limelight as Dale Earnhardts successor at Richard Childress Racing after Earnhardt died in a last-lap crash in the season-opening Daytona 500. Harvick also was the top vote-getter in his 2014 championship season and in 2018.

Buoyed by victories in the final two races of the season, Elliott was second in the balloting with 30 percent of the vote. Dixon and Larson, the latter of whom will return to the Cup Series with Hendrick Motorsports in 2021, also were selected on multiple ballots.

One by-product of the coronavirus pandemic has been the strengthening of the charitable instincts among top NASCAR stars. The Checkered Flag Foundation, founded by 2012 NASCAR Cup champion Brad Keselowski, celebrated its 10th anniversary by providing business suits to returning veterans of the United States Armed Services to aid them in securing work after their service.

Keselowski said:

Weve been celebrating the 10th year of the Checkered Flag Foundation in 2020, and this feels like such a fitting way to end the season and spread some joy around the holidays. Im grateful that we could come together to recognize veterans during this important transition for them.

On November 5, Martin Truex Jr. and his long-time girlfriend, Sherry Pollex, celebrated the opening of the Sherry Strong Integrative Medicine Oncology Clinic at the Weisinger Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C. Pollex has been waging a recurring battle with cervical cancer; she and Truex, through his Martin Truex Jr. Foundation, have committed their time and resources to the benefit of cancer patients throughout the United States.

Bristol Motor Speedway, a property of Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI), is exploring an agreement with Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway that could return NASCAR racing to the historic short track, the second-oldest operating motorsports speedway in the United States, dating to 1904.

Until a potential agreement, Bristol would assume operation of the .596-mile track and take on financial responsibility for the renovation and maintenance of the facility. Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway is deeply rooted in NASCARs past. The Cup Series last raced there in 1984.

President, and CEO of SMI and Bristol Motor Speedway, Marcus Smith, Said:

We can work together to transform Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway into an amazing multipurpose entertainment destination. Were ready to roll up our sleeves and go to work to fully restore the speedway, recruit national events and breathe new life into a venue that has a legendary status in auto racing history.

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Taysha Gene Therapies Expands Leadership Team to Deepen Manufacturing and Communications Capabilities – Business Wire

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Taysha Gene Therapies, Inc. (Nasdaq: TSHA), a patient-centric gene therapy company focused on developing and commercializing AAV-based gene therapies for the treatment of monogenic diseases of the central nervous system in both rare and large patient populations, today announced new additions to its leadership team with the appointments of Greg Gara as Senior Vice President of Manufacturing and Kimberly Lee, D.O., as Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications and Investor Relations.

We are excited to welcome Greg and Kim to Tayshas leadership team, said RA Session II, President, Founder and CEO of Taysha. They each bring significant domain experience and their contributions will be invaluable as we continue our mission of eradicating monogenic CNS diseases. Gregs technical expertise in AAV gene therapy manufacturing along with his proven success in constructing several cGMP gene therapy facilities and Kims deep experience across capital markets and corporate communications will add tremendous value to the team. Importantly, both share our unrelenting, patient-first focus and passion for bringing new cures to life.

Mr. Gara has over 25 years of experience in designing, constructing, and starting up large- and small-scale manufacturing facilities for biotechnology companies globally. Prior to joining Taysha, he served as Vice President of Pharmaceutical Engineering at Sarepta, where he led and managed manufacturing operations for all gene therapy products. Before Sarepta, he served as Vice President of Technical Operations and Engineering at AveXis, a Novartis company, where he led the design, construction, and startup of the Libertyville facility and the new facilities in Research Triangle Park and Colorado. Mr. Gara also led the team for the facility expansion in North Carolina and the renovation of the Colorado site. Prior to AveXis, he led the facilities and engineering organization at Hospira prior to the companys acquisition by Pfizer. Before joining Hospira, he spent 15 years at Amgen, holding positions of increasing responsibility, and was part of the Cork, Ireland, construction project. Mr. Gara received a B.A. in Biology and Environmental Science from Augustana College.

Tayshas dedication to the development and commercialization of potentially transformative gene therapy treatments and its innovative and pioneering spirit is truly inspiring and I am excited to contribute in a meaningful way, said Mr. Gara. I look forward to playing an instrumental role in the companys growth and expansion of its manufacturing capabilities.

Dr. Lee joins Taysha with over 20 years of capital markets, strategic corporate finance, and communications experience from prior roles as a biotech equity research analyst on Wall Street and corporate strategy, communications, and investor relations professional. She most recently served as Head of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations at Lexicon Pharmaceuticals and previously as Vice President of Corporate Strategy, Corporate Communications and Investor Relations at Raptor Pharmaceuticals until its acquisition by Horizon Pharma. Prior to joining Raptor, Dr. Lee was a biotechnology sell-side analyst at investment banks, including Jefferies and Wedbush Securities, covering biotechnology companies across all market capitalizations, multiple therapeutic areas, and modalities. Dr. Lee received a B.S. in Biological Sciences from Stanford University and a D.O. from Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine.

In less than one year, Taysha has made extraordinary progress in developing and funding its elegant platform and rapidly advancing its product candidates for the betterment of patients and I am thrilled and grateful to be a part of this journey, said Dr. Lee. I am eager to learn from and work alongside this team of gene therapy experts at this exciting stage of our companys lifecycle and I look forward to making lasting contributions.

About Taysha Gene Therapies

Taysha Gene Therapies (Nasdaq: TSHA) is on a mission to eradicate monogenic CNS disease. With a singular focus on developing curative medicines, we aim to rapidly translate our treatments from bench to bedside. We have combined our teams proven experience in gene therapy drug development and commercialization with the world-class UT Southwestern Gene Therapy Program to build an extensive, AAV gene therapy pipeline focused on both rare and large-market indications. Together, we leverage our fully integrated platforman engine for potential new cureswith a goal of dramatically improving patients lives. More information is available at http://www.tayshagtx.com.

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A Look Back at the Past Decade of European… – Labiotech.eu

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

As we prepare to enter a new decade, we look back on the major milestones and blunders within European biotech over the last 10 years.

Over the last decade, we have seen many biotech breakthroughs to come from Europe, including first-in-class therapies for cancer, the first approved in vivo gene therapy, as well as notable efforts to combat Covid-19. Some other areas have proven to fall behind expectations, such as Alzheimers or microbiome research, and will need a push over the next decade. Lets have a look back at what the biotech industry has accomplished in the decade were now leaving behind.

Few would disagree that this has been a game-changing decade within oncology. Weve seen the arrival of checkpoint inhibitor drugs, the first oncolytic viral therapy, and the approval of the first CAR-T cell therapies.

For Alexandra Bause, who leads a venture creation program at the investment firm Apollo Health Ventures, immuno-oncology was one of the most exciting things to happen during the last decade. Its not just one cancer and one drug for that specific cancer anymore, we can now activate, reactivate or replenish the bodys own immune response and we can potentially target malignant cells throughout the whole body.

This decade has witnessed the advent and establishment of checkpoint inhibitor drugs. These immunotherapies consist of therapeutic antibodies that block immune checkpoints proteins on the surface of immune cells that tumors use to evade the immune system.

The first checkpoint inhibitor, ipilimumab, was approved in 2011. Since then, six other checkpoint inhibitor drugs belonging to a new generation that blocks the PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint have been approved. These drugs have made a big difference for a certain percentage of patients with difficult-to-treat forms of cancer.

Many good things came to cancer patients in the last decade, said Martin Bonde, CEO of Inthera Biosciences in Switzerland. For instance, we are now much better at treating multiple myeloma and malignant melanoma than we were 10 years ago. At the start of the decade, malignant melanoma had a 5% 5-year survival rate, now its over 50 % thanks to drugs like Opdivo (nivolumab) and Keytruda (pembrolizumab).

Since the initial approval of Opdivo and Keytruda as treatments for advanced melanoma in 2015, their indications have been expanded to include a range of blood and solid cancers. They are also used in combination with other checkpoint inhibitors as well as conventional chemotherapeutic agents. Sales-wise, Keytruda takes the lead as one of the worlds best-selling drugs.

The year 2015 also brought the approval of Imlygic, the first viral therapy for cancer in the Western world. The treatment acts by injecting melanoma tumors with a virus that infects and destroys cancerous cells. While Imlygic hasnt proved to be a blockbuster, viral therapies for cancer going forward could find a niche when combined with other cancer treatments such as checkpoint inhibitors.

In 2017, we saw the US approval of Kymriah, the worlds first CAR-T cell therapy. This treatment consists of engineering the patients own immune cells to make them better at identifying and attacking cancer cells. That same year, a second CAR-T therapy, Yescarta, was approved and a third one, Tecartus, received approval this year.

Despite concerns regarding severe side effects and prohibitive pricing, CAR-T cell therapy has made a big difference for patients with blood cancer that had not responded to other treatments, with remission rates above 90% in some cases. There are now over 1,000 clinical trials testing different forms of CAR-T technology aiming to improve its efficacy and safety and to extend its use to other forms of cancer, such as solid tumors.

