header logo image


Page 14«..10..13141516..2030..»

Archive for the ‘Death by Stem Cells’ Category

SpaceX Dragon to launch heart cell experiment and more to space station tonight – Space.com

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. SpaceX is preparing for its fifth launch of the year: a resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The mission, which is scheduled to launch Friday (March 6) at 11:50 p.m. EST (0450 GMT on March 7), will bring a bevy of science material to the astronauts living and working in the orbiting laboratory.

This flight, dubbed CRS-20, marks the 20th and final mission for SpaceX under the company's first commercial cargo resupply services contract with NASA. Perched atop a Falcon 9 rocket will sit a cargo Dragon capsule filled with more than 4,300 lbs. (1,950 kilograms) of supplies, including more than 2,100 lbs. (950 kg) of science equipment.

The scientific cargo will support a host of experiments across Expeditions 62 and 63, focusing on a range of topics, from biological sciences (growing human heart cells in space), to water conservation methods, to particle-foam manufacturing and the addition of a new research platform on the ISS.

You can watch SpaceX's Dragon launch livehere on Space.com, courtesy of SpaceX, beginning at about 11:30 p.m. EST (0430 GMT), courtesy of NASA TV. You can alsowatch the launch directly from SpaceX here, beginning at 11:35 p.m. EST (0435 GMT).

Video: What's flying to the space station on SpaceX's CRS-20 mission?Related: SpaceX Dragon cargo ship launching tonight. How to watch live.

In its never-ending quest to create the best athletic shoe, Adidas has turned its sights to the International Space Station. The sportswear company has developed a performance midsole an additional shoe layer between the insole (next to your feet) and the sole (what touches the ground) that will enhance comfort.

To create its midsole, Adidas uses a process called particle foam molding, in which thousands of small pellets are blasted into a mold so they fuse together. To streamline the process and create the best shoe it can, Adidas is going to try this process in microgravity. The experiment, dubbed Adidas BOOST (Boost Orbital Operations on Spheroid Tessellation), will look at how the particles fuse together in space.

By removing gravity from the process, the team can take a closer look at individual pellet motion and location. The results of this investigation could show that the space station is a good platform for testing out new manufacturing methods and could lead to more-efficient means of packing and cushioning materials.

Related: Adidas launching new sneakers inspired by historic NASA spacesuits

Delta Faucet Co., a manufacturer of shower heads and other bathroom hardware, is launching a payload on CRS-20 that will seek to better understand how water droplets form. The company will use that knowledge to build a better shower head that lines up with Delta's ultimate goal: creating the sensation of increased pressure while using less water.

Conserving water is incredibly important, but one of the biggest drawbacks is that eco-friendly, low-flow shower heads do not perform as well as their less environmentally friendly counterparts. Users complain that the water pressure feels so low it's difficult to rinse off properly, which can result in longer showers and, ultimately, more water usage.

To help mitigate this issue, Delta has created a unique shower head, called the H2Okinetic, that controls the size and the speed of the water droplets with the help of an oscillating chip. That chip creates a better shower experience by breaking up the water flow into bigger droplets and shooting them out faster, giving the illusion of more water.

Related: Showering in space: Astronaut home video shows off 'hygiene corner'

"Water is a precious commodity," Garry Marty, principal engineer at Delta Faucet, said during a prelaunch briefing on Thursday (March 5). "We are trying to create a shower head to keep our customers happy while using less water."

He went on to explain that once the water leaves the pipes, it essentially doesn't have any pressure. What you're feeling are the droplets. With this new shower head, Delta Faucet is able to control the size and speed on each drop, revolutionizing the way a shower device delivers a shower.

"Lower-flow showers aren't really great to be under," Marty said. "But the more we understand, the more we can improve."

Marty added that, someday, humanity will be living on the moon or Mars and will need a way to take a shower. The lessons learned from this research go beyond conserving water and user experience, he said; it has implications for the space industry as well. But for now, the bigger concern is to better understand the fundamentals of water droplet formation.

Heart disease is the No. 1 cause of death in the U.S. A team of researchers from Emory University in Atlanta, led by Chunhui Xu, are sending an experiment up to the space station to explore how effectively stem cells can be turned into heart muscle cells.

The data collected could lead to new therapies and even speed up the development of new drugs that can better treat heart disease.

The microgravity environment found on the space station is known to have a profound effect on cell growth. Through this research, the team aims to understand the impact microgravity has on cardiac precursors (cardiac cells created from stem cells) and how effectively they produce cardiac muscle cells, called cardiomyocytes.

Related: Heart cells beat differently in microgravity, may benefit astronauts

Ground-based research shows that when cells are grown under simulated microgravity conditions, the production rate of cardiomyocytes is greater than if they were grown under the effects of gravity. By sending the experiment to the space station, Xu and her team will be able to determine if their results are accurate.

"Our goal is to help make stem cell-based therapy more readily available," Xu said during the briefing. "If successful, the demand for it will be tremendous, because heart disease is the No. 1 killer in America."

In order to have a successful therapy, Xu said that the team will need to produce a large number of high-quality cardiomyocytes. To do that, the researchers need to first understand the mechanisms behind cell transformation.

Bartolomeo is a new research platform that will be installed on the exterior of the space station. Placed outside the European Columbus module, this science balcony will host as many as 12 research experiments at one time.

Built by Airbus, the platform will enable researchers to conduct more experiments on the station's exterior. During a prelaunch briefing, NASA and Airbus explained that Bartolomeos potential uses include Earth observation, robotics, materials science and astrophysics.

"All of your [research] dreams can come true with Bartolomeo," said Andreas Schuette, program manager of Bartolomeo at Airbus.

And parking spots on the washing machine-sized platform are all-inclusive, which means that researchers can pay one price to launch, install, operate and even return to Earth. By working directly with agencies like NASA, ESA, and SpaceX, Airbus is able to offer a cost-effective means of conducting research on the space station.

The company is also working with the United Nations in an effort to entice those who wouldn't otherwise be able to afford to send payloads into space, Schuette told Space.com. The duo have teamed up with the United Nations Office for Outer Space (UNOOSA) to make that happen. (The agency works to make space more accessible.)

If all goes as scheduled, the Dragon will arrive at the International Space Station on Monday (March 9) at approximately 6 a.m. EDT (1000 GMT). From there, NASA astronauts Jessica Meir and Drew Morgan will use the station's Canadarm2 robotic arm to capture and attach the spacecraft, before beginning the unloading process.

Follow Amy Thompson on Twitter @astrogingersnap. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

Read more:
SpaceX Dragon to launch heart cell experiment and more to space station tonight - Space.com

Read More...

Biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix synergistically direct MSC differentiation for functional sweat gland regeneration – Science…

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

Abstract

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) encapsulation by three-dimensionally (3D) printed matrices were believed to provide a biomimetic microenvironment to drive differentiation into tissue-specific progeny, which made them a great therapeutic potential for regenerative medicine. Despite this potential, the underlying mechanisms of controlling cell fate in 3D microenvironments remained relatively unexplored. Here, we bioprinted a sweat gland (SG)like matrix to direct the conversion of MSC into functional SGs and facilitated SGs recovery in mice. By extracellular matrix differential protein expression analysis, we identified that CTHRC1 was a critical biochemical regulator for SG specification. Our findings showed that Hmox1 could respond to the 3D structure activation and also be involved in MSC differentiation. Using inhibition and activation assay, CTHRC1 and Hmox1 synergistically boosted SG gene expression profile. Together, these findings indicated that biochemical and structural cues served as two critical impacts of 3D-printed matrix on MSC fate decision into the glandular lineage and functional SG recovery.

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) hold great promise for therapeutic tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, largely because of their capacity for self-renewal and multipotent properties (1). However, their uncertain fate has a major impact on their envisioned therapeutic use. Cell fate regulation requires specific transcription programs in response to environmental cues (2, 3). Once stem cells are removed from their microenvironment, their response to environmental cues, phenotype, and functionality could often be altered (4, 5). In contrast to growing information concerning transcriptional regulation, guidance from the extracellular matrix (ECM) governing MSC identity and fate determination is not well understood. It remains an active area of investigation and may provide previously unidentified avenues for MSC-based therapy.

Over the past decade, engineering three-dimensional (3D) ECM to direct MSC differentiation has demonstrated great potential of MSCs in regenerative medicine (6). 3D ECM has been found to be useful in providing both biochemical and biophysical cues and to stabilize newly formed tissues (7). Culturing cells in 3D ECM radically alters the interfacial interactions with the ECM as compared with 2D ECM, where cells are flattened and may lose their differentiated phenotype (8). However, one limitation of 3D materials as compared to 2D approaches was the lack of spatial control over chemistry with 3D materials. One possible solution to this limitation is 3D bioprinting, which could be used to design the custom scaffolds and tissues (9).

In contrast to traditional engineering techniques, 3D cell printing technology is especially advantageous because it can integrate multiple biophysical and biochemical cues spatially for cellular regulation and ensure complex structures with precise control and high reproducibility. In particular, for our final goal of clinical practice, extrusion-based bioprinting may be more appropriate for translational application. In addition, as a widely used bioink for extrusion bioprinting, alginate-based hydrogel could maintain stemness of MSC due to the bioinert property and improve biological activity and printability by combining gelatin (10).

Sweat glands (SGs) play a vital role in thermal regulation, and absent or malfunctioning SGs in a hot environment can lead to hyperthermia, stroke, and even death in mammals (11, 12). Each SG is a single tube consisting of a functionally distinctive duct and secretory portions. It has low regenerative potential in response to deep dermal injury, which poses a challenge for restitution of lost cells after wound (13). A major obstacle in SG regeneration, similar to the regeneration of most other glandular tissues, is the paucity of viable cells capable of regenerating multiple tissue phenotypes (12). Several reports have described SG regeneration in vitro; however, dynamic morphogenesis was not identified nor was the overall function of the formed tissues explored (1416). Recent advances in bioprinting and tissue engineering led to the complexities in the matrix design and fabrication with appropriate biochemical cues and biophysical guidance for SG regeneration (1719).

Here, we adopted 3D bioprinting technique to mimic the regenerative microenvironment that directed the specific SG differentiation of MSCs and ultimately guided the formation and function of glandular tissue. We used alginate/gelatin hydrogel as bioinks in this present study due to its good cytocompatibility, printability, and structural maintenance in long-time culture. Although the profound effects of ECM on cell differentiation was well recognized, the importance of biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix that determined the cell fate of MSCs remained unknown; thus, the present study demonstrated the role of 3D-printed matrix cues on cellular behavior and tissue morphogenesis and might help in developing strategies for MSC-based tissue regeneration or directing stem cell lineage specification by 3D bioprinting.

The procedure for printing the 3D MSC-loaded construct incorporating a specific SG ECM (mouse plantar region dermis, PD) was shown schematically in Fig. 1A. A 3D cellular construct with cross section 30 mm 30 mm and height of 3 mm was fabricated by using the optimized process parameter (20). The 3D construct demonstrated a macroporous grid structure with hydrogel fibers evenly distributed according to the computer design. Both the width of the fibers and the gap between the fibers were homogeneous, and MSCs were embedded uniformly in the hydrogel matrix fibers to result in a specific 3D microenvironment. (Fig. 1B).

(A) Schematic description of the approach. (B) Full view of the cellular construct and representative microscopic and fluorescent images and the quantitative parameters of 3D-printed construct (scale bars, 200 m). Photo credit: Bin Yao, Wound Healing and Cell Biology Laboratory, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, General Hospital of PLA. (C) Representative microscopy images of cell aggregates and tissue morphology at 3, 7, and 14 days of culture (scale bars, 50 m) and scanning electron microscopy (sem) images of 3D structure (scale bars, 20 m). PD+/PD, 3D construct with and without PD. (D) DNA contents, collagen, and GAGs of native tissue and PD. (E) Proliferating cells were detected through Ki67 stain at 3, 7, and 14 days of culture. (F) Live/dead assay show cell viability at days 3, 7, and 14. *P < 0.05.

During the maintenance of constructs for stem cell expansion, MSCs proliferated to form aggregates of cells but self-assembled to an SG-like structure only with PD administration (Fig. 1C and fig. S1, A to C). We carried out DNA quantification assay to evaluate the cellular content in PD and found the cellular matrix with up to 90% reduction, only 3.4 0.7 ng of DNA per milligram tissue remaining in the ECM. We also estimated the proportions of collagen and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) in ECM through hydroxyproline assay and dimethylmethylene blue assay, the collagen contents could increase to 112.6 11.3%, and GAGs were well retained to 81 9.6% (Fig. 1D). Encapsulated cells were viable, with negligible cell death apparent during extrusion and ink gelation by ionic cross-linking, persisting through extended culture in excess of 14 days. The fluorescence intensity of Ki67 of MSCs cultured in 2D condition decreased from days 3 (152.7 13.4) to 14 (29.4 12.9), while maintaining higher intensity of MSCs in 3D construct (such as 211.8 19.4 of PD+3D group and 209.1 22.1 of PD3D group at day 14). And the cell viability in 3D construct was found to be sufficiently high (>80%) when examined on days 3, 7, and 14. The phenomenon of cell aggregate formation and increased cell proliferation implied the excellent cell compatibility of the hydrogel-based construct and promotion of tissue development of 3D architectural guides, which did not depend on the presence or absence of PD (Fig. 1, E and F).

The capability of 3D-printed construct with PD directing MSC to SGs in vitro was investigated. The 3D construct was dissolved, and cells were isolated at days 3, 7, and 14 for transcriptional analysis. Expression of the SG markers K8 and K18 was higher from the 3D construct with (3D/PD+) than without PD (3D/PD); K8 and K18 expression in the 3D/PD construct was similar to with control that MSCs cultured in 2D condition, which implied the key role of PD in SG specification. As compared with the 2D culture condition, 3D administration (PD+) up-regulated SG markers, which indicated that the 3D structure synergistically boosted the MSC differentiation (Fig. 2A).

(A) Transcriptional expression of K8, K18, Fxyd2, Aqp5, and ATP1a1 in 3D-bioprinted cells with and without PD in days 3, 7, and 14 culture by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Data are means SEM. (B) Comparison of SG-specific markers K8 and K18 in 3D-bioprinted cells with and without PD (K8 and K18, red; DAPI, blue; scale bars, 50 m). (C and D) Comparison of SG secretion-related markers ATP1a1 (C) and Ca2+ (D) in 3D-bioprinted cells with and without PD [ATP1a1 and Ca2+, red; 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), blue; scale bars, 50 m].

In addition, we tested secretion-related genes to evaluate the function of induced SG cells (iSGCs). Although levels of the ion channel factors of Fxyd2 and ATP1a1 were increased notably in 2D culture with PD and ATP1a1 up-regulated in the 3D/PD construct, all the secretory genes of Fxyd2, ATP1a1, and water transporter Aqp5 showed the highest expression level in the 3D/PD+ construct (Fig. 2A). Considering the remarkable impact, further analysis focused on 3D constructs.

Immunofluorescence staining confirmed the progression of MSC differentiation. At day 7, cells in the 3D/PD+ construct began to express K8 and K18, which was increased at day 14, whereas cells in the 3D/PD construct did not express K8 and K18 all the time (Fig. 2B and fig. S2A). However, the expression of ATP1a1 (ATPase Na+/K+ transporting subunit alpha 1) and free Ca2+ concentration did not differ between cells in the 3D/PD+ and 3D/PD constructs (Fig. 2, C and D). By placing MSCs in such a 3D environment, secretion might be stimulated by rapid cell aggregation without the need for SG lineage differentiation. Cell aggregationimproved secretion might be due to the benefit of cell-cell contact (fig. S2B) (21, 22).