The future of cancer treatment seems to be going in the direction of combining different approaches and selecting the most suitable for each patient. According to Bonde, combination therapy will continue to be refined with genomics technology.

I think its difficult to see combination therapy going away anytime soon because cancer is so complex and still difficult to treat, so we need to attack it from multiple angles. I think we will continue to see the search for new mechanisms of action, and research will help us to understand how we can best tackle a particular cancer in relation to its genetic makeup.

The last decade brought gene therapy to the market, offering a one-off treatment for patients suffering from genetic disorders. In Europe, the first gene therapy, Glybera, was approved in 2012. Although the treatment was withdrawn after a commercial failure, it set a precedent; there are now a total of 11 cell and gene therapies approved in the EU.

In 2018, the EMA approved Luxturna, a gene therapy developed by Novartis to treat blindness caused by a genetic mutation. This made Europe the first to approve an in vivo gene therapy, in which the genetic modification happens directly within the body rather than in cells extracted from the patient.

Despite these breakthroughs, the number of approved gene therapies in Europe is very modest compared to the over 1,200 gene therapy trials taking place across Europe. Meaning there is still a lot of space to grow.

Today we can get the entire human genome sequence in 24 hours for $500. This has opened up the possibility to design drugs using genetic information this is just starting and will be important in the next decade in gene therapy for cancer and elsewhere, said Bonde.

The gene therapies approved to date have mostly consisted of replacing a faulty gene with a functional copy delivered on viruses. Rapid technical advances within gene-editing technologies such as CRISPR-Cas9 are now making it possible to make precise edits to the genome, and many such therapies have entered clinical trials in Europe.

The orphan disease space has become much more crowded in recent years, with companies trying to target specific gene mutations behind a given rare disease, many of which incorporate gene therapy or gene-editing technologies, while others target downstream pathways with small molecules, said Bause.

The last decade has primarily been about tool-building within the gene therapy area and with the advent of CRISPR-Cas9 and related technologies, we are really only at the beginning of this era.

A therapeutic area that has seen huge investment, particularly in the second half of the last decade, is aging. Companies in this field seek to tackle aging-related diseases.

Why is this so important? According to Alexandra Bause, a wide range of diseases can be attributed to aging. In our 20s, 30s, and 40s, most of us are healthy, and then disease may creep up from the age of 50 years. The underlying aging process is causing the majority of known diseases that make up the major markets, such as Alzheimers, cancer, heart disease, chronic kidney disease, type 2 diabetes, metabolic disorders, and more.

Right now, much of the focus is on reverting age-related physiological damage. As research sheds light on the mechanisms underlying aging, many strategies to combat aging are being explored. Senolytics are a prominent example. These are small molecules that can simultaneously eliminate aged cells and promote tissue rejuvenation.

In recent years weve seen the creation of companies developing senolytics, including Senolytx in Barcelona and Velabs Therapeutics in Helsinki. However, a senolytic candidate developed by the US company Unity Biotechnology failed a key phase II trial in osteoarthritis earlier this year and the company is still suffering the fallout. Evidently, a lot more progress is still needed in the senolytics field before it can produce any marketed drugs.

Other strategies include drug repurposing, stem cells, and genomics. A major study called TAME is looking at whether the drug metformin can extend longevity and delay the onset of age-related chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, and dementia.

Metformin is widely used to treat type 2 diabetes but it also seems to have properties that may reduce Alzheimers and cancer risk. The TAME study will evaluate whether metformin doesnt just increase healthy lifespan by diminishing the risk of Alzheimers and cancer, but actually affects cellular pathways of aging as well. This is an important drug and an important study because it demonstrates how drugs can be repurposed to directly impact aging, said Greg Bailey, CEO of anti-aging company Juvenescence.

The organizers of the TAME trial also plan to launch a study into what biomarkers can best assess biological age, since its currently hard to measure how much a drug has slowed the aging process. Going forward, these trials will be a huge help to those working within aging, which is not currently seen as an official disease by the EMA or FDA. This means that companies are limited to targeting a specific age-related disease each time they want to test new treatments in clinical trials.

I think genetic modification of cellular pathways and epigenetics will play an enormous role. There is incredible ongoing work with Yamanaka factors; those transcription factors and gene modifications can reset cells to embryonic stage, potentially erasing the epigenetic changes of aging. Clearly the control of these factors and genes would be hugely transformational, said Bailey.

The field is coming fast and furious. We have the opportunity and ability to turn science fiction into science. In the last 10 years, scientists have truly begun to understand the cellular pathways involved with aging. And when we understand a cellular pathway, we can manipulate it. This was made possible by unlocking the human genome with computational biology, and advances in machine learning have literally opened the floodgates.

Although Covid-19 only appeared at the end of the decade, it has already made a huge impact on the biotech industry. If there is a positive in this crisis, the speed at which the biotech, pharma and research communities have come together in the face of Covid-19 is truly remarkable. It has probably accelerated scientific knowledge by years, said Bailey.

Covid-19 has focused the attention on biotech and healthcare and I believe that biotech is the ultimate superhero. It is the Modernas and the BioNTechs of this world that will kill Covid, said Antoine Papiernik, Managing Partner at life sciences VC firm Sofinnova Partners.

There are currently over 50 Covid-19 vaccines in clinical trials, with 12 of these in late-stage testing. One area in particular that has seen a big push because of the pandemic has been RNA therapeutics. In partnership with Pfizer, BioNTech in Germany has obtained approval in the UK and US for a Covid-19 vaccine, making it the first medicine using messenger RNA technology.

Although European diagnostics and vaccine development have seen a boost in funding this year thanks to Covid-19, funding for infectious diseases in general will still be an uphill battle. Its almost impossible to get funding for infectious diseases nowadays. Why? Because there are few patients in need, and a lot of drugs already out there, and treatment lasts a maximum of 2 weeks. How much can you charge for that compared to a cancer treatment? said Bonde.

There have been some efforts to boost the development of new antibiotics, such as the launch of the Antimicrobial Resistance Action Fund this year. Additionally, the UK began trialling a new payment policy to incentivize antibiotics development in 2019. However, this may still not be enough.

Its a broken business model, and its going to hurt us because an estimated 10 million people will die over the next 10 years or so, from multi-resistant bacteria. But theres no incentive in the market for companies to go after it. I think this should and will end as a state matter. The state will make sure that we have enough options to deal with deadly bacteria.

The last decade saw hundreds of clinical trials for Alzheimers disease, yet not a single drug is able to stop or slow down its progression. Clinical trials are failing one after the other, in most cases because of a lack of convincing therapeutic efficacy when tested in large groups of patients.

For the last decade, research and clinical strategies within the Alzheimers field have largely focused on the beta amyloid protein, which accumulates in the brains of Alzheimers patients years before they experience cognitive symptoms. These findings led to the hypothesis that these beta amyloid plaques were responsible for cognitive decline, but the failure of clinical trials targeting beta amyloid seems to indicate the solution may lay elsewhere. The biggest challenge is that no consensus exists on the underlying mechanisms of the disease, which is now the 6th leading cause of death worldwide.

Poor disease models and an incomplete understanding of the mechanisms of disease are a big part of the problem. Beta amyloid might be more of a biomarker or a symptom, than the mechanism, said Bause.

Companies dont talk to each other enough to share knowledge about what doesnt work. How many amyloid drugs do you have to put into trials before you realize that this isnt working? This is one of the biggest blunders of the last decade from my perspective, added Bailey.

Even for companies following other approaches, the results have been mixed so far. One example is an antibody drug developed by the Swiss company AC Immune and US partner Genentech to tackle Alzheimers disease by blocking a protein called tau. However, this drug proved a dud on a debut phase II trial this year.

However, the French company AB Science provided a glimmer of hope at the end of the decade. Its drug designed to reduce inflammation in the brain reportedly reduced the number of mild Alzheimers cases that progressed to being severe cases in a phase IIb/III trial this month.

Alzheimers isnt the only field to suffer from inadequate animal models. Other notable disease areas that lack translatable animal models include infectious diseases, bacterial sepsis, psychiatric disorders and immunological disorders.

Alexandra Bause points out that the problem with animal studies is not only due to an incomplete understanding of the underlying mechanisms of disease, but also to the fact that there are intrinsic problems with the way animals are tested. Most companies or most research programs are looking at young animals, and theyre artificially making these young animals sick. Then they are giving them the drug to target whatever made them sick, and they recover. But that doesnt mean that an old animal can recover equally.

Other factors that limit the predictive power of animal models are assumptions that animals and humans use the same or highly similar cellular pathways in response to specific diseases, as well as gender-biases and the use of germ-free animals that dont reflect the potential impact of our microbiome on health and disease.

For the next decade, the biotech industry will have to face the challenge of improving animal models or even replacing them with alternatives such as organs on chips or tissue bioprinting.

In the last decade, the study of the microbiome has gained a lot of attention. The human microbiome, which comprises the collection of microorganisms that live in and on our bodies has been linked to almost every disease imaginable. There are currently more than 1,000 clinical trials listed worldwide testing microbiome-related therapies.

This created huge expectations that are taking longer than expected to pan out. Technological advances have resulted in the generation of mountains of data that is often extremely complex and difficult to interpret. We still dont really understand the dynamic complexity of the microbiome or how to manipulate it for therapeutic benefit.

I think theres a long way to go, said Bonde. Im not sure were ever going to fully understand it.

We aggressively looked at a number of microbiome companies and its fascinating but chaotic. We know what we can do with lactobacilli, but what do we do with everything else? You can change one factor, but what does it do to the other billion or trillion entities that constitute the microbiome? said Bailey.

Overall, the biotech industry in Europe has matured over the last decade and strengthened its position in the global market. If the biotech market in Europe was born around 25 years ago, then by now we have learned from the best during our childhood as well as our adolescent years. Today, as an industry, we are now young adults in our prime, ready to forge our own paths, said Antoine Papiernik, Managing Partner at the French life sciences investment firm Sofinnova Partners.

During this pandemic, Europe has demonstrated its strength, resilience, and scientific prowess, he added. Europe has strong scientific and technological output, it has cultivated talent and built highly experienced management teams, and more than ever before, we are capable of funding young biotechs and medtech to success.

The last decade has brought incredible levels of progress to the biotech industry, while also opening up new challenges to tackle in the coming years. Stay tuned for part two next week, where well look in more detail into what the next decade has in store.

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5 Medical Innovations You Probably Didn’t Notice Happened in 2020 – Healthline

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Even in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the medical community made advances throughout 2020. Here are 5 of the years most impactful innovations.

Overall, 2020 has been a tumultuous year. From a health perspective, its been one turned upside down with a deadly global pandemic reorienting how we live our lives and relate to others.

The COVID-19 pandemic has justifiably dominated headlines and attention from media, policymakers, and health officials alike.

While its clearly the defining public health, cultural, economic even political event of the year, the pandemic shouldnt obscure the fact that 2020 was also a time of great medical innovation.

From breakthroughs in oncology, gene therapies, and heart health, to the development of COVID-19 vaccines that are now being administered domestically and around the world, theres a lot that the medical community can be proud of in 2020.

Healthline touched base with leading experts about some of the most impactful medical advances of the year and how they hint at a more hopeful tomorrow.

Almost every expert Healthline interviewed agreed that gene editing was one of the big stories of the year.

In October, Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A. Doudna were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering the CRISPR/Cas9 genetic scissors. (Just five other women have won this prize before).

This gene scissor tool is what it sounds like enzymes snip out pieces of DNA to restore them to their normal function, Dr. William Morris, executive medical director of Cleveland Clinic Innovations, told Healthline.

Charpentier and Doudna showed that these genetic tools could be controlled to cut any kind of DNA molecule at a designated location not just distinguish DNA from viruses, as these scissors exist in their natural form.

Essentially, it means we can rewrite the code of life, according to the Nobel Prizes official announcement.

Morris said that this innovation has wide-ranging ramifications for people who have a wide range of genetic conditions.

He cited sickle cell disease, a condition where malformed sickle-shaped red blood cells cause blockages in blood flow, preventing the protein hemoglobin from effectively ferrying needed oxygen through the body.

Morris said these microscopic tools can cut out these genetic errors.

There have only been a handful of drugs to treat these kinds of conditions in the past.

Now, this kind of development allows you to remove the error and replace the [genetic] code, kind of like in your computer or your iPhone if you downloaded a patch for new software to repair an app that always crashes thats what this is, Morris explained.

Its so earth-shatteringly amazing to tell these patients who otherwise faced an entire lifetime of pain and suffering. You can now use the word cure, which is unbelievable to think about, he said.

Olivier Elemento, PhD, director of the Englander Institute for Precision Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, told Healthline that 2020 is the year of the genetic code.

Were really able to use the genetic code in humans and viruses to help humanity in ways we were not equipped to before, in ways we couldnt do before, Elemento said.

He added that gene therapy in general, along with this CRISPR technology, is pretty extraordinary.

This more comprehensive understanding of genetics extends beyond the Nobel Prize.

For instance, Elemento said Weill Cornell Medicine, where he currently works, along with New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Illumina Inc. recently announced an initiative to sequence the genome of thousands of patients.

The more we understand about genetics and gene therapies, the more improved our precision medicine capacity will be opening up the possibilities of creating targeted therapies for all kinds of conditions.

Recently, the American Heart Association released its own list of innovations in medical treatments.

The spotlight includes a new phase 3 study that could change the way hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (when the heart muscle thickens and can stiffen) is treated.

It also highlights new treatments that might change up the first-line treatment for atrial fibrillation (AFib) a new minimally invasive surgery to prevent stroke and a new trial that reveals more treatment might not necessarily mean better treatment for coronary heart disease.

American Heart Association President Dr. Mitchell S.V. Elkind, MS, FAAN, FAHA, wrote in an email to Healthline that all of these advances over the past year reflect connections between seemingly disparate areas of medicine and the fact that we are most successful when we break down the barriers between fields.

In order to tackle an issue as wide ranging as heart disease, for instance, it takes an interdisciplinary, comprehensive approach.

For example, we learned more this year about the unexpected ways in which medicines designed to treat diabetes, the sodium glucose transporter 2 inhibitors, or SGLT2 inhibitors, help patients with heart failure, even those without diabetes, he added.

Elkind also cited our growing understanding of how connections between infectious diseases like the flu and COVID-19 are tied to greater risk for heart disease and stroke.

Often, the most important advances occur when experts from different areas work together in creative ways to solve a difficult problem, he wrote.

When asked if there was one particular heart health innovation that stood out the most to him, Elkind said that what resonated with him was something not tied to fancy medications or groundbreaking research.

An analysis of people from across the U.S. showed that rates of blood pressure control have begun to decline in the U.S., after almost two decades of better control. High blood pressure is one of the most important and easily treated risk factors for stroke and heart disease, and so this backsliding is especially alarming, he added.

He stressed that the study also pointed to the impact that having health insurance has on controlling ones blood pressure.

Those with some form of health insurance had blood pressure control rates of 4354 percent, while for those without insurance, it was only 24 percent, Elkind explained.

Improving access to quality care is one of the best ways we have to improve health, and that is where we at the American Heart Association will be placing our efforts in the coming years, he said.

Benjamin Neel, MD, PhD, director of the Perlmutter Cancer Center at NYU Langone Health, said 2020 has been a year thats seen cancer research push forward on multiple fronts.

He said technologies are in development for early detection of cancer by way of blood tests.

Its been known for quite some time that tumors release DNA into the blood stream, we have technology developing from the standpoint of monitoring tumors, conducting sensitive tests for tumors, for tests for recurrence of cancers and protein-based tests, Neel told Healthline, outlining current research.

He also cited technology that modulates the regulatory DNA sequence patterns which refers to the part of the DNA molecule that can change the way a gene expresses itself in a living thing to pinpoint when methylation patterns might point to the development of cancer.

Among other research highlights over the past year, Neel said researchers have been developing new ways of drugging genetic mutations.

He mentioned work being done in developing a compound to degrade the androgen receptor for prostate cancer cells what allows these cancer cells to grow.

One of the biggest changes this year came in the form of how our new normal work-from-home lifestyle has impacted medicine.

As more and more people stay away from offices and public spaces, theyre turning to telemedicine. The Zoom screen is the new doctors office.

Morris said that, while this isnt a medical discovery per se, its a crucial in some ways life-saving development for how we relate to healthcare in our lives.

Out of this whole pandemic, one of the things weve discovered as clinicians is that we need to see patients where they are and not force them to cross state lines, Morris said. While we had telemedicine, we had some patients over Skype and video visits, there were clear disincentives and policies in place against people easily crossing state lines to seek medical care, of receiving care remotely.

He said the pandemic facilitated a push at the government level and with state and federal regulators to reduce barriers to these tools that are critical lifelines for patients.

Even when healthcare professionals couldnt always see patients in person this year, the embrace of telemedicine has resulted in unprecedented increases in the adoption and use of these tools and seeking care, Morris added.

This pandemic has challenged us to question old perceptions and policies, so that was a very positive thing, he stressed.

Innovation doesnt necessarily have to be an aha moment in a lab or something right in front of us, he said. Its unfortunate we needed a pandemic or a challenge to sometimes see a barrier, and sometimes that barrier is us.

This year, a possible breakthrough in Alzheimers disease research and treatment came in the form of a blood test that can diagnose this progressive form of dementia.

While the news is huge, the test is still in the trial phase.

If ultimately approved, a simple test for the condition would be a game changer.

There are as many as 5 million people living with Alzheimers in the United States, a number that will likely triple by 2060, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

While this test has yet to go through all the proper approvals, a company distributed the first publicly available Alzheimers blood test this fall.

As 2020 comes to a close, experts are looking to a more hopeful new year.

For its part, Cleveland Clinic, which enters its centennial next year, released a list of the predicted top 10 innovations of 2021.

Morris said that while many think of this year as fraught and divisive full of tragedy and setbacks looking back at these innovations shows theres always something to be grateful for and look forward to.

Elemento said that he expects a biotech and pharma boom in the next few years.

Citing the breakthroughs in gene therapies and genetic manipulation indicate what will be a continual embrace of this kind of medical technology.