To map the cell fate changes during the differentiation between MSCs and SG cells, we monitored the mRNA levels of epithelial markers such as E-cadherin, occludin, Id2, and Mgat3 and mesenchymal markers N-cadherin, vimentin, Twist1, and Zeb2. The cells transitioned from a mesenchymal status to a typical epithelial-like status accompanied by mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET), then epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) occurred during the further differentiation of epithelial lineages to SG cells (fig. S3A). In addition, MET-related genes were dynamically regulated during the SG differentiation of MSCs. For example, the mesenchymal markers N-cadherin and vimentin were down-regulated from days 1 to 7, which suggested cells losing their mesenchymal phenotype, then were gradually up-regulated from days 7 to 10 in their response to the SG phenotype and decreased at day 14. The epithelial markers E-cadherin and occludin showed an opposite expression pattern: up-regulated from days 1 to 5, then down-regulated from days 7 to 10 and up-regulated again at day 14. The mesenchymal transcriptional factors ZEB2 and Twist1 and epithelial transcriptional factors Id2 and Mgat3 were also dynamically regulated.

We further analyzed the expression of these genes at the protein level by immunofluorescence staining (figs. S3B and S4). N-cadherin was down-regulated from days 3 to 7 and reestablished at day 14, whereas E-cadherin level was increased from days 3 to 7 and down-regulated at day 14. Together, these results indicated that a sequential and dynamic MET-EMT process underlie the differentiation of MSCs to an SG phenotype, perhaps driving differentiation more efficiently (23). However, the occurrence of the MET-EMT process did not depend on the presence of PD. Thus, a 3D structural factor might also participate in the MSC-specific differentiation (fig. S3C).

To investigate the underlying mechanism of biochemical cues in lineage-specific cell fate, we used quantitative proteomics analysis to screen the ECM factors differentially expressed between PD and dorsal region dermis (DD) because mice had eccrine SGs exclusively present in the pads of their paws, and the trunk skin lacks SGs. In total, quantitative proteomics analyses showed higher expression levels of 291 proteins in PD than DD. Overall, 66 were ECM factors: 23 were significantly up-regulated (>2-fold change in expression). We initially determined the level of proteins with the most significant difference after removing keratins and fibrin: collagen triple helix repeat containing 1 (CTHRC1) and thrombospondin 1 (TSP1) (fig. S5). Western blotting was performed to further confirm the expression level of CTHRC1 and TSP1, and we then confirmed that immunofluorescence staining at different developmental stages in mice revealed increased expression of CTHRC1 in PD with SG development but only slight expression in DD at postnatal day 28, while TSP1 was continuously expressed in DD and PD during development (Fig. 3, A to C). Therefore, TSP1 was required for the lineage-specific function during the differentiation in mice but was not dispensable for SG development.

(A and B) Differential expression of CTHRC1 and TSP1in PD and back dermis (DD) ECM of mice by proteomics analysis (A) and Western blotting (B). (C) CTHRC1 and TSP1 expression in back and plantar skin of mice at different developmental times. (Cthrc1/TSP1, red; DAPI, blue; scale bars, 50 m).

According to previous results of the changes of SG markers, 3D structure and PD were both critical to SG fate. Then, we focused on elucidating the mechanisms that underlie the significant differences observed in 2D and 3D conditions with or without PD treatment. To this end, we performed transcriptomics analysis of MSCs, MSCs treated with PD, MSCs cultured in 3D construct, and MSC cultured in 3D construct with PD after 3-day treatment. We noted that the expression profiles of MSCs treated with 3D, PD, or 3D/PD were distinct from the profiles of MSCs (Fig. 4A). Through Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of differentially expressed genes, it was shown that PD treatment in 2D condition induced up-regulation of ECM and inflammatory response term, and the top GO term for MSCs in 3D construct was ECM organization and extracellular structure organization. However, for the MSCs with 3D/PD treatment, we found very significant overrepresentation of GO term related to branching morphogenesis of an epithelial tube and morphogenesis of a branching structure, which suggested that 3D structure cues and biochemical cues synergistically initiate the branching of gland lineage (fig S6). Heat maps of differentially expressed ECM organization, cell division, gland morphogenesis, and branch morphogenesis-associated genes were shown in fig. S7. To find the specific genes response to 3D structure cues facilitating MSC reprogramming, we analyzed the differentially expressed genes of four groups of cells (Fig. 4B). The expression of Vwa1, Vsig1, and Hmox1 were only up-regulated with 3D structure stimulation, especially the expression of Hmox1 showed a most significant increase and even showed a higher expression addition with PD, which implied that Hmox1 might be the transcriptional driver of MSC differentiation response to 3D structure cues. Differential expression of several genes was confirmed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR): Mmp9, Ptges, and Il10 were up-regulated in all the treated groups. Likewise, genes involving gland morphogenesis and branch morphogenesis such as Bmp2, Tgm2, and Sox9 showed higher expression in 3D/PD-treated group. Bmp2 was up-regulated only in 3D/PD-treated group, combined with the results of GO analysis, we assumed that Bmp2 initiated SG fate through inducing branch morphogenesis and gland differentiation (Fig. 4C).

(A) Gene expression file of four groups of cells (R2DC, MSCs; R2DT, MSC with PD treatment; R3DC, MSC cultured in 3D construct; and R3DT, MSC treated with 3D/PD). (B) Up-regulated genes after treatment (2DC, MSCs; 2DT, MSC with PD treatment; 3DC, MSC cultured in 3D construct; and 3DT, MSC treated with 3D/PD). (C) Differentially expressed genes were further validated by RT-PCR analysis. [For all RT-PCR analyses, gene expression was normalized to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) with 40 cycles, data are represented as the means SEM, and n = 3].

To validate the role of HMOX1 and CTHRC1 in the differentiation of MSCs to SG lineages, we analyzed the gene expression of Bmp2 by regulating the expression of Hmox1 and CTHRC1 based on the 3D/PD-treated MSCs. The effects of caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) and tin protoporphyrin IX dichloride (Snpp) on the expression of Hmox1 were evaluated by quantitative real-time (qRT)PCR. Hmox1 expression was significantly activated by CAPE and reduced by Snpp. Concentration of CTHRC1 was increased with recombinant CTHRC1 and decreased with CTHRC1 antibody. That is, it was negligible of the effects of activator and inhibitor of Hmox1 and CTHRC1 on cell proliferation (fig. S8, A and B). Hmox1 inhibition or CTHRC1 neutralization could significantly reduce the expression of Bmp2, while Hmox1 activation or increased CTHRC1 both activated Bmp2 expression. Furthermore, Bmp2 showed highest expression by up-regulation of Hmox1 and CTHRC1 simultaneously and sharply decreased with down-regulation of Hmox1 and CTHRC1 at the same time (Fig. 5A). Immunofluorescent staining revealed that the expression of bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) at the translational level with CTHRC1 and Hmox1 regulation showed a similar trend with transcriptional changes (Fig. 5B). Likewise, the expression of K8 and K18 at transcriptional and translational level changed similarly with CTHRC1 and Hmox1 regulation (fig. S9, A and B). These results suggested that CTHRC1 and Hmox1 played an essential role in SG fate separately, and they synergistically induced SG direction from MSCs (Fig. 5C).

(A and B) Transcriptional analysis (A) and translational analysis (PD, MSCs; PD+, MSCs with 3D/PD treatment; CAPE, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and Hmox1 activator; Snpp, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and Hmox1 inhibitor; Cthrc1, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and recombinant CTHRC1; anti, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and CTHRC1 antibody: +/+, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and Hmox1 activator and recombinant CTHRC1; and /, MSCs treated with 3D/PD and Hmox1 inhibitor and CTHRC1 antibody. Data are represented as the means SEM and n = 3) (B) of bmp2 with regulation of CTHRC1 and Hmox1. (C) The graphic illustration of 3D-bioprinted matrix directed MSC differentiation. CTHRC1 is the main biochemical cues during SG development, and structural cues up-regulated the expression of Hmox1 synergistically initiated branching morphogenesis of SG. *P < 0.05.

Next, we sought to assess the repair capacity of iSGCs for in vivo implications, the 3D-printed construct with green fluorescent protein (GFP)labeled MSCs was transplanted in burned paws of mice (Fig. 6A). We measured the SG repair effects by iodine/starch-based sweat test at day 14. Only mice with 3D/PD treatment showed black dots on foot pads (representing sweating), and the number increased within 10 min; however, no black dots were observed on untreated and single MSC-transplanted mouse foot pads even after 15 min (Fig. 6B). Likewise, hematoxylin and eosin staining analysis revealed SG regeneration in 3D/PD-treated mice (Fig. 6C). GFP-positive cells were characterized as secretory lumen expressing K8, K18, and K19. Of note, the GFP-positive cells were highly distributed in K14-positive myoepithelial cells of SGs but were absent in K14-positive repaired epidermal wounds (Fig. 6, D and E). Thus, differentiated MSCs enabled directed restitution of damaged SG tissues both at the morphological and functional level.

(A) Schematic illustration of approaches for engineering iSGCs and transplantation. (B) Sweat test of mice treated with different cells. Photo credit: Bin Yao, Wound Healing and Cell Biology Laboratory, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, General Hospital of PLA. (C) Histology of plantar region without treatment and transplantation of MSCs and iSGCs (scale bars, 200 m). (D) Involvement of GFP-labeled iSGCs in directed regeneration of SG tissue in thermal-injured mouse model (K14, red; GFP, green; DAPI, blue; scale bar, 200 m). (E) SG-specific markers K14, K19, K8, and K18 detected in regenerated SG tissue (arrows). (K14, K19, K8, and K18, red; GFP, green; scale bars, 50 m).

A potential gap in MSC-based therapy still exists between current understandings of MSC performance in vivo in their microenvironment and their intractability outside of that microenvironment (24). To regulate MSCs differentiation into the right phenotype, an appropriate microenvironment should be created in a precisely controlled spatial and temporal manner (25). Recent advances in innovative technologies such as bioprinting have enabled the complexities in the matrix design and fabrication of regenerative microenvironments (26). Our findings demonstrated that directed differentiation of MSCs into SGs in a 3D-printed matrix both in vitro and in vivo was feasible. In contrast to conventional tissue-engineering strategies of SG regeneration, the present 3D-printing approach for SG regeneration with overall morphology and function offered a rapid and accurate approach that may represent a ready-to-use therapeutic tool.

Furthermore, bioprinting MSCs successfully repaired the damaged SG in vivo, suggesting that it can improve the regenerative potential of exogenous differentiated MSCs, thereby leading to translational applications. Notably, the GFP-labeled MSC-derived glandular cells were highly distributed in K14-positive myoepithelial cells of newly formed SGs but were absent in K14-positive repaired epidermal wounds. Compared with no black dots were observed on single MSC-transplanted mouse foot pads, the black dots (representing sweating function) can be observed throughout the entire examination period, and the number increased within 10 min on MSC-bioprinted mouse foot pads. Thus, differentiated MSCs by 3D bioprinting enabled exclusive restitution of damaged SG tissues morphologically and functionally.

Although several studies indicated that engineering 3D microenvironments enabled better control of stem cell fates and effective regeneration of functional tissues (2730), there were no studies concerning the establishment of 3D-bioprinted microenvironments that can preferentially induce MSCs differentiating into glandular cells with multiple tissue phenotypes and overall functional tissue. To find an optimal microenvironment for promoting MSC differentiation into specialized progeny, biochemical properties are considered as the first parameter to ensure SG specification. In this study, we used mouse PD as the main composition of a tissue-specific ECM. As expected, this 3D-printed PD+ microenvironment drove the MSC fate decision to enhance the SG phenotypic profile of the differentiated cells. By ECM differential protein expression analysis, we identified that CTHRC1 was a critical biochemical regulator of 3D-printed matrix for SG specification. TSP1 was required for the lineage-specific function during the differentiation in mice but was not dispensable for SG development. Thus, we identified CTHRC1 as a specific factor during SG development. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of CTHRC1 involvement in dictating MSC differentiation to SG, highlighting a potential therapeutic tool for SG injury.

The 3D-printed matrix also provided architectural guides for further SG morphogenesis. Our results clearly show that the 3D spatial dimensionality allows for better cell proliferation and aggregation and affect the characteristics of phenotypic marker expression. Notably, the importance of 3D structural cues on MSC differentiation was further proved by MET-EMT process during differentiation, where the influences did not depend on the presence of biochemical cues. To fully elucidate the underlying mechanisms, we first examined how 3D structure regulating stem cell fate choices. According to our data, Hmox1 is highly up-regulated in 3D construct, which were supposed to response to hypoxia, with a previously documented role in MSC differentiation (31, 32). It is suggested that 3D microenvironment induced rapid cell aggregation leading to hypoxia and then activated the expression of Hmox1.

Through regulation of the expression of Hmox1 and addition or of CTHRC1 in the matrix, we confirmed that each of them is critical for SG reprogramming, respectively. Thus, biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix synergistically creating a microenvironment could enhance the accuracy and efficiency of MSC differentiation, thereby leading to resulting SG formation. Although we further need a more extensive study examining the role of other multiple cues and their possible overlap function in regulating MSC differentiation, our findings suggest that CTHRC1 and Hmox1 provide important signals that cooperatively modulate MSC lineage specification toward sweat glandular lineage. The 3D structure combined with PD stimulated the GO functional item of branch morphogenesis and gland formation, which might be induce by up-regulation of Bmp2 based on the verification of qPCR results. Although our results could not rule out the involvement of other factors and their possible overlapping role in regulating MSC lineage specification toward SGs, our findings together with several literatures suggested that BMP2 plays a critical role in inducing branch morphogenesis and gland formation (3335).

In summary, our findings represented a novel strategy of directing MSC differentiation for functional SG regeneration by using 3D bioprinting and pave the way for a potential therapeutic tool for other complex glandular tissues as well as further investigation into directed differentiation in 3D conditions. Specifically, we showed that biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix synergistically direct MSC differentiation, and our results highlighted the importance of 3D-printed matrix cues as regulators of MSC fate decisions. This avenue opens up the intriguing possibility of shifting from genetic to microenvironmental manipulations of cell fate, which would be of particular interest for clinical applications of MSC-based therapies.

The main aim and design of the study was first to determine whether by using 3D-printed microenvironments, MSCs can be directed to differentiate and regenerate SGs both morphologically and functionally. Then, to investigate the underlying molecular mechanism of biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix involved in MSCs reprogramming. The primary aims of the study design were as follows: (i) cell aggregation and proliferation in a 3D-bioprinted construct; (ii) differentiation of MSCs at the cellular phenotype and functional levels in the 3D-bioprinted construct; (iii) the MET-EMT process during differentiation; (iv) differential protein expression of the SG niche in mice; (v) differential genes expression of MSCs in 3D-bioprinted construct; (vi) the key role of CTHRC1 and HMOX1 in MSCs reprogramming to SGCs; and (vii) functional properties of regenerated SG in vivo.

Gelatin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) and sodium alginate (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) were dissolved in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) at 15 and 1% (w/v), respectively. Both solutions were sterilized under 70C for 30 min three times at an interval of 30 min. The sterilized solutions were packed into 50-ml centrifuge tubes, stored at 4C, and incubated at 37C before use.

From wild-type C57/B16 mice (Huafukang Co., Beijing) aged 5 days old, dermal homogenates were prepared by homogenizing freshly collected hairless mouse PD with isotonic phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) for 20 min in an ice bath to obtain 25% (w/v) tissue suspension. The supernatant was obtained after centrifugation at 4C for 20 min at 10,000g. The DNA content was determined using Hoechst 33258 assay (Beyotime, Beijing). The fluorescence intensity was measured to assess the amount of remaining DNA within the decellularized ECMs and the native tissue using a fluorescence spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, Evolution 260 Bio, USA). The GAGs content was estimated via 1,9-dimethylmethylene blue solution staining. The absorbance was measured with microplate reader at wavelength of 492 nm. The standard curve was made using chondroitin sulfate A. The total COL (Collagen) content was determined via hydroxyproline assay. The absorbance of the samples was measured at 550 nm and quantified by referring to a standard curve made with hydroxyproline.