All these technologies, now everyone knows they exist and that they can be used for good, it will be a big boom for these technologies, Elemento added.

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Global CAR-T Pipeline Insight Report 2020: Overview, Landscape, Therapeutic Assessment, Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies -…

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

Dublin, Dec. 30, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "CAR-T - Pipeline Insight, 2020" drug pipelines has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The "CAR-T - Pipeline Insight, 2020," report provides comprehensive insights about 250+ companies and 250+ pipeline drugs in CAR-T pipeline landscape. It covers the pipeline drug profiles, including clinical and nonclinical stage products. It also covers the therapeutics assessment by product type, stage, route of administration, and molecule type. It further highlights the inactive pipeline products in this space.

CAR-T: Overview

CAR-T is a type of treatment in which a patient's T cells (a type of immune system cell) are changed in the laboratory so they will attack cancer cells. T cells are taken from a patient's blood. Then the gene for a special receptor that binds to a certain protein on the patient's cancer cells is added to the T cells in the laboratory. The special receptor is called a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). Large numbers of the CAR T cells are grown in the laboratory and given to the patient by infusion. CAR T-cell therapy is used to treat certain blood cancers, and it is being studied in the treatment of other types of cancer. Also called chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy.

Potential Mechanisms of CAR-T Cell-Mediated Toxicity

Significant progress has been made in the field of cancer immunotherapy, and CAR-T cells have shown outstanding efficacy in clinical trials. As with all technologies, CAR-T technologies also need to go through a long process of development, and CAR-T cell therapy has related acute and chronic toxicities that have become a roadblock on the developmental path. If these setbacks are not overcome, it will be difficult to make a more significant breakthrough.

Cytokine Release Syndrome

Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) is the most common toxic side effect in CAR-T cell therapy. CRS is a systemic inflammatory response caused by the significant increase in cytokines accompanied by the rapid in vivo activation and proliferation of CAR-T cells, usually occurring within a few days after the first infusion. CRS is a clinical condition with mild symptoms of fever, fatigue, headache, rash, joint pain, and myalgia. Severe CRS cases are characterized by tachycardia, hypotension, and high fever. Mild to moderate CRS is usually self-limiting and can be managed through close observation and supportive care. Severe CRS must be treated with tocilizumab or steroids alone for intensive treatment.

Advances in Research of CAR-T Cell Therapy for Solid Tumors

Although early CAR-T cell trials of solid tumors did not show the same success as observed in leukemia trials, a better understanding of the multiple barriers seen in solid tumors could promote the design of clinical trials for CAR-T cells. In this early stage of clinical development, CAR-T cells offer much hope. The ability of genetic manipulation techniques to modify CAR-T cells provides almost unlimited opportunities for other changes and improvements, thus providing a strong desire for future success.

Global Landscape of CAR-T Cell Therapy

At present, CAR-T cells are widely used in cellular immunotherapy for various tumors. According to statistics, more than 300 clinical trials of CAR-T cell therapies have been approved by many national drug regulatory agencies, including the FDA of the United States. Statistical data from these clinical trials show that although the effects of various clinical trials vary due to the use of different sources and the preparation techniques of CARs and T cells, as well as differences in pretreatment and combinations of drugs, overall, CAR-T cells are effective in treating tumors with an effective rate of 30% to 70% or even more than 90%. For example, the complete remission rate for r/r ALL treated with the Novartis drug CTL0l9, which the FDA has approved, is 93%. Perhaps CAR-T cell therapy will ultimately remedy the fate of human cancer.

CAR-T Emerging Drugs Chapters

This segment of the CAR-T report encloses its detailed analysis of various drugs in different stages of clinical development, including phase II, I, preclinical and Discovery. It also helps to understand clinical trial details, expressive pharmacological action, agreements and collaborations, and the latest news and press releases.

CAR-T: Therapeutic Assessment

This segment of the report provides insights about the different CAR-T drugs segregated based on following parameters that define the scope of the report, such as:

Major Players in CAR-T

There are approx. 250+ key companies which are developing the therapies for CAR-T. The companies which have their CAR-T drug candidates in the most advanced stage, i.e. phase III include, Janssen Research & Development, ViiV Healthcare, Sorrento Therapeutics, Celgene, Novartis, Abbott etc.

Report Highlights

Current Treatment Scenario and Emerging Therapies:

Key Players

Key Products

For more information about this drug pipelines report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/c6ze76

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

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VBL Therapeutics Announces First Patient in Europe in the OVAL Trial – BioSpace

Wednesday, December 30th, 2020

TEL AVIV, Israel, Dec. 29, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- VBL Therapeutics(Nasdaq: VBLT) today announced the expansion of its ongoing OVAL Phase 3 study investigating ofranergene obadenovec (VB-111), for the treatment of platinum-resistant ovarian cancer into Europe, where the first patient has now been enrolled. The study continues to actively recruit patients in the U.S. and Israel, with over 200 patients enrolled to date.

VB-111 is our proprietary anti-cancer gene therapy product candidate that has shown overall survival benefit across multiple tumor types, said Dror Harats, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of VBL Therapeutics. We are pleased to expand the OVAL potential registration study of VB-111 in patients with late stage ovarian cancer to Europe, which is expected to accelerate our recruitment pace, diversify the patient population in the study and support our dialogue with European regulatory authorities as we get closer to potential commercialization. If successful and approved, VB-111 has the potential to establish a new standard of care in a challenging disease setting where patients currently have limited options.

Interim analysis from OVAL demonstrated VB-111s significant response rate of 58% or higher in the first 60 patients. According to the Company update on November 16, 2020, the high response rate of >50% in the total evaluable patient population was still maintained with approximately 200 patients enrolled.

The EU expansion follows two completed analyses by the independent Data Safety Monitoring Committee (DSMC) which recommended to continue the study as planned. The next DSMC review is expected in the first quarter of 2021.

VB-111 has received an Orphan Designation for the treatment of ovarian cancer from theEuropean Commission.

About the OVAL study (NCT03398655)OVAL is an international Phase 3 randomized pivotal potential registration clinical trial that compares a combination of VB-111 and paclitaxel to placebo plus paclitaxel, in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. The study is planned to enroll approximately 400 patients. OVAL is conducted in collaboration with theGOG Foundation, Inc., an independent international non-profit organization with the purpose of promoting excellence in the quality and integrity of clinical and basic scientific research in the field of gynecologic malignancies.

About VB-111 (ofranergene obadenovec)VB-111 is an investigational, first-in-class, targeted anti-cancer gene therapy agent that is being developed to treat a wide range of solid tumors. VB-111 is a unique biologic agent that uses a dual mechanism to target solid tumors. Its mechanism combines blockade of tumor vasculature with an anti-tumor immune response. VB-111 is administered as an IV infusion once every 6-8 weeks. It has been observed to be well-tolerated in >300 cancer patients and demonstrated activity signals in an all comers Phase 1 trial as well as in three tumor-specific Phase 2 studies. VB-111 has received an Orphan Designation for the treatment of ovarian cancer from theEuropean Commission. VB-111 has also received orphan drug designation in both the US andEurope, and fast track designation in the US for prolongation of survival in patients with rGBM. VB-111 successfully demonstrated proof-of-concept and survival benefit in Phase 2 clinical trials in radioiodine-refractory thyroid cancer and recurrent platinum-resistant ovarian cancer (NCT01711970).

About VBLVascular Biogenics Ltd., operating asVBL Therapeutics, is a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of first-in-class treatments for areas of unmet need in cancer and immune/inflammatory indications.

Forward Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, which are often indicated by terms such as anticipate, believe, could, estimate, expect, goal, intend, look forward to, may, plan, potential, predict, project, should, will, would and similar expressions. These forward-looking statements may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding our programs, including VB-111, including their clinical development, therapeutic potential and clinical results. These forward-looking statements are not promises or guarantees and involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described or projected herein include uncertainties associated generally with research and development, clinical trials and related regulatory reviews and approvals, the risk that historical clinical trial results may not be predictive of future trial results, that our financial resources do not last for as long as anticipated, and that we may not realize the expected benefits of our intellectual property protection. In particular, the DSMC recommendation that the OVAL trial proceed is not assurance that the trial will meet its primary endpoint of overall survival once completed, or that we will obtain positive results to support further development of this candidate. A further list and description of these risks, uncertainties and other risks can be found in our regulatory filings with theU.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including in our annual report on Form 20-F for the year endedDecember 31, 2019, and subsequent filings with theSEC. Existing and prospective investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof.VBL Therapeuticsundertakes no obligation to update or revise the information contained in this press release, whether as a result of new information, future events or circumstances or otherwise.

INVESTOR CONTACT:Irina KofflerLifeSci Advisorsikoffler@lifesciadvisors.com(646) 970-4681

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Predictions for AI-powered digital healthcare in 2021 – MedCity News

Monday, December 28th, 2020

Apart from efforts to develop vaccines for Covid-19, 2020 has been a year of substantial advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning technologies that are being applied in healthcare as never before, resulting in improvements and enhancements in diagnosis and treatment that were previously impossible.