MSCs were bioprinted with matrix materials by using an extrusion-based 3D bioprinter (Regenovo Co., Bio-Architect PRO, Hangzhou). Briefly, 10 ml of gelatin solution (10% w/v) and 5 ml of alginate solution (2% w/v) were warmed under 37C for 20 min, gently mixed as bioink and used within 30 min. MSCs were collected from 100-mm dishes, dispersed into single cells, and 200 l of cell suspension was gently mixed with matrix material under room temperature with cell density 1 million ml1. PD (58 g/ml) was then gently mixed with bioink. Petri dishes at 60 mm were used as collecting plates in the 3D bioprinting process. Within a temperature-controlled chamber of the bioprinter, with temperature set within the gelation region of gelatin, the mixture of MSCs and matrix materials was bioprinted into a cylindrical construct layer by layer. The nozzle-insulation temperature and printing chamber temperature were set at 18 and 10C, respectively; nozzles with an inner diameter of 260 m were chosen for printing. The diameter of the cylindrical construct was 30 mm, with six layers in height. After the temperature-controlled bioprinting process, the printed 3D constructs were immersed in 100-mM calcium chloride (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) for 3 min for cross-linking, then washed with Dulbeccos modified Eagle medium (DMEM) (Gibco, USA) medium for three times. The whole printing process was finished in 10 min. The 3D cross-linked construct was cultured in DMEM in an atmosphere of 5% CO2 at 37C. The culture medium was changed to SG medium [contains 50% DMEM (Gibco, New York, NY) and 50% F12 (Gibco) supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum (Gibco), 1 ml/100 ml penicillin-streptomycin solution, 2 ng/ml liothyronine sodium (Gibco), 0.4 g/ml hydrocortisone succinate (Gibco), 10 ng/ml epidermal growth factor (PeproTech, Rocky Hill, NJ), and 1 ml/100 ml insulin-transferrin-selenium (Gibco)] 2 days later. The cell morphology was examined and recorded under an optical microscope (Olympus, CX40, Japan).

Fluorescent live/dead staining was used to determine cell viability in the 3D cell-loaded constructs according to the manufacturers instructions (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). Briefly, samples were gently washed in PBS three times. An amount of 1 M calcein acetoxymethyl (calcein AM) ester (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) and 2 M propidium iodide (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) was used to stain live cells (green) and dead cells (red) for 15 min while avoiding light. A laser scanning confocal microscopy system (Leica, TCSSP8, Germany) was used for image acquisition.

The cell-printed structure was harvested and fixed with a solution of 4% paraformaldehyde. The structure was embedded in optimal cutting temperature (OCT) compound (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) and sectioned 10-mm thick by using a cryotome (Leica, CM1950, Germany). The sliced samples were washed repeatedly with PBS solution to remove OCT compound and then permeabilized with a solution of 0.1% Triton X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in PBS for 5 min. To reduce nonspecific background, sections were treated with 0.2% bovine serum albumin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) solution in PBS for 20 min. To visualize iSGCs, sections were incubated with primary antibody overnight at 4C for anti-K8 (1:300), anti-K14 (1:300), anti-K18 (1:300), anti-K19 (1:300), anti-ATP1a1 (1:300), anti-Ki67 (1:300), antiN-cadherin (1:300), antiE-cadherin (1:300), anti-CTHRC1 (1:300), or anti-TSP1 (1:300; all Abcam, UK) and then incubated with secondary antibody for 2 hours at room temperature: Alexa Fluor 594 goat anti-rabbit (1:300), fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) goat anti-rabbit (1:300), FITC goat anti-mouse (1:300), or Alexa Fluor 594 goat anti-mouse (1:300; all Invitrogen, CA). Sections were also stained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (Beyotime, Beijing) for 15 min. Stained samples were visualized, and images were captured under a confocal microscope.

To harvest the cells in the construct, the 3D constructs were dissolved by adding 55 mM sodium citrate and 20 mM EDTA (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) in 150 mM sodium chloride (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) for 5 min while gently shaking the petri dish for better dissolving. After transfer to 15-ml centrifuge tubes, the cell suspensions were centrifuged at 200 rpm for 3 min, and the supernatant liquid was removed to harvest cells for further analysis.

Total RNA was isolated from cells by using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, USA) following the manufacturers protocol. RNA concentration was measured by using a NanoPhotometer (Implen GmbH, P-330-31, Germany). Reverse transcription involved use of a complementary DNA synthesis kit (Takara, China). Gene expression was analyzed quantitatively by using SYBR green with the 7500 Real-Time PCR System (Takara, China). The primers and probes for genes were designed on the basis of published gene sequences (table S1) (National Center for Biotechnology Information and PubMed). The expression of each gene was normalized to that for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and analyzed by the 2-CT method. Each sample was assessed in triplicate.

The culture medium was changed to SG medium with 2 mM CaCl2 for at least 24 hours, and cells were loaded with fluo-3/AM (Invitrogen, CA) at a final concentration of 5 M for 30 min at room temperature. After three washes with calcium-free PBS, 10 M acetylcholine (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) was added to cells. The change in the Fluo 3 fluorescent signal was recorded under a laser scanning confocal microscopy.

Cell proliferation was evaluated through CCK-8 (Cell counting kit-8) assay. Briefly, cells were seeded in 96-well plates at the appropriate concentration and cultured at 37C in an incubator for 4 hours. When cells were adhered, 10 l of CCK-8 working buffer was added into the 96-well plates and incubated at 37C for 1 hour. Absorbance at 450 nm was measured with a microplate reader (Tecan, SPARK 10M, Austria).

Proteomics of mouse PD and DD involved use of isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ) in BGI Company, with differentially expressed proteins detected in PD versus DD. Twofold greater difference in expression was considered significant for further study.

Tissues were grinded and lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer (Beyotime, Nanjing). Proteins were separated by 12% SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transferred to a methanol-activated polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (GE Healthcare, USA). The membrane was blocked for 1 hour in PBS with Tween 20 containing 5% bovine serum albumin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) and probed with the antibodies anti-CTHRC1 (1:1000) and anti-TSP1 (1:1000; both Abcam, UK) overnight at 4C. After 2 hours of incubation with goat anti-rabbit horseradish peroxidaseconjugated secondary antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA), the protein bands were detected by using luminal reagent (GE Healthcare, ImageQuant LAS 4000, USA).

Total RNA was prepared with TRIzol (Invitrogen), and RNA sequencing was performed using HiSeq 2500 (Illumina). Genes with false discovery rate < 0.05, fold difference > 2.0, and mean log intensity > 2.0 were considered to be significant.

CAPE or Snpp was gently mixed with bioink at a concentration of 10 M. Physiological concentration of CTHRC1 was measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) (80 ng/ml), and then recombinant CTHRC1 or CTHRC1 antibody was added into the bioink at a concentration of 0.4 g/ml. The effect of inhibitor and activator was estimated by qRT-PCR or ELISA.

Mice were anesthetized with pentobarbital (100 mg/kg) and received subcutaneous buprenorphine (0.1 mg/kg) preoperatively. Full-thickness scald injuries were created on paw pads with soldering station (Weller, WSD81, Germany). Mice recovered in clean cages with paper bedding to prevent irritation or infection. Mice were monitored daily and euthanized at 30 days after wounding. Mice were maintained in an Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Careaccredited animal facility, and procedures were performed with Institutional Animal Care and Use Committeeapproved protocols.

MSCs in 3D-printed constructs with PD were cultured with DMEM for 2 days and then replaced with SG medium. The SG medium was changed every 2 days, and cells were harvested on day 12. The K18+ iSGCs were sorting through flow cytometry and injected into the paw pads (1 106 cells/50 l) of the mouse burn model by using Microliter syringes (Hamilton, 7655-01, USA). Then, mice were euthanized after 14 days; feet were excised and fixed with 10% formalin (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) overnight for paraffin sections and immunohistological analysis.

The foot pads of anesthetized treated mice were first painted with 2% (w/v) iodine/ethanol solution then with starch/castor oil solution (1 g/ml) (Sigma-Aldrich, USA). After drying, 50 l of 100 M acetylcholine (Sigma-Aldrich, USA) was injected subcutaneously into paws of mice. Pictures of the mouse foot pads were taken after 5, 10, and 15 min.

All data were presented as means SEM. Statistical analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism7 statistical software (GraphPad, USA). Significant differences were calculated by analysis of variance (ANOVA), followed by the Bonferroni test when performing multiple comparisons between groups. P < 0.05 was considered as a statistically significant difference.

Supplementary material for this article is available at http://advances.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/6/10/eaaz1094/DC1

Fig. S1. Biocompatibility of 3D-bioprinted construct and cellular morphology in 2D monolayer culture.

Fig. S2. Expression of SG-specific and secretion-related markers in MSCs and SG cells in vitro.

Fig. S3. Transcriptional and translational expression of epithelial and mesenchymal markers in 3D-bioprinted cells with and without PD.

Fig. S4. Expression of N- and E-cadherin in MSCs and SG cells in 2D monolayer culture.

Fig. S5. Proteomic microarray assay of differential gene expression between PD and DD ECM in postnatal mice.

Fig. S6. GO term analysis of differentially expressed pathways.

Fig. S7. Heat maps illustrating differential expression of genes implicated in ECM organization, cell division, and gland and branch morphogenesis.

Fig. S8. The expression of Hmox1 and the concentration of CTHRC1 on treatment and the related effects on cell proliferation.

Fig. S9. The expression of K8 and K18 with Hmox1 and CTHRC1 regulation.

Table S1. Primers for qRT-PCR of all the genes.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgments: Funding: This study was supported in part by the National Nature Science Foundation of China (81571909, 81701906, 81830064, and 81721092), the National Key Research Development Plan (2017YFC1103300), Military Logistics Research Key Project (AWS17J005), and Fostering Funds of Chinese PLA General Hospital for National Distinguished Young Scholar Science Fund (2017-JQPY-002). Author contributions: B.Y. and S.H. were responsible for the design and primary technical process, conducted the experiments, collected and analyzed data, and wrote the manuscript. Y.W. and R.W. helped perform the main experiments. Y.Z. and T.H. participated in the 3D printing. W.S. and Z.L. participated in cell experiments and postexamination. S.H. and X.F. collectively oversaw the collection of data and data interpretation and revised the manuscript. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

See the original post here:
Biochemical and structural cues of 3D-printed matrix synergistically direct MSC differentiation for functional sweat gland regeneration - Science...

Read More...

Lies, Spies and Double Agents: On the Trail of Peter Nygard in the Bahamas – The New York Times

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

Given Mr. Nygards alleged sway in the Bahamas, we were told we needed to be careful.

We switched hotels every few days so no one could track us. A Courtyard Marriott worker insisted that the hotel could not deny I was staying there if someone asked for me by name, so he disguised me as LaKim LaBarker, a pseudonym that seemed like poor tradecraft.

One source would talk to me only in a car; as he drove us through a wooded area, he said, worryingly: Dont worry. Im not going to kill you. People recorded our conversations without telling us. A man with a spoofed phone number (which hid his actual location and number) called my dad, looking for me. No one ever called my dad looking for me.

Mr. Nygard actively tried to shut down the article. He filed a racketeering lawsuit against Mr. Bacon, accusing him of trying to plant a false story with The New York Times. One of his lawyers called the allegations paid-for lies. Mr. Nygards spokesman falsely suggested that I had taken $55,000 funneled through Mr. Bacons foundation. (The so-called evidence: On a public 2016 tax return for the foundations grants, easily printable from the internet, somebody had scrawled BARKER $55K next to a grant for Media Matters.)

Weeks before we first hoped to publish, we doubled down on our interviews, visiting our sources to corroborate their stories and crosschecking for inconsistencies. We found that Mr. Smith and his team had spread more money around than anyone had previously told us; in particular, they had paid two women who had helped find alleged victims.

Reporting was complicated by the fact that Mr. Smith had recently nearly died in a paragliding accident in Italy, and we had to interview him as he recovered in an Italian hospital. At times, he screamed in pain.

Then a reporters worst nightmare happened: Two accusers told us they had been lying all along. They said they had never met Mr. Nygard. They claimed they had been paid to lie not by Mr. Smith, not by Mr. Bacon, but by a former Nygard employee, Richette Ross, one of the two women who had helped find victims for Mr. Smith. He had paid her the equivalent of $86,000 a year for her security and to help with another lawsuit against Mr. Nygard, he claimed.

Ms. Ross passed a lie-detector test denying she had paid anyone to lie, the polygraph examiner told us. In December, her Florida lawyer sent me a cease-and-desist letter, threatening to sue if I continued talking about what we had been told.

Original post:
Lies, Spies and Double Agents: On the Trail of Peter Nygard in the Bahamas - The New York Times

Read More...

Man with locked-in syndrome expressed wish not to continue living – The Irish Times

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

A man developed locked-in syndrome after delayed surgery following a fall from a bicycle, an inquest has heard.

Anthony Mason, from Artane, Dublin 5 was a passenger travelling on the crossbar of a bicycle when the accident happened at Mountjoy Square in Dublin on September 9th, 2002. He was 23 at the time.

Dublin Coroners Court heard Mr Mason hit his head on the footpath as a result of the fall. He displayed no symptoms initially but collapsed less than an hour later at St Stephens Green.

He was on a pushbike with somebody and a car pulled out and he hit his head on the footpath, Mr Masons sister Denise Mason said.

He was rushed to St Jamess Hospital. A CT scan revealed a blot clot on his brain and he was transferred to Beaumont Hospital for surgery on September 14th, 2002.

The doctor said if he had seen him earlier he could have done more for him, Ms Mason said.

Mr Mason never fully recovered and was diagnosed with locked-in syndrome after surgery.

He returned home to the care of his family where he remained for 16 years before his death.

He never spoke again. Mam came up with an alphabet to communicate with him. He couldnt move, only his eyes, head and thumbs, Ms Mason said.

Mr Mason communicated using his eyes and computer technology, the inquest heard. He was cared for by family and visited regularly by friends. He enjoyed following football and watching comedies on TV.

Ms Mason became his primary carer following the death of their father in 2005 and mother in 2013.

Mr Mason had hoped that stem cell research could improve his condition and when this was ruled out he expressed a wish not to continue living. He had a happy life, he was just tired, Ms Mason told the court.

He declined food and water and was assessed by a psychiatrist who found him capable of making this decision. A palliative care plan was put in place and Mr Mason died at home on May 4th, 2018, surrounded by his family, at age 39.

The cause of death was spastic quadriparesis in locked-in syndrome following a fall from a bicycle 16 years previously. Coroner Dr Myra Cullinane returned a narrative verdict tracing the circumstances of death back to the fall.

All of the reports demonstrate that he was very much loved and very well cared [for] and still very much part of the familyhopefully in some way he is at peace now, the coroner said.

Follow this link:
Man with locked-in syndrome expressed wish not to continue living - The Irish Times

Read More...

New daily cases of coronavirus in China fall below 100 in several weeks, death toll now 3070 – Hindustan Times

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

Chinese health authorities on Saturday said 3070 people had died from the coronavirus outbreak while, for the first time in several weeks, less than 100 new infections were reported from across the country.

The epidemic is showing signs of stabilising in China, especially outside the worst-hit Hubei provinces as it rages globally.

Chinese authorities continued to strictly screen international airports for infected people coming in or returning to China from abroad.

Chinas national health commission (NHC) said Saturday 99 cases were reported from the mainland with 74 of those from Wuhan, Hubei provinces capital, from where the epidemic started in December.

The commission says it is the first time since January 20 that less than 100 people have been found to be infected in one day.

This is the second day that no new case of covid-19 was reported from other parts of the central Chinese province.

All the 28 new deaths on Friday were reported from Hubei, with 21 in Wuhan, bringing the death toll to 3070.

There are now 80,651 infections in mainland China.