These technologies are advancing at an increasing rate, and we can be sure that AI will be used even more to overcome healthcare challenges in 2021 and beyond. Here are some of the main areas AI will be used to enhance digital healthcare in the near future.

OncologyMany healthcare practices today, including cancer diagnosis, still rely heavily on manual activities and processes and even those that do utilize digital technologies use them on an independent basis, not under one integral environment. Pathology, the medical specialty of diagnosing disease in patients, most notably cancer, is a good example. Traditional pathology involves manual processes that have remained unchanged for years, where glass slides with tissue samples are analyzed by pathologists using microscopes.

But that is changing today with a growing trend of moving toward digitized infrastructures and workflows (for example digital pathology). This trend is expected to accelerate as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, increasingly saving time and labor costs while providing better and more cost-effective care. Moreover, adding an AI layer to an already digitized workflow can help make processes even more efficient on several fronts, including:

Triage: AI tools can help determine which cases should be reviewed more urgently and which physicians or resources to assign to them. This will ensure that each case is diagnosed by the physician whose capabilities can best be applied to the situation at hand, assigning cases based on a physicians sub-specialty or level of experience, which becomes especially important in complex cases.

Diagnosis: AI tools can also help with cancer diagnosis and assessment, pointing instantly to particular areas of interest, for instance those that include cancerous cells, and signaling the needle in the haystack factor that can shed light on a patients situation and what may be required to treat them. As a result, turnaround times for case reporting to the referring physician can be reduced significantly. In addition, smart AI tools will allow for the automation of some diagnostic tasks that are currently performed manually, such as counting cells, measuring features and automatically filling up parts of the report.

Next-generation diagnostics: With advanced machine learning capabilities and as more digital datasets become available, AI tools will be able to analyze more data and thus provide more insight than is currently possible. These tools will go beyond mimicking a physicians diagnosis; AI models will integrate extensive amounts of data from diverse sources (e.g., imaging, pathology and clinical data), acting as a sort of tumor board, where experts from multiple fields share their findings and knowledge to decide on the most accurate diagnosis and treatment. In the near future, we can expect to see AI serve as the perfect companion to the physician, with an unparalleled ability to combine huge amounts of fragmented information accurately and effectively.

Telehealth and Physician AccessThe need for quality healthcare keeps growing with an aging population and an increase in disease incidence. The number of physicians, however, does not grow at the same rate, and this creates a supply gap particularly evident for certain medical sub-specialties, in far-flung rural communities and sometimes even in urban centers. AI-based telehealth for instance, a new generation of affordable and accurate sensing devices that can be used to examine, monitor or diagnose patients remotely, as well as new communication technologies such as AI-based chatbots will help transform a visit to the doctors office into a completely different experience, enabling a more effective, frequent and affordable physician access for patients. The pandemic, with its frequent quarantines and regional lockdowns, only demonstrated the importance of these technologies as well as the shift needed in the mindset of all stakeholders: patients, physicians, providers and payers.

Personalized MedicineWith all the advancements in medical science, prognostic assessments and treatment decisions are many times not much better than a shot in the dark. For example, up to 75% of oncology patients (in a number of cancer types) do not respond to at least one of the available treatment drugs. Developing new biomarkers and genomic tests to more accurately predict prognosis and enable physicians to choose the right treatment is a costly, unpredictable, and painfully slow process.

Enter AI. Biomarkers based on artificial intelligence and machine learning can be an important, cost-effective and efficient way to develop tools for precision medicine. AI algorithms could provide new prognostic insights and help oncologists stratify patients into smaller, more homogeneous groups and assist in selecting personalized treatment for each patient based on a multitude of data types. These algorithms will combine pathology, radiology, genomic, clinical and demographic data, and analyze huge databases of medical records, treatments and outcomes. AI-driven solutions could also provide a more accurate and objective analysis of medical data, leading to new computational tests that replace or augment todays molecular tests.

Quality ControlObviously an essential part of any quality-driven system, quality control is a real challenge in labor-intensive processes. For example, for pathologists diagnosing cancer, an effective near bulletproof quality control requires having a second pathologist review the same biopsy again a time consuming and costly task. As a result, we find many clinical processes where quality control is done only on a small fraction of cases, if at all, often failing to detect errors.

AI and advanced algorithms can help create concurrent processes that rapidly review medical procedures and diagnoses, detecting mistakes early enough to avoid any damage. Fast and automated AI tools will enable pathology labs for the first time to apply rigid quality control standards to all their cases. Currently, the majority of cases are viewed by a single pathologist in almost all labs, which means that errors and misdiagnosed cancers may not be detected on time. AI can help transform this completely.

Algorithms can also alert on inconsistent findings, making sure the different medical disciplines provide a coherent picture of the patients condition and treatment plan, and that there are no holes in the process. An electronic medical record (EMR) that contains all the medical information of a patient could be constantly monitored by AI whenever something suspicious is detected, such as a lab test result that is inconsistent with a previous diagnosis, or a drug prescription that does not match the patients condition, the AI would highlight the inconsistency, prompting a thorough review by the relevant physician.

Screening ProtocolsDecisions on issues like which patient should be sent for a specific test CT, MRI, colonoscopy and others are currently conducted based on demographics or other general variables that often have nothing to do with a patients medical record. Going forward, we will see more medical screening thats based on specific characteristics identified by AI algorithms trained on large providers datasets. Such predictive algorithms will identify specific patterns, risk factors or correlations between multiple variables using advanced machine learning techniques.

Science-based medicine is one of the miracles of the modern age; lives are being saved today that just a few years ago would have been unsalvageable, and new, advanced treatments are providing a much better quality of life for many more than would have been possible in the past. Still, there are many domains in medicine and healthcare that could benefit from adopting the latest developments in artificial intelligence and machine learning and we see their role in improving healthcare becoming ever more important in the future.

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The Increasing Use Of AI In The Pharmaceutical Industry – Forbes

Monday, December 28th, 2020

The pharmaceutical industry has long relied on cutting edge technologies to help deliver safe, reliable drugs to market. With the recent pandemic, its proved more important than ever for pharmaceutical companies to get drugs and vaccines to market faster than ever before.

Subroto Mukherjee, Head of Innovation and Emerging Technology, Americas at GlaxoSmithkline Consumer ... [+] Healthcare

Artificial intelligence and machine learning have been playing a critical role in the pharmaceutical industry and consumer healthcare business. From augmented intelligence applications such as disease identification and diagnosis, helping identify patients for clinical trials, drug manufacturing, and predictive forecasting, these technologies have proven critical. On a recent episode of the AI Today podcast Subroto Mukherjee, who is Head of Innovation and Emerging Technology, Americas at GlaxoSmithkline Consumer Healthcare discussed how AI and ML are being applied to the pharmaceutical industry and some unique use cases for AI and ML technology. In this follow up interview he shares his insights in more detail.

How is AI currently being applied in the pharmaceutical industry?

Subroto Mukherjee: AL and ML have been critical in the pharmaceutical industry and consumer healthcare business. AI and ML are playing an important role during this pandemic, driven by COVID and the race to discover effective vaccines. The top-level uses in Pharma and Consumer Healthcare arena as follows:

Apart from the Healthcare conditions, we see many AI ML usage in Digital Transformation areas for Pharma and Healthcare companies such as Martech, AdTech, Supply Chain, Sales, and Customer Service.

What are some unique use cases for AI and ML technology in the pharmaceutical industry?

Subroto Mukherjee: As per the article in guardian-Artificial intelligence group,DeepMindhas cracked a serious scientific problem that has stumped researchers for half a century. AlphaFold, the company and research laboratory using the AI program, showed it could predict how proteins fold into 3D shapes. The advantage of this discovery is that it will help researchers discover the mechanisms that drive some diseases and pave the way for - designer medicines, more nutritious crops, and "green enzymes" that can break down plastic pollution.

Another unique case and my favorite and involved in enabling the GSK consumer R&D team is AI in Sensory Science. AI and ML are ramping up predicting parameters in foods, beverages, agriculture, andmedicine. This could lead to hyper-personalized products for food, beverage, and medicines customized for different demographics and ethnicities; we extensively usesensoryproperties beyond taste, such as smell, appearance, and texture, influencing what we select to eat or drink.

Can you share use cases where AI was successfully applied at GlaxoSmithKline?

Subroto Mukherjee: Let me share some use cases in our consumer healthcare line of business.

Predictive Forecasting:We have popular seasonal brands in the Allergy and Cold and Flu category. The business use case is to have a predictive model that predicts how the upcoming season for allergy or cold and flu would shape up in different regions, and when are the predicted peaks and troughs. The advantage of this information is to inform consumers on our brand.com website, improve our national and regional media delivery and inform retailers of seasonal activation timing (distribution, stock up, display and secondary support).

Sensory Models Humans react differently, to taste, size, texture, color, and Sensory AI models help in a holistic way of understanding, predicting, and optimizing consumer preference. We use multiple parameters, such as taste, texture, color, and ML models, to understand the relationship between the consumer and the desired product experience. Our brands offer gummies, tablets, and liquids for our over-the-counter products, and these models are beneficial.

AI in eye-tracking:We do studies with our consumers and retailers in our shoppers science lab and monitor how they look at our products while they shop online or in stores. Consumers and retail teams with consent in our labs wear eye-tracking glasses and look at the products on shelf or online. During this process, images are captured and analyzed using AI. The analysis includes Areas of Interest (AOI) metrics, including the time to first fixation and time spent, gaze plots, heatmaps, and video replays. This helps in better product placement, improves our art and labeling, and helps us understand consumer behavior.

What are some of the challenges to AI adoption at larger organizations?

Subroto Mukherjee: Key challenges to AI adoption at larger organizations are as follows:

What are some of the challenges around data privacy, security, ethics, and transparency that organizations such as GSK are dealing with?

Subroto Mukherjee: Data privacy and security are of the highest importance for our organization. We constantly ensure all data privacy, security laws are followed, and appropriate training is provided across our different portfolios and adhered to by our partners and complementary workers. Data classification (PII, CSI, Sensitive), adherence of our systems, and processes to the GDPR or California privacy rights act's needs are some of the challenges we constantly face.

For AI ethics and transparency, we make sure MLOps processes are in place, and Machine learning (ML) models model scoring is established, monitoring and drift detection, the feedback loop is transparently followed. We bring a diverse ML team with diverse experience embedded in the team and test the models constantly to bring transparency and remove bias from the Machine learning models.

The global pandemic has really shaken up the pharma industry. How are you seeing AI and machine learning being put to use in the fight against the pandemic?

Subroto Mukherjee: Concerning the pandemic the biggest use of AI and machine learning from my understanding is to tease out COVID's biological secrets and identify the few molecules which will help end COVID among the millions and to reduce the time to market drugs either be discovery, development to clinical trials and final FDA approvals. Look at the speed and agility of the current vaccine it took 300 days from identifying the coronavirus genome to the first vaccine study, which has previously taken an average of eight to ten years.

Medical Mining - Let me focus on one specific initiative - "US White House - Call to Action." to analyze and Transform COVID-19 Data into Clinical Knowledge. White House is partnering with the AI research community to understand the novel coronavirus by mining medical literature. Natural language processing is one of the fastest-growing practices in this area, helping with this initiative. Medical imaging companies using AI and ML claimed record-level accuracy in detecting covid-induced pneumonia from CT scans, despite concerns from some stakeholders on the quality of training data.

Another important impact of COVID-19 is the impact of the supply chain. All companies, including ours, are facing the impact of COVID in the supply chain and manufacturing. Be it the supply of raw material or distribution of finished goods, it helps in pre-empting the risks associated with it. Companies are scrambling to respond to rapidly shifting consumer demand, limited supply of some products, and new workplace rules. AI and ML are used in Planning and Forecasting, Bots for automation and collaboration, and many key areas of the value chain.

How do large organizations approach change management for transformative technologies such as AI?

Subroto Mukherjee: We are implementing agile transformation across the business to create an effective and simple change management structure. Our technology organization, business team, and leadership team have undergone agile training. The change management discipline has been re-oriented with a clear hierarchy of approvals (key decision-makers) for onboarding new AI technology solutions. We define clear business objectives and value for now, next, and later for these transformative technologies.

What do you see as critical needs for workforce development around AI?

Subroto Mukherjee: We need reskilling and education among the workforce, not only in technical aspects but also in AI's business value. AI for Good or AI ethics is another key aspect that employees and the business community need to understand. Workers should not be afraid of AI, but rather embrace it and understand the benefits of AI. In terms of workforce, organizations need to scale up slowly with monitored results and a pool of data scientists knowing the business, data engineers, and subject matter experts.

How is the global regulatory environment impacting the pharma industrys adoption of AI?

Subroto Mukherjee: It is necessary to meet compliance and regulatory requirements as regulators need to safeguard consumers, and it does impact the timelines of new AI solutions to be rolled out. But organizations should be collaborating with regulators to streamline this process to the benefit of all. Both regulators and pharma companies can embrace AI and other digital transformation initiatives to drive the economy, cost efficiency, and value-driven effectiveness of regulatory operations.

What AI technologies are you most looking forward to in the coming years?

Subroto Mukherjee: I am looking forward to the advancement and extended use of Natural language processing, Robotics, Speech, and computer vision in the coming years.

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The Increasing Use Of AI In The Pharmaceutical Industry - Forbes

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The global metabolomics market size is projected to reach USD 4.1 billion by 2025 from USD 1.9 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 13.4% – GlobeNewswire

Monday, December 28th, 2020

New York, Dec. 24, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Metabolomics Market by Product, Application, Indication, End User - Global Forecast to 2025" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p04763096/?utm_source=GNW However, issues related to data examination & data processing in metabolomics and the high cost of tools and instruments are likely to restrain the market growth to a certain extent.

By Product & Service, the metabolomics instrument accounted for the largest share of the metabolomics market.

The metabolomics instrument segment is expected to account for the largest market share in 2020. Factors such as the technological advancements in analytical instruments in terms of miniaturization, automation, and computerization; increase in the number of research-related activities worldwide in the field of medicine, nutraceuticals, and metabolomics; and strengthening healthcare infrastructure in developing nations for efficient disease diagnosis and treatment are expected to propel the growth of this segment during the forecast periodBy application, the biomarker discovery segment accounted for the largest share of the metabolomics market.The biomarker discovery segment is expected to account for the largest market share in 2020.The use of metabolic biomarkers to assess the pathophysiological health status of patients is increasing.

In recent years, as a result of significant technological advancements, metabolomics has become a vital tool in discovering biomarkers. By Indication, Cancer segment expected to grow at the fastest growth rate during the forecast period.

Based on indication, the metabolomics market has been segmented into into cancer, cardiovascular disorders, neurological disorders, metabolic disorders, inborn errors of metabolism, and other indications (respiratory and infectious diseases.The cancer segment is expected to account for the largest market share in 2020, with the highest growth rate as well.

This can primarily be attributed to the increasing number of patients who have cancer and the subsequent increase in the demand for cancer therapies.

By End user, Academic and Research Institutes accounted for the largest share of the metabolomics marketThe academic and research institutes segment accounted for the largest share of the metabolomics market in 2020. The increasing number of research activities in the field of metabolomics and funding to the academic and research institutes to conduct metabolomics research are the factors responsible for the largest share of the segment.

Asia Pacific: The fastest-growing region in the metabolomics market.

The Asia Pacific market is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period.Several global pharmaceutical firms have entered the APAC market to tap the significant growth opportunities in emerging Asian countries and lower their production costs by shifting their drug discovery R&D operations and manufacturing to the region.

A large number of qualified researchers and low-cost operations in APAC countries, such as India and China, are some of the major factors supporting this trend.

North America: The largest share of the metabolomics market.

North America, which includes the US and Canada, accounted for the largest share of the metabolomics market. The large share of the North America region can be attributed to the presence of major players operating in the metabolomics market in the US, growing biomedical research in the US, and rising preclinical activities by CROs and pharmaceutical companies in the region.

Breakdown of primariesThe study contains insights from various industry experts, ranging from component suppliers to Tier 1 companies and OEMs. The break-up of the primaries is as follows: By Respondent Supply Side- 80%, Demand Side-20% By Designation Executives- 25%, CXOs- 20%, Managers - 55% By Region North America - 50%, Europe - 20%, APAC 20%, RoW- 10%

The metabolomics market is dominated by a few globally established players such as Waters Corporation (US), Agilent Technologies (US), Shimadzu Corporation (Japan), Thermo Fisher Scientific (US), Danaher Corporation (US), Bruker Corporation (US), PerkinElmer (US), Merck KGaA (Germany), GE Healthcare (US), Hitachi High-Technologies Corporation (Japan), Human Metabolome Technologies, Inc. (Japan), LECO Corporation (US), Metabolon, Inc. (US), Bio-Rad Laboratories (US), Scion Instruments (US), DANI Instruments S.p.A. (Italy), GL Sciences (Japan), SRI Instruments (US), Kore Technology Ltd. (UK), and JASCO, Inc. (US)

Research Coverage:The report segments the metabolomics market based on region (North America, Asia Pacific, Europe, Latin America and Middle East & Africa), product & service (metabolomics instruments ((separation tools (((gas chromatography, high-performance liquid chromatography, ultra-performance liquid chromatography, and capillary electrophoresis))), detection tools (((nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, mass spectrometry (MS), and surface-based mass analysis))), bioinformatics tools and services) application (biomarker discovery, drug discovery, toxicology testing, nutrigenomics, functional genomics, personalized medicine, and other applications), indication (cancer, cardiovascular disorders, neurological disorders, metabolic disorders, inborn errors of metabolism, and other indications),end user(academic and research institutes, pharmaceutical & biotechnology companies, contract research organizations, and other end users).Company type (Tier 1, tier 2, Tier 3 providers of metabolomics instruments and services).

The report also provides a comprehensive review of market drivers, challenges, and opportunities in the metabolomics market.