According to Wuhans local officials, about one-third of residential communities in the city have had no newly confirmed cases in the past two weeks as of Thursday.

Outside Hubei, nearly all new infections, or at least 24 of those, were found among people coming in to China.

As of Friday, the mainland had reported 60 such cases.

Four people who had travelled to Italy tested positive in Beijing, while in Shanghai a person who had been studying in Iran was found to be infected.

Authorities said 11 out of 311 people who arrived in Gansu Province from Iran on chartered flights between Monday and Thursday also tested positive.

Local governments in Beijing, Shanghai and in the southern province of Guangdong are asking that people arriving from Japan, South Korea, Italy or Iran quarantine themselves at home or elsewhere for 14 days.

Meanwhile, a senior WHO official has said that there is no evidence right now suggesting covid-19 will disappear in summer.

We do not know yet what the activity or behavior of the virus will be in different climatic conditions. We have to assume the virus will continue to have the capacity to spread, Michael Ryan, executive director of the WHO Health Emergencies Program said.

Ryan urged countries to fight the new virus decisively at the current stage and called on countries and societies to avoid blame culture and to do all the things needed to save lives.

Meanwhile, a new study has found that mesenchymal (cells that grow into tissues blood and cartilage) stem cell (MSC) therapy could be effective in treating COVID-19, according to research published in the peer-reviewed journal Aging and Disease, state media reported.

The study, conducted by a research team led by Robert Chunhua Zhao, a professor from Shanghai University and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, assessed clinical outcomes of seven patients treated with MSC therapy at Beijing Youan Hospital for 14 days.

They found that MSCs could greatly optimise the functional outcomes of the patients without observed adverse effects, the china.org reported.

The pulmonary function and symptoms of all patients with covid-19 pneumonia were significantly improved two days after MSCs transplantation. Among them, two moderate and one severe patient were recovered and discharged in 10 days after treatment, the authors wrote in the research paper.

Here is the original post:
New daily cases of coronavirus in China fall below 100 in several weeks, death toll now 3070 - Hindustan Times

Read More...

From Scorpion to Immunotherapy: City of Hope Scientists Repurpose Nature’s Toxin for First-of-Its Kind CAR T Cell Therapy to Treat Brain Tumors -…

Sunday, March 8th, 2020

DUARTE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--City of Hope scientists have developed and tested the first chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy using chlorotoxin (CLTX), a component of scorpion venom, to direct T cells to target brain tumor cells, according to a preclinical study published today in Science Translational Medicine. The institution has also opened the first in-human clinical trial to use the therapy.

CARs commonly incorporate a monoclonal antibody sequence in their targeting domain, enabling CAR T cells to recognize antigens and kill tumor cells. In contrast, the CLTX-CAR uses a 36-amino acid peptide sequence first isolated from death stalker scorpion venom and now engineered to serve as the CAR recognition domain.

Glioblastoma (GBM), the most common type of brain tumor, is also among the most deadly of human cancers, according to the American Cancer Society. It is particularly difficult to treat because the tumors are disseminated throughout the brain. Efforts to develop immunotherapies, including CAR T cells, for GBM must also contend with a high degree of heterogeneity within these tumors.

For the study, City of Hope researchers used tumor cells in resection samples from a cohort of patients with GBM to compare CLTX binding with expression of antigens currently under investigation as CAR T cell targets, including IL13R2, HER2 and EGFR. They found that CLTX bound to a greater proportion of patient tumors and cells within these tumors.

CLTX binding included the GBM stem-like cells thought to seed tumor recurrence. Consistent with these observations, CLTX-CAR T cells recognized and killed broad populations of GBM cells while ignoring nontumor cells in the brain and other organs. The study team demonstrated that CLTX-directed CAR T cells are highly effective at selectively killing human GBM cells in cell-based assays and in animal models without off-tumor targeting and toxicity.

Our chlorotoxin-incorporating CAR expands the populations of solid tumors potentially targeted by CAR T cell therapy, which is particularly needed for patients with cancers that are difficult to treat such as glioblastoma, said Christine Brown, Ph.D., City of Hopes Heritage Provider Network Professor in Immunotherapy and deputy director of T Cell Therapeutics Research Laboratory. This is a completely new targeting strategy for CAR T therapy with CARs incorporating a recognition structure different from other CARs.

Michael Barish, Ph.D., City of Hope professor and chair of the Department of Developmental and Stem Cell Biology, initiated the development of a CAR using chlorotoxin to target GBM cells. The peptide has been used as an imaging agent to guide GBM resection surgery, and to carry radioisotopes and other therapeutics to GBM tumors.

Much like a scorpion uses toxin components of its venom to target and kill its prey, were using chlorotoxin to direct the T cells to target the tumor cells with the added advantage that the CLTX-CAR T cells are mobile and actively surveilling the brain looking for appropriate targets, Barish said. We are not actually injecting a toxin, but exploiting CLTXs binding properties in the design of the CAR. The idea was to develop a CAR that would target T cells to a wider variety of GBM tumor cells than the other antibody-based CARs.

The notion is that the higher the proportion of tumor cells that one can kill at the beginning of treatment, the greater the probability of slowing down or stopping GBM growth and recurrence, Barish added.

Dongrui Wang, a doctoral candidate in City of Hopes Irell & Manella Graduate School of Biological Sciences, was the lead scientist to establish and optimize the CLTX-CAR T cell platform and to determine that cell surface protein matrix metalloprotease 2 is required for CLTX-CAR T cell activation. He added that while people might think the chlorotoxin is what kills the GBM cells, what actually eradicates them is the tumor-specific binding and activation of the CAR T cells.

Based on the promising findings of this study, the study team intends to bring this therapy to patients diagnosed with GBM with the hope of improving outcomes against this thus far intractable cancer. With recently granted Food and Drug Administration approval to proceed, the first-in-human clinical trial using the CLTX-CAR T cells is now screening potential patients.

This work was supported by the Ben & Catherine Ivy Foundation of Scottsdale, Arizona, and the clinical trial will be supported by The Marcus Foundation of Atlanta.

City of Hope, a recognized leader in CAR T cell therapies for glioblastoma and other cancers, has treated nearly 500 patients since its CAR T program started in the late 1990s. The institution continues to have one of the most comprehensive CAR T cell clinical research programs in the world it currently has 29 ongoing CAR T clinical trials, including CAR T trials for HER-2 positive breast cancer that has spread to the brain, and PSCA-positive bone metastatic prostate cancer. It was the first and only cancer center to treat GBM patients with CAR T cells targeting IL13R2, and the first to administer CAR T cell therapy locally in the brain, either by direct injection at the tumor site, through intraventricular infusion into the cerebrospinal fluid, or both. In late 2019, City of Hope opened a first-in-human clinical trial for patients with recurrent glioblastoma combining IL13R2-CAR T cells with checkpoint inhibitors nivolumab, an anti-PD1 antibody, and ipilimumab, blocking the CTLA-4 protein.

About City of Hope

City of Hope is an independent biomedical research and treatment center for cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening diseases. Founded in 1913, City of Hope is a leader in bone marrow transplantation and immunotherapy such as CAR T cell therapy. City of Hopes translational research and personalized treatment protocols advance care throughout the world. Human synthetic insulin and numerous breakthrough cancer drugs are based on technology developed at the institution. A National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center and a founding member of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, City of Hope is the highest ranked cancer hospital in the West, according to U.S. News & World Reports Best Hospitals: Specialty Ranking. Its main campus is located near Los Angeles, with additional locations throughout Southern California. For more information about City of Hope, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube or Instagram.

See more here:
From Scorpion to Immunotherapy: City of Hope Scientists Repurpose Nature's Toxin for First-of-Its Kind CAR T Cell Therapy to Treat Brain Tumors -...

Read More...

Radiation Kills Cancer Cells, But May Also Protect Some Tumor Stem Cells That Can Spread – MedicalResearch.com

Tuesday, February 25th, 2020

MedicalResearch.com Interview with:

Jennifer Sims-Mourtada, Ph.D.Senior Rsearch ScientistDirector of Translational Breast Cancer ResearchCenter for Translational Cancer ResearchChristianaCare

MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: Cancer stem cells are resistant cancer cells that are able to continuously grow and are very resistant to radiation and chemotherapy. Cancer stem cells can also escape to the blood stream and travel to another site causing metastasis.

MedicalResearch.com: What are the main findings?

Response: In this study we show that cancer stem cells depend on radiation induced inflammatory responses to survive radiation. Additionally we show that activation of IL-6-STAT3 pathway after radiation can make even non-cancer stem cells look like and behave as cancer stem cells. Thus any cell that survives radiation in the presence of certain inflammatory signals may be converted to a cancer stem cell.

MedicalResearch.com: What should readers take away from your report?

Response: Although radiation kills tumor cells, it can also activate inflammatory responses that may protect some tumor cells. Co-treatment with anti-inflammatory agents such as inhibitors to the IL-6 STAT 3 pathway may sensitize cancer stem cells to radiation induced death, and may prevent generation of new cancer stem cancer stem cells and improve outcomes in triple negative breast cancer.

MedicalResearch.com: What recommendations do you have for future research as a result of this work?

Response: Agents inhibiting the IL-6-STAT3 pathway are currently in clinical trials for breast cancer. Future work should focus on understanding radiation-induced inflammation in the context of both the immune response and tumor cells, as radiation induced inflammation can activate anti-tumor immunity as well as killing tumor cells. Some studies suggest that inhibition of IL-6 STAT3 signaling may also improve anti-tumor immunity, and thus these agents may target cancer cells by multiple mechanisms. It will be important to understand how these agents work to select which patients will respond to inhibition of this pathway and which ones will not.

MedicalResearch.com: Is there anything else you would like to add?

Response: This is the good and the bad of radiation. We know radiation induced inflammation can help the immune system to kill tumor cells thats good but also it can protect cancer stem cells in some cases, and thats bad. Whats exciting about these findings is were learning more and more that the environment the tumor is in its microenvironment is very important. Historically, research has focused on the genetic defects in the tumor cells. Were now also looking at the larger microenvironment and its contribution to cancer.

There are no disclosures to report

Citation:

Kimberly M. Arnold et al, Radiation induces an inflammatory response that results in STAT3-dependent changes in cellular plasticity and radioresistance of breast cancer stem-like cells,International Journal of Radiation Biology(2019).DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2020.1705423

We respect your privacy and will never share your details.

The information on MedicalResearch.com is provided for educational purposes only, and is in no way intended to diagnose, cure, or treat any medical or other condition. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health and ask your doctor any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. In addition to all other limitations and disclaimers in this agreement, service provider and its third party providers disclaim any liability or loss in connection with the content provided on this website.

More here:
Radiation Kills Cancer Cells, But May Also Protect Some Tumor Stem Cells That Can Spread - MedicalResearch.com

Read More...

Why Some COVID-19 Cases Are Worse than Others – The Scientist

Tuesday, February 25th, 2020

Like many other respiratory conditions, COVID-19the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2can vary widely among patients. The vast majority of confirmed cases are considered mild, involving mostly cold-like symptoms to mild pneumonia, according to the latest and largest set of data on the new coronavirus outbreak released February 17 by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Fourteen percent of confirmed cases have been severe, involving serious pneumonia and shortness of breath. Another 5 percent of patients confirmed to have the disease developed respiratory failure, septic shock, and/or multi-organ failurewhat the agency calls critical cases potentially resulting in death. Roughly 2.3 percent of confirmed cases did result in death.

Scientists are working to understand why some people suffer more from the virus than others. It is also unclear why the new coronaviruslike its cousins SARS and MERSappears to be more deadly than other coronaviruses that regularly circulate among people each winter and typically cause cold symptoms. I think its going to take a really, really long time to understand the mechanistic, biological basis of why some people get sicker than others, says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia Universitys Mailman School of Public Health.

In the meantime, the latest data from China and research on other coronaviruses provide some hints.

The latest data from China stem from an analysis of nearly 45,000 confirmed cases, and on the whole suggest that the people most likely to develop severe forms of COVID-19 are those with pre-existing illnesses and the elderly.

While less than 1 percent of people who were otherwise healthy died from the disease, the fatality rate for people with cardiovascular disease was 10.5 percent. That figure was 7.3 percent for diabetes patients and around 6 percent for those with chronic respiratory disease, hypertension, or cancer.

While overall, 2.3 percent of known cases proved fatalwhich many experts say is likely an overestimate of the mortality rate, given that many mild cases might go undiagnosedpatients 80 years or older were most at risk, with 14.8 percent of them dying. Deaths occurred in every age group except in children under the age of nine, and, generally speaking, we see relatively few cases among children, World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said last week.

This pattern of increasing severity with age differs from that of some other viral outbreaks, notably the 1918 flu pandemic, for which mortality was high in young children and in people between 20 and 40 years of age. However, its broadly consistent with records of the SARS and MERS coronavirus outbreaks, notes Lisa Gralinski, a virologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. If youre over fifty or sixty and you have some other health issues and if youre unlucky enough to be exposed to this virus, it could be very bad, she says.

I think its going to take a really, really long time to understand the mechanistic, biological basis of why some people get sicker than others.

Angela Rasmussen, Columbia University

Scientists dont know what exactly happens in older age groups. But based on research on other respiratory viruses, experts theorize that whether a coronavirus infection takes a turn for the worse depends on a persons immune response. The virus matters, but the host response matters at least as much, and probably more, says Stanley Perlman, a virologist and pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Iowa.

Once SARS-CoV-2 gets inside the human respiratory tract, its thought to infect and multiply in cells lining the airway, causing damage that kicks the immune system into action. In most people, it should trigger a wave of local inflammation, recruiting immune cells in the vicinity to eradicate the pathogen. The immune response then recedes, and patients recover.

For reasons that arent entirely clear, some peopleespecially the elderly and sickmay have dysfunctional immune systems that fail to keep the response to particular pathogens in check. This could cause an uncontrolled immune response, triggering an overproduction of immune cells and their signaling molecules and leading to a cytokine storm often associated with a flood of immune cells into the lung. Thats when you end up with a lot of these really severe inflammatory disease conditions like pneumonia, shortness of breath, inflammation of the airway, and so forth, says Rasmussen.

Local inflammation can turn into widespread inflammation of the lungs, which then has ripple effects across all organs of the body. This could also happen if the virus replicates faster than the immune system can respond, so that it then has to play catch-up to contain the pathogena situation that could also cause the immune defense to spiral out of control. With mice, we know that in some cases, particularly for SARS and MERS coronaviruses, virus replication is very rapid and in some cases overwhelming to the immune system, says Perlman.

Its harder to explain why young, healthy people also sometimes die from the diseasefor instance, Li Wenliang, a 34-year-old doctor who first sounded the alarm about the virus. He died a few weeks after contracting the pathogen.

Genetic and environmental risk factors might help explain the severity of infections. Though its clear that genetic factors can strongly determine the outcome of viral infections in miceas some of Rasmussens work has shown for Ebola, for instanceresearchers havent yet been able to tease out specific genes or variants in mice, let alone in people, that are responsible for varying degrees of illness. Environmental factors, such as smoking or air quality, may also play a role in disease severity, Rasmussen adds.

A lot of research has gone into understanding what causes respiratory failure that results from systemic inflammation of the lungsalso called acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)that can occur from coronaviruses and other infections. Yet researchers still dont know how it occurs exactly, let alone how to treat it, Gralinksi notes. Its still a really poorly understood issue.

An intriguing finding in the new data released last week is that although similar numbers of men and women have contracted SARS-CoV-2, more men are dying from the disease. The death rate for males was 2.8 percent and 1.7 percent for women. Rasmussen is quick to caution that although the data encompass nearly 45,000 patients, thats still not that many people to determine if theres really a gender biasyoud have to look at this in a much larger population of patients in a number of different countries, she says.