Key Benefits of Buying the Report:The report will help the leaders/new entrants in this market with information on the closest approximations of the revenue numbers for the overall market and the sub-segments.This report will help stakeholders understand the competitive landscape and gain more insights to better position their businesses and plan suitable go-to-market strategies.

The report also helps stakeholders understand the pulse of the metabolomics market and provides them information on key market drivers, challenges, and opportunities.

Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p04763096/?utm_source=GNW

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The global metabolomics market size is projected to reach USD 4.1 billion by 2025 from USD 1.9 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 13.4% - GlobeNewswire

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Robert Gallo of the UM School of Medicine Institute of Human Virology and Global Virus Network Awarded Top Life Sciences and Medicine Prize from China…

Monday, December 28th, 2020

BALTIMORE, Dec. 21, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Robert C. Gallo, MD, The Homer & Martha Gudelsky Distinguished Professor in Medicine, co-founder and director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and co-founder and international scientific advisor of the Global Virus Network, was awarded the "VCANBIO Award for Biosciences and Medicine," a significant and authoritative award in the life sciences and medicine field of China. The elite Prize is jointly presented by the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences and the VCANBIO CELL & GENE ENGINEERING CORP, LTD to push forward scientific research, technological innovation and continuous development in the life sciences and medicine field of China.

"The Prize also serves to facilitate the industrial development and application of innovative life science achievements,"said George F. Gao, DVM, DPHIL (OXON), Director General of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC), Director, CAS Key Laboratory of Pathogenic Microbiology and Immunology, Professor, Institute of Microbiology, Dean of the Medical School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Director of China's Global Virus Network Center of Excellence. "Dr. Gallo is a pioneer in virus research and most worthy of this Prize. We are pleased to see him recognized by many members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences."

"Hosted by the Medical School of the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, this award commends outstanding and innovative Chinese and foreign scientists, who have accomplished innovation achievements and breakthroughs in the life sciences and medicine field,"said Yiming Shao, MD, the Chief Expert on AIDS, China CDC, Director of the Division of Research on Virology and Immunology, National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention, China and Member of the GVN SARS-CoV-2 Task Force and China GVN. "I have worked with Dr. Gallo through the decades and admire his intellect and leadership, which have led to discoveries that have broad implications in protecting mankind from viral threats. I am delighted that my Chinese colleagues are recognizing him with this significant honor."

"Prof. Gallo has made a great deal of contribution to promote the Sino-American friendship and collaboration, especially for medical talent training and public health in China,"said Prof. Guanhua Xu, Chairman of the selection committee of the VCANBIO Award for Biosciences and Medicine.

"This is a tremendous and well-deserved honor for Dr. Gallo,"said E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs, UM Baltimore, the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor, and Dean, University of Maryland School of Medicine. "Dr. Gallo has dedicated his career to building international collaborations that have produced major scientific discoveries in human virology, including with leading scientists and academic colleagues in China. As a result, the Institute of Human Virology continues to be recognized as the global leader in the fight against chronic viral diseases."

"I am humbled and honored to receive this esteemed Prize from my colleagues in China,"said Dr. Robert Gallo. "I take this opportunity to stress that it is imperative that government and politics not interfere with science, and that my Chinese and American colleagues, who have a long history of collaborating together and contributing scientific breakthroughs to protect humanity from global health threats, continue to have the freedom to do so and to grow these collaborations."

A Distinguished Scientific Career Advancing Global Health

Dr. Robert Gallo has long believed in the necessity of international cooperation and collaboration in medical sciences in general, and infectious diseases in particular, in part to build global friendships and advance humanitarian principles. Though entertainment and sports facilitate such connections he believes the "knots" are tied best through medical sciences. Throughout his 30 years at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and more recently his nearly 25 years at Baltimore's Institute of Human Virology (IHV) at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, he has fostered these connections. First, through his pioneering scientific discoveries including his discovery in 1976 of Interleukin-2, the first cytokine, a growth regulating substance now used as immune therapy in some cancers and in autoimmune diseases when suppressive T cells are needed. Then in 1980, the first human retrovirus, HTLV-1, a cause of human leukemia and paralytic neurological diseases as well as severe inflammatory disorders, which is endemic in some regions such as parts of Africa, the Caribbean Islands, Japan, Aboriginal Australians, Iran and South America. Dr. Gallo and his team developed a blood test for HTLV-1 applicable to all countries which protects people receiving blood transfusions that would be contaminated with this virus. Similarly, in 1984, when he and his team co-discovered HIV as the cause of AIDS they also developed the HIV blood test for the world and made their reagents available to all. Dr. Gallo and his team established collaborations in HIV/AIDS research, education, therapy and care for many African countries, particularly in Nigeria and some Caribbean nations. During the current pandemic he quickly became involved in initiating preventive measures against SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 disease through the idea of stimulating innate immunity with "live" virus vaccines such as the oral polio vaccine. Dr. Gallo, abetted by his collaborator, Konstantin Chumakov, PhD, Associate Director for Research for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Office of Vaccines Research and Review and a GVN Center Director and his clinical colleague, Shyam Kottilil, MBBS, PhD, professor of medicine and director of the Clinical Care and Research Division of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and senior advisor at the GVN, are advising on trials in India and in discussion about trials in Mexico, Brazil, Uzbekistan and China. He has also fostered the international nature of his research by hosting students beyond the U.S., including post-doctoral senior scientists from Asia, Middle East, Europe, the Americas and many African nations.

However, nothing demonstrates his concern for medical science cooperation more than when he established the idea for the Global Virus Network (GVN), which he co-founded in 2011 with the late Prof. Reinhard Kurth, MD, formerly Director of the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin, and Prof. William Hall, BSc, PhD, MD, DTMH, of University College Dublin. Now, GVN is headed by its President Christian Brchot, MD, PhD. The GVN was formed to advance medical and zoological science without any government influence, giving members of the GVN maximum freedom to speak freely while encouraging all nations to be involved. China, among several dozen other countries, has an active Center of Excellence within the GVN and was the site of the 7th meeting of the GVN in May 2015 held in Beijing and hosted by the late GVN Center Director, Zeng Yi of Beijing University of Technology. Experts shared information on varying viral threats, including those causing hemorrhagic fevers, hepatitis, HIV, measles, influenza, dengue and chikungunya, to name a few. GVN members also reviewed strategies at the center of the organization including the creation of specialized task forces and the launch of training programs to address growing viral threats.

A History with Chinese-American Collaborations

Dr. Gallo had a deep friendship with Dr. Robert Ting who came to the U.S. as a child refugee from Shanghai during the Japanese invasion. As a student, Dr. Ting worked with the famous Italian molecular biologist, Dr. Salvatore Luria at MIT, who won a Nobel Prize. Dr. Ting then went to Caltech to work with another Italian Nobel Prize winner, Dr. Renato Dulbecco and they were joined by two others who were soon to be Nobel Prize winners, Drs. Howard Temin and David Baltimore. Dr. Ting was not just Dr. Gallo's friend but also his teacher by introducing him to Chinese culture and food, tennis, and the field of virology. Soon after meeting Dr. Ting, another Chinese-born and educated young man, Dr. Alan Wu, came to Dr. Gallo's lab from Toronto bringing with him the knowledge and skills of blood stem cells. There were then several other Chinese post-doctoral fellows culminating with Dr. Flossie Wong-Staal from Canton Province and who played a very major role in advancing molecular biology on Dr. Gallo's team for about 15 years. Dr. Nancy Chang, also Chinese, came as a visiting scientist on a few occasions. On one such time she was key to the development of the second-generation HIV blood test used around the world.

In 2009, with the help of a University of Maryland School of Medicine colleague, Dr. Richard Zhao, born in China and educated in the U.S., the Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences (SAMS) announced the establishment of the Shandong Gallo Institute of Virology (SGIV). The announcement was made simultaneously with a ceremony to establish China's first Molecular Diagnostic Center for Personalized Healthcare (MDCPH), which was a joint venture among the University of Maryland, Baltimore, Roche Diagnostics Asia Pacific and SGIV at the Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences. The mission of the SGIV is to promote the basic science of virology especially in the area of HIV/AIDS and other important and emerging viral diseases and to facilitate translational research and clinical trials for related diseases. SGIV also aims to provide molecular-based testing for disease diagnosis, prognosis and treatment in the area of individualized molecular testing for personalized medicine.

Since the founding of the Institute of Human Virology (IHV), Dr. Gallo notes that several of his key science leaders at the Institute of Human Virology came from China, including: Dr. Wuyuan Lu (recent Director of the Division of Infectious Agents and Cancer), Dr. Yang Liu (recent Director of the Division of Immunotherapy), Dr. Pan Zheng (Division of Immunotherapy), Dr. Lishan Su (current Director of the Division of Virology, Pathogenesis and Cancer), Dr. Man Charurat (current Director of the Division of Epidemiology and Prevention and Ciheb) and Dr. Lai-Xi Wang (formerly at IHV and now at University of Maryland, College Park). With each of these leaders also came labs full of Chinese colleagues, who Dr. Gallo states contributed greatly to advancing America's biomedical research. Further, over the past six decades, Dr. Gallo visited China countless times to discuss potential collaborations with public and private sector entities, mentored rising Chinese scientists and facilitated open scientific discussions to advance the field of human virology, among other important things.