That said, if there is a bias, it would be consistent with what epidemiologists have observed during the SARS and MERS outbreaks. In the 2003 SARS outbreak in Hong Kong, for instance, nearly 22 percent of infected men died, compared to around 13 percent of women. In an analysis of MERS infections between 2017 and 2018, around 32 percent of men died, and nearly 26 percent of women. The difference could have something to do with the fact that the gene for the ACE-2 receptor, which is used by both SARS-CoV-2 and the SARS virus to enter host cells, is found on the X chromosome, she speculates. If its a particular variant of the protein that makes people more susceptible to the virus, then females could compensate for that one bad variant because theyd have two copies of the X chromosome, whereas men would be stuck with only one copy. Or, it could be that men are more likely to be smokers and so their lungs are already a bit compromised. Theres definitely more to be teased out there, Gralinski says.

Some of Perlmans research, which demonstrated that the sex disparity also holds true in SARS-infected mice, points to the hormone estrogen as possibly having protective effects: Removing the ovaries of infected female mice or blocking the estrogen receptor made the animals more likely to die compared to infected control mice. The effects are probably more pronounced in mice than in people, Perlman tells The New York Times.

Whether patients develop antibodies after SARS-CoV-2 infection that will protect them against future infections is still a mystery. Surveys of SARS patients around five or 10 years after their recovery suggest that the coronavirus antibodies dont persist for very long, Gralinski says. They found either very low levels or no antibodies that were able to recognize SARS proteins.

However, for the new coronavirus, we would expect some immunity, at least in the short term, she says.

There are seven coronaviruses known to infect people. Four of them229E, NL63, OC43, and HKU1typically cause a cold and only rarely result in death. The other threeMERS-CoV, SARS-CoV, and the new SARS-CoV-2have varying degrees of lethality. In the 2003 SARS outbreak, 10 percent of infected people died. Between 2012 and 2019, MERS killed 23 percent of infected people. Although the case fatality rate of COVID-19 is lower, the virus has already killed more people than the other two outbreaks combined, which some have attributed to the pathogens fast transmission.

The cold-causing coronaviruses, as well as many other viruses that cause common colds, are typically restricted to the upper respiratory tract, that is, the nose and sinuses. Both SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2, however, are capable of invading deep into the lungs, something that is associated with more severe disease.

One possible reason for this is that the virus binds to the ACE-2 receptor on human cells in order to gain entry. This receptor is present in ciliated epithelial cells in the upper and lower airway, as well as in type II pneumocytes, which reside in the alveoli in the lower airway and produce lung-lubricating proteins. The type II pneumocytes are . . . important for lung function, so this is part of why the lower respiratory disease can be so severe, notes Gralinksi.

The new coronavirus also appears to use the ACE-2 receptor, which may help partially explain why, like SARS, it is more deadly than the other four coronaviruses. Those pathogens use different receptors, except for NL63, which also uses the ACE-2 receptor but binds to it with less affinity, says Gralinski. (MERS is thought to use an entirely different receptor, which is also present in the lower airways.)

To understand these questions fully will take time, research, and consistent funding for long-term studies. Coronavirus funding has been criticized for following a boom-and-bust cycle; viral spillovers from animals to people cause an initial surge of interest that tends to wane until the next outbreak occurs, Rasmussen warns.

Im hopeful that in this case it will be really apparent to everybody in the world that we need to be funding this type of basic science, fundamental science, to understand these mechanisms of disease, she says. Otherwise, were going to be in the same situation when the next outbreak happenswhether its a coronavirus or something else.

Katarina Zimmer is a New Yorkbased freelance journalist. Find her on Twitter@katarinazimmer.

The rest is here:
Why Some COVID-19 Cases Are Worse than Others - The Scientist

Read More...

How low oxygen levels in the heart can cause arrhythmias – Futurity: Research News

Thursday, February 20th, 2020

Share this Article

You are free to share this article under the Attribution 4.0 International license.

New research reveals the underlying mechanism for a dangerous heart disorder in which low oxygen levels in the heart produce life-threatening arrhythmias.

The discovery, made with human heart muscle cells derived from pluripotent stem cells, offers new targets for therapies aimed at preventing sudden death from heart attack.

Our research shows that within seconds, at low levels of oxygen (hypoxia), a protein called small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) is linked to the inside of the sodium channels which are responsible for starting each heartbeat, says Steve A. N. Goldstein, vice chancellor for health affairs at the University of California, Irvine and professor in the School of Medicine departments of pediatrics and physiology and biophysics.

And, while SUMOylated channels open as they should to start the heartbeat, they re-open when they should be closed. The result is abnormal sodium currents that predispose to dangerous cardiac rhythms.

Every heartbeat begins when sodium channels open and ions to rush into heart cellsthis starts the action potential that causes the heart muscle to contract. When functioning normally, the sodium channels close quickly after opening and stay closed. After that, potassium channels open, ions leave the heart cells, and the action potential ends in a timely fashion, so the muscle can relax in preparation for the next beat.

If sodium channels re-open and produce late sodium currents, as observed in this study with low oxygen levels, the action potential is prolonged and new electrical activity can begin before the heart has recovered risking dangerous, disorganized rhythms.

Fifteen years ago, the Goldstein group reported SUMO regulation of ion channels at the surface of cells. It was an unexpected finding because the SUMO pathway had been thought to operate solely to control gene expression in the nucleus.

This new research shows how rapid SUMOylation of cell surface cardiac sodium channels causes late sodium current in response to hypoxia, a challenge that confronts many people with heart disease, says Goldstein. Previously, the danger of late sodium current was recognized in patients with rare, inherited mutations of sodium channels that cause cardiac Long QT syndrome, and to result from a common polymorphism in the channel we identified in a subset of babies with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).

The information gained through the current study offers new targets for therapeutics to prevent late current and arrhythmia associated with heart attacks, chronic heart failure, and other life-threatening low oxygen cardiac conditions.

The National Institutes of Health funded the study, which appears in Cell Reports.

Source: UC Irvine

Here is the original post:
How low oxygen levels in the heart can cause arrhythmias - Futurity: Research News

Read More...

US FDA Grants Orphan Drug Designation for Retrotope’s RT001 in the Treatment of Progressive SupraNuclear Palsy (PSP) – Yahoo Finance

Thursday, February 20th, 2020

LOS ALTOS, Calif., Feb. 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Retrotope announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Office of Orphan Products Development granted orphan drug designation for its chemically-modified polyunsaturated fatty acid drug (RT001) for the treatment of Progressive SupraNuclear Palsy (PSP). Physicians collaborating with Retrotope have previously received approval from the FDAs Division of Neurology Products to test RT001 in Expanded Access trials of three patients having PSP, an orphan neurodegenerative disorder that causes progressive impairment of balance and walking; impaired eye movement, abnormal muscle rigidity; dysarthria; and dysphagia and eventual death.

PSP is a serious neurodegenerative disease that profoundly affects the quality and length of life in adults. Patients are typically severely disabled within 3-5 years of disease onset. It affects an estimated 17,500 adults in the US. In addition to the motor deficits noted above, affected individuals frequently experience personality changes and cognitive impairment. Symptoms typically begin after age 60 but can begin earlier. The exact cause of PSP is unknown, and is often misdiagnosed as Parkinson disease due to the similarity of symptoms in the early stage of disease. The cause of PSP is not known, but it is a form of tauopathy, in which abnormal phosphorylation and accumulation of the protein tau in the mid brain leads to destruction of vital protein filaments in nerve cells, causing their death. Most cases appear to be sporadic as an acquired tauopathy and there is no approved drug therapy. A regionally specific increase in lipid peroxidation has been observed in PSP and mitochondrial structures and functions are compromised, leading to profound oxidation damage.

RT001 is a chemically stabilized fatty acid that confers resistance to lipid peroxidation in mitochondrial and cellular membranes via a novel mechanism. RT001 has been shown to decrease levels of lipid peroxidation in PSP patient mesenchymal stem cells, and restore mitochondrial structure and function to damaged cells. As RT001 is distributed, as an essential fat, throughout tissues in human, it is expected to lower the amount of lipid peroxidation, restore normal mitochondrial function and prevent mitochondrial cell death.

Robert Molinari, Ph.D. CEO of Retrotope commented: We want to sincerely thank the FDAs OOPD for this designation which allows us accelerated review and more flexibility in pursuing this indication. We are also grateful to the researchers, patients and clinicians whose work contributed to the results supporting our filing an investigational new drug (IND) application to FDA in this terrible disease.

Peter Milner, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Retrotope, added, PSP is a disease involving modification and dysfunction of tau protein. RT001s mechanism of action both lowers lipid peroxidation and prevents mitochondrial cell death of neurons which is associated with disease onset and progression. Also RT001 has a synergistic downstream benefit in the pathophysiology of PSP. This orphan designation encourages clinical trials and rapid review of data from trials to treat this intractable disease.

About the Orphan Drug ActThe US FDA Orphan Drug Act (ODA) provides orphan designation for drugs and biological products to treat a rare disease or condition upon request of a sponsor. Orphan drugs are usually defined as those products intended for the safe and effective treatment, diagnosis or prevention of rare diseases/disorders that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the U.S., or that affect more than 200,000 persons but are not expected to recover the costs of developing and marketing a treatment drug. Orphan designation qualifies the sponsor of the drug for various development incentives of the ODA, including tax credits for qualified clinical testing. A marketing application for a prescription drug product that has received orphan designation is not subject to a prescription drug user fee unless the application includes an indication for other than the rare disease or condition for which the drug was designated.

About RT001RT001 is a patented, first-in-class, orally available D-PUFA, a deuterated polyunsaturated fatty acid, that incorporates into mitochondrial and cellular membranes and stabilizes them. Retrotope and others have discovered that lipid peroxidation, the free-radical damage of polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs) in mitochondrial and cellular membranes, may be the primary source of cell death in several degenerative diseases. The presence of D-PUFAs (RT001) can help protect (fireproof) against this attack and potentially restore cellular health.

Story continues

About RetrotopeRetrotope, a privately held, clinical-stage pharmaceutical company, is creating a new category of drugs to treat degenerative diseases. Composed of proprietary compounds that are chemically stabilized forms of essential nutrients, these compounds are being studied as disease-modifying therapies for many intractable diseases, such as Parkinsons, Alzheimers, mitochondrial myopathies, and retinopathies. RT001, Retrotopes first lead candidate, is being tested in clinical trials for the treatment of Friedreich's ataxia, a fatal orphan disease; and in a fatal, childhood neurodegenerative disease called Infantile Neuroaxonal Dystrophy, and now in PSP which is also fatal. Expanded Access trials calibrating endpoint effects of RT001 in ALS, PSP, Huntingtons disease, and others are also underway. For more information about Retrotope, please visit http://www.retrotope.com.

https://www.ninds.nih.gov/Disorders/Patient-Caregiver-Education/Fact-Sheets/Progressive-Supranuclear-Palsy-Fact-Sheet

SOURCE: Retrotope, Inc. 4300 El Camino Real, Suite 201 Los Altos, CA 94022 650-575-7551

Read more:
US FDA Grants Orphan Drug Designation for Retrotope's RT001 in the Treatment of Progressive SupraNuclear Palsy (PSP) - Yahoo Finance

Read More...

The global cell expansion market is projected to reach US$ 42,837.11 Mn in 2027 from US$ 11,929.43 Mn in 2018 – Yahoo Finance

Thursday, February 20th, 2020

The cell expansion market is expected to grow with a CAGR of 15. 6% from 2019-2027. Driving factors include increasing adoption of regenerative medicines, rising prevalence of cancer. However, the risk contamination during cell expansion is expected to hamper the market during the forecast period.

New York, Feb. 17, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Cell Expansion Market to 2027 - Global Analysis and Forecasts By Product ; Cell Type ; Application ; End User, and Geography" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05862085/?utm_source=GNW

Cancer is one of the major cause of human death worldwide.In recent years, the cases of cancer have been increasing tremendously and the trend is anticipated to remain the same in the upcoming years.

According to the World Health Organization in 2018, approximately 9.6 million deaths across the globe were due to cancer. Furthermore, the National Cancer Institute predicted that in 2018, approximately 1,735,350 new cancer cases would be diagnosed in the US.

Changes in lifestyle have resulted in more exposure to oncogenic factors.Cancer can be cured if diagnosed and treated at an initial stage.

Cancer sequencing using next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods provides more information. Additionally, cell expansion related procedures also aids in research, diagnostics and treatment of cancer.Furthermore, Asia Pacific region is also facing the problem of the growing prevalence of cancer.The top 15 countries with Cancer prevalence are Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, China, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Indonesia, Mongolia, India, Laos, and Cambodia.

According to the National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research (NICPR), in 2018, in India, total deaths due to cancer were 784,821.

The global Cell Expansion market is segmented by product, cell type, application, end user.Based on product, the cell expansion market is segmented into consumables and instruments.

In 2018, the consumables accounted for the largest market share in the global cell expansion market by product.These consumables are essential components of any laboratory experiment hence they are expected to witness significant growth during the forecast period.

Based on cell type, the cell expansion market has been segmented into human cell and animal cell.Furthermore based on application the cell expansion market has been segmented into Regenerative Medicine And Stem Cell Research, Cancer And Cell-Based Research and Other Applications.

Based in end user market is segmented into Biopharmaceutical And Biotechnology Companies, Research Institutes, cell banks and others.

Some of the essential primary and secondary sources included in the report are the National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research (NICPR), Association for Management Education and Development, Center for Cancer Research, International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR), American Association of Blood Banks (AABB), National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research and others.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05862085/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

__________________________

Clare: clare@reportlinker.comUS: (339)-368-6001Intl: +1 339-368-6001

See the original post:
The global cell expansion market is projected to reach US$ 42,837.11 Mn in 2027 from US$ 11,929.43 Mn in 2018 - Yahoo Finance

Read More...

Combination Enfortumab Vedotin + Pembrolizumab Granted Breakthrough Therapy in Bladder Cancer – OncoZine

Thursday, February 20th, 2020

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Breakthrough Therapy designation to enfortumab vedotin-ejfv (Padcev; Astellas Pharma and Seattle Genetics) in combination with Mercks (known as MSD outside the United States and Canada) anti-PD-1 therapy pembrolizumab (Keytruda) for the treatment of patients with unresectable locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer who are unable to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy in the first-line setting.

It is estimated that approximately 81,000 people in the U.S. will be diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2020. [1] Urothelial cancer accounts for 90% of all bladder cancers and can also be found in the renal pelvis, ureter, and urethra. [2] Globally, approximately 549,000 people were diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2018, and there were approximately 200,000 deaths worldwide. [3]

The recommended first-line treatment for patients with advanced urothelial cancer is cisplatin-based chemotherapy. For patients who are unable to receive cisplatin, such as people with kidney impairment, a carboplatin-based regimen is recommended. However, fewer than half of patients respond to carboplatin-based regimens and outcomes are typically poorer compared to cisplatin-based regimens. [4]

Conditionally approvedEnfortumab vedotin-ejfv, a first-in-class antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) that is directed against Nectin-4, a protein located on the surface of cells and highly expressed in bladder cancer, was conditionally approved by the FDA in December 2019 based on the Accelerated Approval Program. [5][6]

Antibody-drug Conjugates or ADCs are highly targeted biopharmaceutical drugs that combine monoclonal antibodies specific to surface antigens present on particular tumor cells with highly potent anti-cancer agents linked via a chemical linker.

With seven approved drugs on the market, ADCs have become a powerful class of therapeutic agents in oncology and hematology.

Continued approval for enfortumab vedotin-ejfv in combination with pembrolizumab for the treatment of patients with advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer may be contingent upon verification and description of clinical benefit in confirmatory trials. [5]

The drug is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer who have previously received a programmed death receptor-1 (PD-1) or programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor and a platinum-containing chemotherapy before (neoadjuvant) or after (adjuvant) surgery or in a locally advanced or metastatic setting.