About the Institute of Human Virology

Formed in 1996 as a partnership between the State of Maryland, the City of Baltimore, the University System of Maryland, and the University of Maryland Medical System, the IHV is an institute of the University of Maryland School of Medicine and is home to some of the most globally-recognized and world-renowned experts in all of virology. The IHV combines the disciplines of basic research, epidemiology, and clinical research in a concerted effort to speed the discovery of diagnostics and therapeutics for a wide variety of chronic and deadly viral and immune disorders - most notably, HIV the virus that causes AIDS. For more information, visit http://www.ihv.org and follow us on Twitter @IHVmaryland.

About the Global Virus Network (GVN)

The Global Virus Network (GVN) is essential and critical in the preparedness, defense and first research response to emerging, exiting and unidentified viruses that pose a clear and present threat to public health, working in close coordination with established national and international institutions. It is a coalition comprised of eminent human and animal virologists from 59 Centers of Excellence and 11 Affiliates in 33 countries worldwide, working collaboratively to train the next generation, advance knowledge about how to identify and diagnose pandemic viruses, mitigate and control how such viruses spread and make us sick, as well as develop drugs, vaccines and treatments to combat them. No single institution in the world has expertise in all viral areas other than the GVN, which brings together the finest medical virologists to leverage their individual expertise and coalesce global teams of specialists on the scientific challenges, issues and problems posed by pandemic viruses. The GVN is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. For more information, please visit http://www.gvn.org. Follow us on Twitter @GlobalVirusNews

SOURCE Global Virus Network

gvn.org

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Robert Gallo of the UM School of Medicine Institute of Human Virology and Global Virus Network Awarded Top Life Sciences and Medicine Prize from China...

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Coagulo Medical Technologies Announces $6.5 Million in Financing to Accelerate Delivery of Disruptive Coagulation Diagnostics Platform – Business Wire

Monday, December 28th, 2020

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Coagulo Medical Technologies, an MIT-born startup that has developed the worlds first precision-medicine platform for comprehensive and targeted blood clotting management, today announced it has raised $6.5 million in financing from 20/20 HealthCare Partners, Sands Capital, Good Growth Capital, IAG Capital Partners and private investors. The Boston area diagnostics innovator also announced that it has been awarded a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant by the National Science Foundation to accelerate delivery of breakthrough innovations amid the global COVID19 public health crisis, which has called attention to the limitations of conventional coagulation tests.

Coagulos rapid, point-of-care device is a major advancement for personalized diagnosis and management of all coagulation-related diseases. The device is ultra-portable, requires just drops of blood and will provide vital, clinically-actionable information within 10 minutes. It leverages a proprietary and entirely novel approach to coagulation testing, which is capable of parsing through the entire coagulation cascade to pinpoint deficiency or inhibition of specific coagulation factors and quantifies their effect on clotting time.

Current coagulation testing methods were developed over a half-century ago, provide only general information on blood clotting function and cannot identify the specific cause of a clotting abnormality. Outdated testing technology is akin to a generic check engine light, whereas Coagulos test is designed to isolate the issue down to a specific diagnostic code. The device promises better health outcomes by permitting physicians to supplement clinical intuition with targeted information that they always wanted but no other technology could deliver, said Dr. Galit Frydman, CSO and President of the company. To be able to seamlessly deliver those comprehensive, sample-to-insight results using merely drops of blood, and to have that information within a clinically meaningful timeframe and at the bedside, will make Coagulos diagnostic platform a critical tool in meeting the ever-evolving challenges of coagulation management, added Jarrod Niebloom, Coagulos CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors. No doubt the complex clotting issues that continue to be observed in patients with COVID19 epitomize just how antiquated existing diagnostic tools are and how pressing the clinical need is.

Coagulo has developed a platform that directly responds to current medical needs and, further, will support traditional tests like prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time, said Hillel Bachrach, managing partner of 20/20 HealthCare Partners. We are excited to invest in Coagulo and to help accelerate their path to market as they up-end an industry that has seen very little innovation for decades.

20/20 HealthCare Partners, a global investment group based in Boston that invests at the early stage of technology and life science innovation, has led the investment.

About Coagulo:

Founded in 2018 and based out of Alexandria LaunchLabs, Coagulo licensed technology out of MIT and the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) developed by Dr. Galit Frydman, the companys CSO and President, who also holds appointments in the Division of Trauma, Emergency Surgery and Surgical Critical Care at MGH and in the Center for Biomedical Engineering at MIT. Coagulo has developed the next-generation of rapid, ultra-portable and comprehensive diagnostics for the personalized diagnosis and management of all coagulation-related diseases. Coagulos point-of-care device is not yet approved or cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for marketing in the United States.

http://www.coagulomed.com

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Coagulo Medical Technologies Announces $6.5 Million in Financing to Accelerate Delivery of Disruptive Coagulation Diagnostics Platform - Business Wire

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The Precision Medicine Market To Transcend The Covid-19 Barrier From 2024 Onwards – Farming Sector

Monday, December 28th, 2020

Market Report Summary

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The latest report published by Persistence Market Research titled Global Market Study on Precision Medicine: Drug Discovery Technology Segment Estimated to Witness 0.1% Decline in Market Share Between 2016 and 2024. projects some of the crucial aspects of the globalprecision medicine marketafter an in-depth research. The report assures that the market will grow manifold and it will register a 14.7% CAGR between 2016 and 2024.

Global Precision Medicine Market: The Propellers

The global expansion of the medicine industry will expand the canvas of the global precision market. Larger investments, better infrastructure, simplified approval process of drugs along with companion diagnostics will impact the structure of the entire climate of the global precision medicine market.

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Company Profiles

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The affordable DNA profiling, the bloating cancer population of the globe will create a favorable condition of growth for the global precision medicine market. The proper storage of genome data plays a crucial part in this segment. The emergence of data backed medicare will also drive the global precision market ahead.

But the market is combating acute data storage and data privacy issues and it also lacks in systematic approach towards funding and soaring prices of personalized drugs is also creating a blockade in the expansion of the global precision medicine market.

Global Precision Medicine Market: Market Autopsy

The global precision medicine market is bifurcated into multiple parent segments which are further sub-categorized. The primary division of the market is an assimilation of three, region, technology and application. The major technologies which will define the market character in the forthcoming years are bioinformatics, next-gen sequencing and drug discovery technology. The applications segment will showcase fruitful results and oncology will act as the showstopper.

The market prediction shows that this segment will bloom and will touch an approximate value of US$ 69 Bn by the end of the assessment period. The approximate registered CAGR of this segment within the assessed period will be above 13.5%. The global population is struggling with some of the acute diseases such as arthritis. A large slice of the aged population is an easy prey of this crippling ailment. The immunology segment will reap maximum benefits from the population affected by arthritis. The immunology segment will gain revenue from the market and the market worth will cross US$ 34 Mn by the end of 2024.

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Global Precision Medicine Market: Regional Scrutiny

The regional market arena has penetrated through different key regions of the globe. The global precision medicine market has extended its boundaries in the last few years. The product has a massive global presence and it is expanding steadily. Apart from North America, Europe, MEA, Latin America and Asia Pacific regions are other major pockets which are expected to show fruitful outcome in the forthcoming years.

The global precision medicine market is expected to perform well in the North American region and it will occupy more than 35% of the market share within the period of prediction. The global precision market in North America will flourish and will probably touch the approximate market value of more than US$ 60 Mn by 2024 end. With a stupendous performance the US and Canada will conquer a lion share of the global precision medicine market of this region predicts the report.

The Europe is a consistent market and will crawl up the revenue chart within the forecast period. The global precision market in Europe will ride an estimated CAGR of more than 13% to sew up an average worth of more than US$ 40 Mn by the end of 2024. In Europe the markets spread across Germany and France will shape the destiny of this market. Apart from this the countries such as Spain, UK and Italy will also follow the leading pack during the period of assessment.

The APAC region is the rising star of the global precision medicine market. The region will project a CAGR of more than 14% during the period of projection. The market will witness a staggering hike and will touch approximately US$ 35 Mn by the end of 2024. In the APAC region Japan will spearhead the market, China and India will lock horns to accumulate maximum market share during the projected period.

The region of Latin America will score considerable revenue during this period. MEA will be a sulking market as less of research activities will dampen the spirit of the precision medicine market.

Explore Extensive Coverage of PMR`sLife Sciences & Transformational HealthLandscape

Persistence Market Research (PMR) is a third-platform research firm. Our research model is a unique collaboration of data analytics and market research methodology to help businesses achieve optimal performance.

To support companies in overcoming complex business challenges, we follow a multi-disciplinary approach. At PMR, we unite various data streams from multi-dimensional sources. By deploying real-time data collection, big data, and customer experience analytics, we deliver business intelligence for organizations of all sizes.

Our client success stories feature a range of clients from Fortune 500 companies to fast-growing startups. PMRs collaborative environment is committed to building industry-specific solutions by transforming data from multiple streams into a strategic asset.

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