Nonclinical data suggest the anticancer activity of enfortumab vedotin is due to its binding to Nectin-4 expressing cells followed by the internalization and release of the anti-tumor agent monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) into the cell, which result in the cell not reproducing (cell cycle arrest) and in programmed cell death (apoptosis). [5]

Breakthrough therapyThe Breakthrough Therapy process is designed to expedite the development and review of drugs that are intended to treat a serious or life-threatening condition. The designation is based upon preliminary clinical evidence indicating that the drug may demonstrate substantial improvement over available therapies on one or more clinically significant endpoints. In the case of enfortumab vedotin, the designation was based on the initial results from Phase Ib/II EV-103 Clinical Trial.

The FDAs Breakthrough Therapy designation reflects the encouraging preliminary evidence for the combination of enfortumab vedotin and pembrolizumab in previously untreated advanced urothelial cancer to benefit patients who are in need of effective treatment options, said Andrew Krivoshik, M.D., Ph.D., Senior Vice President, and Oncology Therapeutic Area Head, Astellas.

We look forward to continuing our work with the FDA as we progress our clinical development program as quickly as possible.

This is an important step in our investigation of enfortumab vedotin in combination with pembrolizumab as first-line therapy for patients with advanced urothelial cancer who are unable to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy, said Roger Dansey, M.D., Chief Medical Officer, Seattle Genetics.

Based on encouraging early clinical activity, we recently initiated a phase III trial of this platinum-free combination and look forward to potentially addressing an unmet need for patients.

Clinical trialThe Breakthrough Therapy designation was granted based on results from the dose-escalation cohort and expansion cohort A of the Phase Ib/II trial, EV-103 (NCT03288545), evaluating patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer who are unable to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy-treated in the first-line setting with enfortumab vedotin-ejfv in combination with pembrolizumab.

The initial results from the trial were presented at the European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO) 2019 Congress, and updated findings at the 2020 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.

EV-103 is an ongoing, multi-cohort, open-label, multicenter phase Ib/II trial of PADCEV alone or in combination, evaluating the safety, tolerability, and efficacy in muscle-invasive, locally advanced and first- and second-line metastatic urothelial cancer.

Adverse eventsSerious adverse reactions occurred in 46% of patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejfv. The most common serious adverse reactions (3%) were urinary tract infection (6%), cellulitis (5%), febrile neutropenia (4%), diarrhea (4%), sepsis (3%), acute kidney injury (3%), dyspnea (3%), and rash (3%). Fatal adverse reactions occurred in 3.2% of patients, including acute respiratory failure, aspiration pneumonia, cardiac disorder, and sepsis (each 0.8%).

Discontinuing treatmentAdverse reactions leading to discontinuation occurred in 16% of patients; the most common adverse reaction leading to discontinuation was peripheral neuropathy (6%). Adverse reactions leading to dose interruption occurred in 64% of patients; the most common adverse reactions leading to dose interruption were peripheral neuropathy (18%), rash (9%) and fatigue (6%). Adverse reactions leading to dose reduction occurred in 34% of patients; the most common adverse reactions leading to dose reduction were peripheral neuropathy (12%), rash (6%) and fatigue (4%).

The most common adverse reactions (20%) were fatigue (56%), peripheral neuropathy (56%), decreased appetite (52%), rash (52%), alopecia (50%), nausea (45%), dysgeusia (42%), diarrhea (42%), dry eye (40%), pruritus (26%) and dry skin (26%). The most common Grade 3 adverse reactions (5%) were rash (13%), diarrhea (6%) and fatigue (6%).

Specific recommendations

HyperglycemiaHyperglycemia occurred in patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejfv, including death and diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), in patients with and without pre-existing diabetes mellitus. The incidence of Grade 3-4 hyperglycemia increased consistently in patients with higher body mass index and in patients with higher baseline A1C. In one clinical trial, 8% of patients developed Grade 3-4 hyperglycemia. Patients with baseline hemoglobin A1C 8% were excluded.

Physicians are recommended to closely monitor blood glucose levels in patients with, or at risk for, diabetes mellitus or hyperglycemia and, if blood glucose is elevated (>250 mg/dL), withhold the drug.

Peripheral neuropathyPeripheral neuropathy (PN), predominantly sensory, occurred in 49% of the 310 patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejf in clinical trials. Two percent (2%) of patients experienced Grade 3 reactions. In one clinical trial, peripheral neuropathy occurred in patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejf with or without preexisting peripheral neuropathy.

The median time to onset of Grade 2 was 3.8 months (range: 0.6 to 9.2). Neuropathy led to treatment discontinuation in 6% of patients. At the time of their last evaluation, 19% had complete resolution, and 26% had partial improvement.

Physicians should:

Occular disordersOcular disorders occurred in 46% of the 310 patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejf. The majority of these events involved the cornea and included keratitis, blurred vision, limbal stem cell deficiency and other events associated with dry eyes. Dry eye symptoms occurred in 36% of patients, and blurred vision occurred in 14% of patients, during treatment with enfortumab vedotin-ejf.

The median time to onset to symptomatic ocular disorder was 1.9 months (range: 0.3 to 6.2).

Physicians should monitor patients for ocular disorders and consider:

Skin reactionsSkin reactions occurred in 54% of the 310 patients treated with enfortumab vedotin-ejf in clinical trials. Twenty-six percent (26%) of patients had a maculopapular rash and 30% had pruritus. Grade 3-4 skin reactions occurred in 10% of patients and included symmetrical drug-related intertriginous and flexural exanthema (SDRIFE), bullous dermatitis, exfoliative dermatitis, and palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia. In one clinical trial, the median time to onset of severe skin reactions was 0.8 months (range: 0.2 to 5.3).

Of the patients who experienced rash, 65% had complete resolution and 22% had partial improvement.

Physicians should monitor patients for skin reactions, and consider:

Infusion site extravasationSkin and soft tissue reactions secondary to extravasation have been observed after the administration of enfortumab vedotin-ejf. Of the 310 patients, 1.3% of patients experienced skin and soft tissue reactions. Reactions may be delayed.

Erythema, swelling, increased temperature, and pain worsened until 2-7 days after extravasation and resolved within 1-4 weeks of peak. One percent (1%) of patients developed extravasation reactions with secondary cellulitis, bullae, or exfoliation.

Physicians should ensure adequate venous access prior to starting enfortumab vedotin-ejf and monitor for possible extravasation during administration. If extravasation occurs, stop the infusion and monitor for adverse reactions.

Embryo-fetal toxicityEnfortumab vedotin-ejf can cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman.

Physicians should advise patients of the potential risk to the fetus and advise female patients of reproductive potential to use effective contraception during enfortumab vedotin-ejf treatment and for 2 months after the last dose. At the same time, they should advise male patients with female partners of reproductive potential to use effective contraception during treatment with enfortumab vedotin-ejf and for 4 months after the last dose.

Clinical trialA Study of Enfortumab Vedotin Alone or With Other Therapies for Treatment of Urothelial Cancer (EV-103) NCT03288545

References[1] American Cancer Society. Cancer Facts & Figures 2020. Online. Last accessed on January 23, 2020.[2] American Society of Clinical Oncology. Bladder cancer: introduction (10-2017). Online. Last accessed on January 23, 2020.[3] International Agency for Research on Cancer. Cancer Tomorrow: Bladder. Online. Last accessed on January 23, 2020.[4] National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Bladder Cancer. Version 4; July 10, 2019. Online. Last accessed on January 23, 2020.[5] Enfortumab vedotin-ejfv (Padcev; Astellas Pharma [package insert]. Northbrook, IL)[6] Challita-Eid P, Satpayev D, Yang P, et al. Enfortumab Vedotin Antibody-Drug Conjugate Targeting Nectin-4 Is a Highly Potent Therapeutic Agent in Multiple Preclinical Cancer Models. Cancer Res 2016;76(10):3003-13.

A version of this article was first published in ADC Review | Journal of Antibody-drug Conjugates.

Read the original:
Combination Enfortumab Vedotin + Pembrolizumab Granted Breakthrough Therapy in Bladder Cancer - OncoZine

Read More...

Life and death in Wuhan: On the front lines fighting coronavirus – Nikkei Asian Review

Friday, February 7th, 2020

WUHAN, China (Caixin) -- In the coronavirus epidemic, doctors on the front lines take on the greatest risk and best understand the situation. Peng Zhiyong, director of acute medicine at the Wuhan University South Central Hospital, is one of those doctors.

In an interview on Tuesday with Caixin, Peng described his personal experiences in first encountering the disease in early January and quickly grasping its virulent potential and the need for stringent quarantine measures.

As the contagion spread and flooded his ICU, the doctor observed that three weeks seemed to determine the difference between life and death. Patients with stronger immune systems would start to recover in a couple of weeks, but in the second week some cases would take a turn for the worse.

In the third week, keeping some of these acute patients alive might require extraordinary intervention. For this group, the death rate seems to be 4% to 5%, Peng said. After working 12-hour daytime shifts, the doctor spends his evenings researching the disease and has summarized his observations in a thesis.

The doctors and nurses at his hospital are overwhelmed with patients. Once they don protective hazmat suits, they go without food, drink and bathroom breaks for their entire shifts. That's because there's aren't enough of the suits for a mid-shift change, he said.

Over the past month on the front lines of the coronavirus battle, Peng has been brought to tears many times when forced to turn away patients for lack of staffing and beds. He said what really got to him, though, was the death of an acutely ill pregnant woman when treatment stopped for lack of money -- the day before the government decided to pick up the costs of all coronavirus treatments.

Here is our interview with the ICU doctor:

Screening criteria were too tough in the beginning

Caixin: When did you encounter your first novel coronavirus patient?

Peng Zhiyong: Jan. 6, 2020. There was a patient from Huanggang who had been refused by multiple hospitals and was sent to the South Central Hospital emergency room. I attended the consultation. At the time, the patient's illness was already severe, and he had difficulty breathing. I knew right then that he had contracted this disease. We debated at length whether to accept the patient. If we didn't, he had nowhere to go; if we did, there was a high likelihood the disease would infect others. We had to do a very stringent quarantine. We decided to take the patient in the end.

I called the hospital director and told him the story, including the fact that we had to clear the hospital room of other patients and to remodel it after SARS standards by setting up a contamination area, buffer area and cleaning area while separating the living areas of the hospital staff from the patients'.

On Jan. 6, with the patient in the emergency room, we did quarantine remodeling in the emergency room and did major renovations to the intensive care unit. South Central Hospital's ICU has 66 beds in total. We kept a space dedicated to coronavirus patients. I knew the infectiousness of the disease. There were bound to be more people coming in, so we set aside 16 beds. We did quarantine renovations on the infectious diseases area because respiratory illnesses are transmitted through the air, so even air has to be quarantined so that inside the rooms the air can't escape. At the time, some said that the ICU had a limited number of beds and 16 was excessive. I said it wasn't excessive at all.

Caixin: You predicted in January that there would be person-to-person transmission and even took quarantine measures. Did you report the situation to higher-ups?

Peng: This disease really did spread very fast. By Jan. 10, the 16 beds in our ICU were full. We saw how dire the situation was and told the hospital's leadership that they had to report even higher. Our head felt it was urgent too, and reported this to the Wuhan city health committee. On Jan. 12, the department sent a team of three specialists to South Central to investigate. The specialists said that clinical symptoms really resembled SARS, but they were still talking about diagnosis criteria, that kind of stuff. We replied that those standards were too stringent. Very few people would get diagnosed based on those criteria. The head of our hospital told them this multiple times during this period. I know other hospitals were doing the same.

Before this, the specialists had already gone to Jinyintan Hospital to investigate and made a set of diagnosis criteria. You had to have had exposure to the South China Seafood Market, you needed to have had a fever and test positive for the virus. You had to meet all three criteria in order to be diagnosed. The third one was especially stringent. In reality, very few people were able to test for a virus.

On Jan. 18, the high-level specialists from the National Health Commission came to Wuhan, to South Central Hospital to inspect. I told them again that the criteria were too high. This way it was easy to miss infections. I told them this was infectious; if you made the criteria too high and let patients go, you're putting society in danger. After the second national team of specialists came, the criteria were changed. The number of diagnosed patients rose quickly.

Caixin: What made you believe the new coronavirus could be transmitted between people?

Peng: Based on my clinical experience and knowledge, I believed that the disease would be an acutely infectious one and that we needed high-level protection. The virus isn't going to change based on man's will. I felt we needed to respect it and act according to science. Heeding my requirements, South Central Hospital's ICU took strict quarantine measures, and as a result, our department only had two infections. As of Jan. 28, of the entire hospital's medical personnel, only 40 have been infected. This is way less compared with other hospitals in terms of percentage of total medical staff.

It pains us to see the coronavirus develop to such a desperate state. But the priority now is to treat people; do everything we can to save people.

Fatality rate for acute patients is 4% to 5%. Three weeks determine life and death

Caixin: Based on your clinical experience, what's the disease progression of the new coronavirus?

Peng: Lately I've been spending daytimes seeing patients in the ICU, then doing some research in the evenings. I just wrote a thesis. I drew on data from 138 cases that South Central Hospital had from Jan. 7 to Jan. 28 and attempted to summarize some patterns of the novel coronavirus.

A lot of viruses will die off on their own after a certain amount of time. We call these self-limited diseases. I've observed that the breakout period of the novel coronavirus tends to be three weeks, from the onset of symptoms to developing difficulties breathing. Basically going from mild to severe symptoms takes about a week. There are all sorts of mild symptoms: feebleness, shortness of breath, some people have fevers, some don't. Based on studies of our 138 cases, the most common symptoms in the first stage are fever (98.6% of cases), feebleness (69.6%), cough (59.4%), muscle pains (34.8%) and difficulties breathing (31.2%), while less common symptoms include headaches, dizziness, stomach pain, diarrhea, nausea and vomiting.

But some patients who enter the second week will suddenly get worse. At this stage, people should go to the hospital. Elderly with underlying conditions may develop complications; some may need machine-assisted respiration. When the body's other organs start to fail, that's when it becomes severe, while those with strong immune systems see their symptoms decrease in severity at this stage and gradually recover. So the second week is what determines whether the illness becomes critical.

The third week determines whether critical illness leads to death. Some in critical condition who receive treatment can increase their lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell, and see an improvement in their immune systems, and have been brought back, so to speak. But those whose lymphocyte numbers continue to decline, those whose immune systems are destroyed in the end, experience multiple organ failure and die.

For most, the illness is over in two weeks, whereas for those for whom the illness becomes severe, if they can survive three weeks they're good. Those that can't will die in three weeks.

Caixin: Could you give more details on clinical research? What percentage of cases develop from mild conditions to severe conditions? What percentage of serious cases develop into life-threatening ones? What is the mortality rate?

Peng: Based on my clinical observations, this disease is highly contagious, but the mortality rate is low. Those that progressed into the life-threatening stage often occurred in the elderly already with chronic diseases.

As of Jan. 28, of 138 cases, 36 were in the ICU, 28 recovered, five died. That is to say, the mortality rate of patients with severe conditions was 3.6%. Yesterday, Feb. 3, another patient died, bringing the mortality rate to 4.3%. Given patients in the ICU, it is likely to have more deaths. The mortality rate is also likely to edge up but not significantly.

Those hospitalized tend to have severe or life-threatening conditions. Patients with slight symptoms are placed in quarantine at home. We have not gathered data on the percentage of cases that progress from slight symptoms to serious symptoms. If a patient goes from serious conditions to life-threatening conditions, the patient will be sent to the ICU. Among 138 patients, 36 were transferred to the ICU, representing 26% of all patients. The percentage of deaths among life-threatening cases is about 15%. The mean period to go from slight conditions to life-threatening conditions is about 10 days. Twenty-eight patients recovered and were discharged. Right now, the recovery rate is 20.3% while other patients remain hospitalized.

It is notable that 12 cases were linked to South China Seafood Market; 57 were infected while being hospitalized, including 17 patients already hospitalized in other departments; and 40 medical staff, among 138 cases, as of Jan. 28. That demonstrates that a hospital is a high-risk zone and appropriate protection must be taken.

Caixin: What is the highest risk a seriously ill patient faces?

Peng: The biggest assault the virus launches is on a patient's immune system. It causes a fall in the count of lymphocytes, damage in the lungs and shortness of breath. Many serious patients died of choking. Others died of the failure of multiple organs following complications in their organs resulting from a collapse of the immune system.

Caixin: A 39-year-old patient in Hong Kong suffered from cardiac arrest, and he died quickly. A few patients did not have severe symptoms upon the onslaught of the virus, or in the early stages, but they died suddenly. Some experts argue that the virus triggers a cytokine storm, which ravages the stronger immune systems of young adults. Eventually excessive inflammations caused by cytokine result in the higher mortality rate. Have you seen such a phenomenon in the coronavirus outbreak?

Peng: Based on my observations, a third of patients exhibited inflammation in their whole body. It was not necessarily limited to young adults. The mechanism of a cytokine storm is about whole-body inflammation, which leads to a failure of multiple organs and quickly evolves into the terminal stage. In some fast-progressing cases, it took two to three days to progress from whole-body inflammation to the life-threatening stage.

Caixin: How do you treat serious and life-threatening cases?

Peng: For serious and life-threatening cases, our main approach is to provide oxygen, high-volume oxygen. At first noninvasive machine-pumped oxygen, followed by intubated oxygen if conditions worsen. For life-threatening cases, we use ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or pumping the patient's blood through an artificial lung machine). In four cases, we applied ECMO to rescue patients from the verge of death.

Currently there are no special drugs for the coronavirus. The primary purpose of the ICU is to help patients sustain the functions of their body. Different patients have different symptoms. In case of shortness of breath, we provided oxygen; in case of a kidney failure, we gave dialysis; in case of a coma, we deployed ECMO. We provide support wherever a patient needs it to sustain their life. Once the count of lymphocytes goes up and the immune system improves, the virus will be cleared. However, if the count of lymphocytes continues to fall, it is dangerous because the virus continues to replicate. Once a patient's immune system is demolished, it is hard to save a patient.

Caixin: There is news of some drugs that work. People are hopeful of U.S.-made remdesivir, which cured the first case in the United States. What do you think of the drugs?

Peng: There are no 2019 novel coronavirus-targeted drugs so far. Some patients may recover after taking some drugs along with supportive treatment. But such individual cases do not indicate the universal effect of the drugs. The effect is also related to how serious each case is and their individual health conditions. People want a cure urgently, and that is understandable. But we need to be cautious.

Caixin: Do you have any advice for coronavirus patients?

Peng: The most effective approach to the virus epidemic is to control the source of the virus, stem the spread of the virus and prevent human-to-human transmission. My advice for a patient is going to a special ward for infectious diseases, early detection, early diagnosis, early quarantine and early treatment. Once it has developed into a severe case, hospitalization is a must. It is better to contain the disease at an early stage. Once it reaches the life-threatening stage, it is way more difficult to treat it and requires more medical resources. With regard to life-threatening cases, try to save them with ICU measures to reduce the mortality rate.

Sad story of a pregnant patient

Caixin: How many patients with life-threatening conditions have you treated? How many have recovered?

Peng: As of Feb. 4, six patients in the ICU of South Central Hospital died. Eighty percent of them have been improving, a quarter are approaching their discharge and the remainder are still recovering in segregated wards.

The patient who impressed me most came from Huanggang. He was the first to be saved with the assistance of ECMO. He had contact with South China Seafood Market and was in very serious condition. He was transferred to the ICU and we saved him with ECMO. He was discharged from the hospital Jan. 28.

Caixin: What is your workload and pace like?

Peng: The ICU is overloaded. There are three patient wards with 66 beds in South Central Hospital, housing 150 patients. Since Jan. 7 when we received the first patient, no one took any leave. We took turns working in the ICU. Even pregnant medical staff did not take leave. After the epidemic got worse, none of the medical staff ever went home. We rest in a hotel near the hospital or in the hospital.

In the segregated ward, we wear level-3 protective gear. One shift is 12 hours for a doctor and eight hours for a nurse. Since protective gear is in a shortage, there is only one set for a medical staff member a day. We refrain from eating or drinking during our shift because the gear is no longer protective once we go to the washroom. The gear is thick, airtight and tough on our body. It felt uncomfortable at the beginning, but we are used to it now.

Caixin: Did you experience any danger? For example, in case of intubation, what do you do to prevent yourselves from being infected?

Peng: It is a new coronavirus. We are not sure of its nature and its path of spread. It is not true to say we are not afraid. Medical staff members do fear to some extent. But patients need us. When a patient is out of breath and noninvasive oxygen provision fails, we must apply intubation. The procedure is dangerous as the patient may vomit or spit. Medical staff are likely to be exposed to the danger of infection. We strictly require doctors and nurses to apply the highest-level protection. The biggest problem we face now is the shortage of protective gear. The protective stock for ICU staff is running low, although the hospital prioritizes the supply to us.

Caixin: Is there anything that moved you in particular? Did you cry?

Peng: I often cried because so many patients could not be admitted to the hospital. They wailed in front of the hospital. Some patients even knelt down to beg me to accept him into the hospital. But there was nothing I could do since all beds were occupied. I shed tears while I turned them down. I've run out of tears now. I have no other thoughts but to try my best to save more lives.

The most saddest thing was a pregnant woman from Huanggang. She was in very serious condition. Nearly 200,000 yuan ($28,700) was spent after more than a week in the ICU. She was from the countryside, and the money for hospitalization was borrowed from her relatives and friends. Her condition was improving after the use of ECMO, and she was likely to survive. But her husband decided to give up. He cried for his decision. I wept too because I felt there was hope for her to be saved. The woman died after we gave up. And exactly the next day, the government announced a new policy that offers free treatment for all coronavirus-infected patients. I feel so sorry for that pregnant woman.

The deputy director of our department told me one thing, and he cried too. Wuhan 7th Hospital is in a partnership with our hospital, South Central Hospital. The deputy director went there to help in their ICU. He found that two-thirds of the medical staff in the ICU were already infected. Doctors there were running "naked" as they knew they were set to be infected given the shortage of protective gear. They still worked there nonetheless. That was why ICU medical staff were almost all sickened. It is too tough for our doctors and nurses.

Read the original story here.

Caixinglobal.com is English-language online news portal of Chinese financial and business news media group Caixin. Nikkei recently agreed with the company to exchange articles in English.

See the article here:
Life and death in Wuhan: On the front lines fighting coronavirus - Nikkei Asian Review

Read More...

Gianficaro: Rush Limbaugh’s cancer reveal brings out the darkest side of humanity – Bucks County Courier Times

Friday, February 7th, 2020

Two women celebrated the cancer diagnoses affecting the others political opponent, revealing the cold, cruel side to our humanity.

In the kingdom of glass, everything is transparent, and there is no place to hide a dark heart. Vera Nazarian, author

What is it that prompts the human heart to venture into the deepest corners of darkness? To descend there willingly and zealously? To encourage death to snatch life from a foe over little more than crudeness and differing points of view? To celebrate a pending death proudly, to hope for it quickly? To rationalize it as justice being the executioner?

Just what causes humanity to become so incredibly twisted and strangled by unyielding cords of hate?

On the surface, the two women Tuesday morning appeared much like any youd see sharing a table in a coffee shop. It was only when they began to speak did their words and feelings reveal the worst of who we sometimes are.

One day earlier, right-wing radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh revealed he had been diagnosed with advanced, or metastatic, lung cancer. Last month, Rep. Jerry Nadler, a Democrat and a lead House impeachment manager urging the removal of Donald Trump from office for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, announced he would step away from the impeachment trial to be with his wife, who has metastatic pancreatic cancer.

The women, clearly on opposite ends of the political spectrum, discussed what both men are facing in their lives. My coffee went down with ease. Their conversation did not.

Limbaughs getting what he deserves, one woman said of the often caustic, occasionally unsympathetic radio host. Hes a rotten, evil man. I hate that anyone gets cancer, but theres some justice here with him. I remember he mocked Ruth Ginsburg when she got cancer. I bet its not so funny to him now.

Getting what he deserves. Getting cancer. Celebrating a mans possible, probable death. Unfathomable. As I found the distasteful opinion hard to swallow on World Cancer Day, of all days, I thought about my 88-year-old mom battling cancer today, and how the disease and the treatment are beating her up, and how I wouldnt wish the disease on anyone, especially because they wear a red tie and I wear a blue one.

Yet into the darkness the women tread. Zealously.

And then her friend followed her into the abyss. Eagerly.

Yeah, well, that Nadler is getting his, too, the other woman said. You dont survive pancreatic cancer; look at Alex Trebek. (Nadler) was part of the whole witch hunt on the president, and now this. I guess throwing Trump out of office isnt so important to him now.

Two women drinking hot coffee and revealing frozen hearts. I was hoping for better. The thaw never came.

Across the internet and on social media, cold hearts thumped out a drum beat of inhumanity, mostly against Limbaugh.

A 2006 video was recirculated of Limbaugh accusing actor Michael J. Fox of faking his symptoms of Parkinsons disease in a video ad endorsing a Democratic candidate for Senate, Claire McCaskill, who supported embryonic stem-cell research. Limbaugh also mocked Fox on air by impersonating tremors associated with the disease and charging that Fox was exaggerating them for effect. Insensitivity does not get much lower than that.

The intended message by those recirculating Limbaughs inhumanity shortly after he disclosed his cancer diagnosis was unmistakable: Paybacks are hell.

Religious scholar Reza Aslan also attacked Limbaugh, tweeting this Monday: Ask yourself this simple question: Is the world a better place or a worse place with Rush Limbaugh in it? Azlans answer was not a mystery.

I approached the two women with cold hearts. I introduced myself, told them Id overheard their conversation, and would like to talk to them about their casual discussion of cancer and death. They chided me for eavesdropping, then, predictably, refused.

While the cold hearts revealed by those women was likely an extreme perspective, it was, without question, reflective of the widening political divide in America, one in which disagreement doesnt represent the absolute ground floor. For some, it goes much deeper.

And darker.

Columnist Phil Gianficaro can be reached at 215-345-3078, pgianficaro@theintell.com, and @philgianficaro on Twitter.

See original here:
Gianficaro: Rush Limbaugh's cancer reveal brings out the darkest side of humanity - Bucks County Courier Times

Read More...

The biology, function, and biomedical applications of exosomes – Science Magazine

Friday, February 7th, 2020

Clinical uses of cellular communication

Exosomes are a type of extracellular vesicle that contain constituents (protein, DNA, and RNA) of the cells that secrete them. They are taken up by distant cells, where they can affect cell function and behavior. Intercellular communication through exosomes seems to be involved in the pathogenesis of various disorders, including cancer, neurodegeneration, and inflammatory diseases. In a Review, Kalluri and LeBleu discuss the biogenesis and function of exosomes in disease, highlighting areas where more research is needed. They also discuss the potential clinical applications of exosome profiling for diagnostics and exosome-mediated delivery of therapeutics to target disease cells.

Science, this issue p. eaau6977

All cells, prokaryotes and eukaryotes, release extracellular vesicles (EVs) as part of their normal physiology and during acquired abnormalities. EVs can be broadly divided into two categories, ectosomes and exosomes. Ectosomes are vesicles that pinch off the surface of the plasma membrane via outward budding, and include microvesicles, microparticles, and large vesicles in the size range of ~50 nm to 1 m in diameter. Exosomes are EVs with a size range of ~40 to 160 nm (average ~100 nm) in diameter with an endosomal origin. Sequential invagination of the plasma membrane ultimately results in the formation of multivesicular bodies, which can intersect with other intracellular vesicles and organelles, contributing to diversity in the constituents of exosomes. Depending on the cell of origin, EVs, including exosomes, can contain many constituents of a cell, including DNA, RNA, lipids, metabolites, and cytosolic and cell-surface proteins. The physiological purpose of generating exosomes remains largely unknown and needs investigation. One speculated role is that exosomes likely remove excess and/or unnecessary constituents from cells to maintain cellular homeostasis. Recent studies reviewed here also indicate a functional, targeted, mechanism-driven accumulation of specific cellular components in exosomes, suggesting that they have a role in regulating intercellular communication.

Exosomes are associated with immune responses, viral pathogenicity, pregnancy, cardiovascular diseases, central nervous systemrelated diseases, and cancer progression. Proteins, metabolites, and nucleic acids delivered by exosomes into recipient cells effectively alter their biological response. Such exosome-mediated responses can be disease promoting or restraining. The intrinsic properties of exosomes in regulating complex intracellular pathways has advanced their potential utility in the therapeutic control of many diseases, including neurodegenerative conditions and cancer. Exosomes can be engineered to deliver diverse therapeutic payloads, including short interfering RNAs, antisense oligonucleotides, chemotherapeutic agents, and immune modulators, with an ability to direct their delivery to a desired target. The lipid and protein composition of exosomes can affect their pharmacokinetic properties, and their natural constituents may play a role in enhanced bioavailability and in minimizing adverse reactions. In addition to their therapeutic potential, exosomes also have the potential to aid in disease diagnosis. They have been reported in all biological fluids, and the composition of the complex cargo of exosomes is readily accessible via sampling of biological fluids (liquid biopsies). Exosome-based liquid biopsy highlights their potential utility in diagnosis and determining the prognosis of patients with cancer and other diseases. Disease progression and response to therapy may also be ascertained by a multicomponent analysis of exosomes.

The study of exosomes is an active area of research. Ongoing technological and experimental advances are likely to yield valuable information regarding their heterogeneity and biological function(s), as well as enhance our ability to harness their therapeutic and diagnostic potential. As we develop more standardized purification and analytical procedures for the study of exosomes, this will likely reveal their functional heterogeneity. Nonetheless, functional readouts using EVs enriched for exosomes have already provided new insights into their contribution to various diseases. New genetic mouse models with the ability for de novo or induced generation of cell-specific exosomes in health and disease will likely show the causal role of exosomes in cell-to-cell communication locally and between organs. Whether exosome generation and content change with age needs investigation, and such information could offer new insights into tissue senescence, organ deterioration, and programmed or premature aging. Whether EVs and/or exosomes preceded the first emergence of the single-cell organism on the planet is tempting to speculate, and focused bioelectric and biochemical experiments in the future could reveal their cell-independent biological functions. Single-exosome identification and isolation and cryoelectron microscopy analyses have the potential to substantially improve our understanding of the basic biology of exosomes and their use in applied science and technology. Such knowledge will inform the therapeutic potential of exosomes for various diseases, including cancer and neurodegenerative diseases.

Exosomes are extracellular vesicles generated by all cells and they carry nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, and metabolites. They are mediators of near and long-distance intercellular communication in health and disease and affect various aspects of cell biology.

The study of extracellular vesicles (EVs) has the potential to identify unknown cellular and molecular mechanisms in intercellular communication and in organ homeostasis and disease. Exosomes, with an average diameter of ~100 nanometers, are a subset of EVs. The biogenesis of exosomes involves their origin in endosomes, and subsequent interactions with other intracellular vesicles and organelles generate the final content of the exosomes. Their diverse constituents include nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, amino acids, and metabolites, which can reflect their cell of origin. In various diseases, exosomes offer a window into altered cellular or tissue states, and their detection in biological fluids potentially offers a multicomponent diagnostic readout. The efficient exchange of cellular components through exosomes can inform their applied use in designing exosome-based therapeutics.

Continue reading here:
The biology, function, and biomedical applications of exosomes - Science Magazine

Read More...

Innovation in the treatment of COPD – Health Europa

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

OmniSpirant Limited are a leading European biotech startup company with ambitions to change the paradigm of treatment for respiratory disease. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is an umbrella term used to describe progressive lung diseases including emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and refractory (non-reversible) asthma. This disease is characterised by increasing breathlessness, frequent chest infections and persistent wheezing. COPD currently cannot be cured or fully reversed.

This debilitating disease today has a solution, developed by OmniSpirant, as we explain below. Until now, the current COPD therapeutics market has lacked any effective disease modifying treatments and the clinical stage pipeline is weak, given the massive disease prevalence; COPD is arguably the disease with the most severely unmet medical and patient needs.

Smoking is indeed the primary cause of this devastating disease, but 15-20% of COPD cases are due to exposures to occupational dust, chemicals, vapours or other airborne pollutants in the workplace. Air pollution is also a likely and underappreciated driver of the growth of the disease and declining lung function in COPD is strongly associated with ageing.

COPD affects up to 500 million patients globally and is the worlds fourth leading cause of death. This dire situation is projected to worsen with COPD becoming the third leading cause of death globally in 2030 and the leading cause of hospitalisations in the industrialised world. COPD is classified as a priority disease by the EU and WHO as it is the only leading cause of death that is rising in prevalence globally. The burden of this chronic respiratory disease is growing rapidly, fuelled by an ageing demographic, persistent smoking habits, and air pollution.

A recent study has estimated that air pollution may be a factor in as many as 47,000 COPD deaths per annum across the 28 EU Member States. Epidemiologic studies have found a measured prevalence of COPD in Europe of between 4% and 10% of adults (European COPD Coalition). However, COPD is widely undiagnosed and untreated especially in its early stages, so the actual prevalence may be higher. New therapies that can slow disease progression desperately need to be developed.

The disease costs tens of billions of euros annually to healthcare payers in reimbursement for largely ineffective pharmacological and medical interventions. In the key United States market, COPD is responsible for USD $72bn (~65bn) per year in direct healthcare expenditures. In the EU, estimated spending on inpatient, outpatient and pharmaceuticals exceeds 10bn per year and productivity losses are estimated at 28.5bn year.

The disease also causes an estimated 300,000 premature deaths in the EU annually (European Respiratory Society). These startling figures are forecast to rise dramatically as the disease prevalence is set to rise sharply.

Current COPD treatments do not include an effective disease modifying therapy which can reduce the exacerbation of symptoms and/or slow down COPD from progressing and worsening. State of the art therapies for COPD consists of combinations of oral, injected or inhaled bronchodilators, anti-muscarinics, corticosteroids, anti-inflammatories, and antibiotics, all of which are used to treat symptoms and reduce exacerbations of COPD with only modest results.

Except for a small minority of Alpha one Antitrypsin (AAT) deficient COPD patients (five in 10,000 carry the mutation responsible for AAT deficiency on both chromosomes), there are no available therapies which modulate disease progression. AAT is a protein that protects the lungs from the destructive actions of common illnesses and exposures, particularly tobacco smoke.

Furthermore, the COPD pipeline is also devoid of disease modifying treatments. The COPD pipeline is full of incremental advances on existing mainstay therapies which merely treat disease symptoms and do not target the root causes of the disease. There are a few innovative therapies in development but a small molecule or biologic agent such as a monoclonal antibody (or even combinations of several of these agents) are highly unlikely to provide a curative or even therapeutically useful intervention in a complex disease like COPD.

OmniSpirant believe that the solution to the COPD epidemic can be found in the new era of advanced therapeutics by combining several technological advances in the fields of cell culturing, genetic engineering and their innovative exosome technology platform. OmniSpirant are developing inhaled bioengineered exosome therapeutics, delivered by a tailored aerosol delivery method based on vibrating mesh nebuliser technology.

In the first instance, the presenting problem is that patients have established lung damage and an increased risk of developing lung cancer (independent of smoking history). OmniSpirant believe that microRNA/mRNA engineered stem cell exosomes can provide powerful anti-inflammatory and regenerative effects and also reduce the risk of patients developing lung malignancies.

Exosomes are naturally produced by cells and recent research highlights the vast potential of stem cell exosomes as transformative regenerative medicines. Stem cell exosomes have shown great regenerative potential in animal models of COPD by stimulation of repair mechanisms and reversing damage to the lung. Stem cells have also shown some promising results in COPD clinical trials.

Donor (Allogeneic) MSCs delivered intravenously in repeat-dose clinical trials for COPD (Prochymal Osiris Therapeutics) were found to be safe and well tolerated and reduced systemic inflammation, but no significant improvements in lung function were observed. We believe that the use of exosomes, as the therapeutic essence of stem cells, delivered by the inhaled route of administration will be capable of far greater efficacy by delivering far higher doses of exosomes directly to the affected lung tissues than intravenous delivery while typically only requiring about 1% of the overall dose. Furthermore, our exosomes will have enhanced delivery (via proprietary surface engineering) and are also bioengineered to enhance efficacy.

OmniSpirants novel technology platform is capable of delivering high doses of these exosomes across the mucus barrier and through cell membranes to deliver the therapeutic payload directly into the diseased lung cells. Such delivery has proven problematic for competing gene transfer technologies because the mucus in the lungs is a barrier that traps the carriers used to deliver gene therapies such as nanoparticles and viral vectors. These trapped gene therapy carriers are mostly cleared from the mucus layer before they can penetrate into the underlying cells and introduce their genetic cargo.

The use of exosomes overcomes other issues associated with viral and non-viral vectors which include the generation of therapy-inactivating host immune responses and poor ability to cross cell membranes. Furthermore, traditional gene transfer vectors may be immunogenic and elicit adverse inflammatory responses.

OmniSpirants solution is a proprietary method of surface engineering exosomes so they can efficiently penetrate the protective mucus barrier and enter into the underlying cells. These stem cell exosomes are therapeutic (regenerative, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial and antifibrotic), non-immunogenic, and can be tailored via genetic modification of the parent stem cells to create ideal inhaled gene therapy vectors for any lung disease.

The surface engineered exosomes have demonstrated 100% mucus penetration and target cell uptake in the gold standard in vitro model (well-differentiated bronchial epithelial cells in air liquid interface culture), which is game changing compared with the state of the art viral vectors which can achieve only 30% of cells at best. We believe that the enhanced delivery of stem cell exosomes can translate the promising regenerative effects witnessed in various animal models of inflammatory lung diseases into the clinic.

To treat COPD, our approach is to genetically modify the stem cells so that they produce exosomes carrying carefully selected nucleic acids which are tailored for treating the underlying causes of COPD, which has been linked to gene expression and cellular senescence. The genetic element to COPD runs much deeper than just AAT deficiency.

Abnormalities in scores of genes have been clearly shown to increase or decrease the risk of developing COPD and perturbed gene expression is apparent in hundreds of disease associated genes. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a recently discovered class of non-coding RNAs that play key roles in the regulation of gene expression and more than 2,000 miRNAs have been identified in the human genome to date. The fact that each miRNA has the ability to target multiple genes within a pathway makes miRNAs one of the most abundant classes of regulatory genes in humans, regulating up to 30% of human protein coding genes.

MiRNAs have been widely shown to be dysregulated in the affected lung tissues of COPD patients which makes an inhaled gene therapy a highly promising approach for treating COPD. Such a gene therapy could effectively modulate the disease altered microRNAs (and their target genes) to halt or even reverse the disease. Recent advances in cell culturing techniques, isolation of exosomes and proprietary cell engineering technologies hold the promise to bring this therapy to the afflicted masses. The BOLD project estimates that there are currently 36 million patients in the EU and US alone with GOLD Stage 2 disease or higher; we need to act quickly as this figure is set to rise dramatically in the coming decade.

OmniSpirant are currently seeking investors or partners to fund the preclinical development of OS002 and anticipate that clinical studies can be initiated within approximately four years an impactful investing opportunity as the rising prevalence of COPD means that by 2030 there may be over 4.5 million deaths annually worldwide and COPD is predicted to be the leading cause of hospitalisation. Lets work together to change those grim statistics.

OmniSpirant and their consortium partners were awarded a 9.3m Irish government grant award (Disruptive Technologies Innovation Fund) in December 2019 to advance the development of their novel COPD gene therapy.*

OmniSpirant have received funding from Horizon 2020, ReSpire, Grant agreement ID: 855463 and have been accelerated by EIT Health.

Gerry McCauleyCEOOmniSpirant Ltd+353 876306538gmccauley@omnispirant.comwww.omnispirant.com

Please note, this article will appear in issue 12 ofHealth Europa Quarterly, which will be available to read in February 2020.

See original here:
Innovation in the treatment of COPD - Health Europa

Read More...

New Bedford firefighter dies of occupational cancer – SouthCoastToday.com

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

NEW BEDFORD The New Bedford Fire Department is mourning the death of one of their own.

On Monday morning Russ Horn, who worked for the department for over 30 years, died of occupational cancer, according to the president of New Bedford Firefighters Union, Billy Sylvia.

Sylvia said Horn, who was in his 50s, was forced to retire from the department after being diagnosed with multiple myeloma.

According to a patient blog on the Dana Farber Cancer Institutes website, Horn was diagnosed with cancer of plasma cells in 2014 after a minor slip at work sent him to the emergency room. There they discovered he had two broken ribs and a punctured lung as a result of the cancer already attacking his bones.

After receiving stem cell transplants and participating in clinical trials, Horn retired from the department in 2017.

Firefighters face a 1.53 times greater risk of getting multiple myeloma, according to the Firefighter Cancer Support Network.

Sylvia said he has seen a lot of cancer diagnoses among his colleagues in his 14 years as a firefighter, its adding up really quickly... its more than a handful.

We have active guys dealing with this, we have guys that are contracting it after retirement... studies show how much more susceptible we are, Sylvia said.

Its more than just the smoke theyre breathing thats putting them at risk, according to Sylvia; firefighters also can end up absorbing things through their skin and some of its coming from the gear thats supposed to protect us.

The issue is affecting firefighters across the country, Sylvia said, Were learning more and more, trying to get it under control, but theres still a lot of work that can be done.

Sylvia said Horns family has been proactive about making firefighters aware of their cancer risk and teaching them what to look for and the importance of early cancer screenings.

He was a very strong individual, both mentally and physically, Sylvia said of Horn, Eventually it just took its toll.

In 2019, Horn told Dana-Farber, Id do it all again, referring to his 30 years as a firefighter. This has been really hard, but having the guys behind me 100 percent makes it all a little easier.

Both the New Bedford Fire Department and the union have updated their profile pictures on Facebook to include a black stripe over their logos, honoring Horn.

In a post to the unions Facebook page announcing Horns passing, Sylvia said, Russ was the perfect example of what a firefighter, husband, father, and friend, that anyone could ever be. He was surrounded by his family, friends, brother and sisters firefighters throughout his fight and now beyond.

Sylvia closed the post with, We Love You Russ, Well see you again At the Big One.

On their own Facebook page the New Bedford Fire Department posted, "Our hearts are broken as we learned this morning that our retired brother, FF Russell Horn has lost his brave and courageous battle. We will never forget you and we will keep your family in our thoughts and prayers."

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

View post:
New Bedford firefighter dies of occupational cancer - SouthCoastToday.com

Read More...

Mucosal Barrier Injury-Laboratory Confirmed Bloodstream Infection in Patients Who Receive HSCT – Cancer Network

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

Mucosal barrier injury-laboratory confirmed bloodstream infection (MBI-LCBI), in addition to any bloodstream infections (BSIs), were associated with significant morbidity and mortality after hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), according to this study published inJAMA Network Open.

The researchers indicated that further investigation into risk reduction should be a clinical and scientific priority for this patient population.

Reduction in MBI-LCBI will require a better understanding of its mechanisms and risk factors, and our data contribute to the knowledge needed to make important progress, the authors wrote.

According to the study, a BSI is defined as an MBI-LCBI if it resulted from 1 or more of a group of selected organisms known to be commensals of the oral cavity or gastrointestinal tract, and it occurred in a patient with specific signs or symptoms compatible with the presence of mucosal barrier injury, like gastrointestinal graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) and/or neutropenia.

Of this cohort of 16,875 patients, 13,686 underwent HSCT for a malignant neoplasm, and 3,189 (18.9%) underwent HSCT for a nonmalignant condition. The cumulative incidence of MBI-LCBI was 13% (99% CI, 12%-13%) by day 100, and the cumulative incidence of BSI-other was 21% (99% CI, 21%-22%) by day 100. The median time from transplant to first MBI-LCBI was 8 (<1 to 98) days, versus 29 (<1 to 100) days for BSI-other. Most cases of MBI-LCBI met the definition secondary to neutropenia alone (1,915 of 2,179 [87.9%]), with the other 12.1% (264 of 2,179) meeting criteria owing to the presence of gastrointestinal GVHD (166 of 2,179 [7.6%]) or gastrointestinal GVHD with neutropenia (98 of 2,179 [4.5%]).

Multivariable analysis exposed an increased risk of MBI-LCBI with poor Karnofsky/Lansky performance status (hazard ratio [HR], 1.21 [99% CI, 1.04-1.41]), cord blood grafts (HR, 2.89 [99% CI, 1.97-4.24]), myeloablative conditioning (HR, 1.46 [99% CI, 1.19-1.78]), and posttransplant cyclophosphamide GVHD prophylaxis (HR, 1.85 [99% CI, 1.19-1.78]). These findings support current efforts to use umbilical cord blood graft expansion to shorten the duration of neutropenia.

One-year mortality was significantly higher for patients with MBI-LCBI (HR, 1.81 [99% CI, 1.56-2.12]), BSI-other (HR, 1.81 [99% CI, 1.60-2.06]), and MBI-LCBI plus BSI-other (HR, 2.65 [99% Ci, 2.17-3.24]) compared with controls. Moreover, one-year TRM (non-relapse mortality) among patients with malignant disease increased for patients with any BMI. There was no association of any BSI with the development of chronic GVHD.

Infection was more often reported as a cause of death for patients with MBI-LCBI (139 of 740 [18.8%]), BSI (251 of 1,537 [16.3%]), and MBI-LCBI plus BSI (94 of 435 [21.6%]) than for controls (566 of 4,740 [11.9%]). Additionally, infection as an associated secondary cause of death was higher in patients with MBI-LCBI (158 of 740 [21.4%]), BSI only (343 of 1,537 [22.3%]), and MBI-LCBI plus BSI (116 of 435 [26.7%]) than in the control group (739 of 4,740 [15.6%]).

To our knowledge, this is the first large-scale study to evaluate MBI-LCBI, the authors wrote. The inclusion of multiple centers provides a diverse population of all ages, stem cell sources, and transplant types and minimizes overreporting or underreporting biases inherent in single-center studies.

Each year, more than 50,000 HSCTs are performed worldwide, according to the researchers. Though transplant strategies and supportive care has evolved, leading to improved overall survival, patients who have undergone HSCT are still at high risk for BSIs and associated morbidity and mortality.

Reference:

Dandoy CE, Kim S, Chen M, et al. Incidence, Risk Factors, and Outcomes of Patients Who Develop Mucosal Barrier Injury-Laboratory Confirmed Bloodstream Infections in the First 100 Days After Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant.JAMA Network Open. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.18668.

Read the original here:
Mucosal Barrier Injury-Laboratory Confirmed Bloodstream Infection in Patients Who Receive HSCT - Cancer Network

Read More...

The special legacies left by people who died too soon – Wales Online

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

We have all heard heartbreaking stories about those who have battled lifelong illnesses or died in sudden and unexpected circumstances.

But sometimes when tragedy strikes it can also act as a way of highlighting issues and helping others suffering similar heartache.

Here we look at some of the wonderful legacies that are working tirelessly to keep alive the memories of people across Wales who were taken too soon.

Mathew Mizen was just 25 years old when he suddenly died following a short mystery illness.

A popular postman from Cwmavon, in Neath Port Talbot, he had been playing rugby for his beloved Cwmavon RFC just three weeks before he died.

After suddenly becoming ill he began to deteriorate and was admitted to hospital.

While his death at the time remained a mystery to his loved ones, tests later showed he died from acute respiratory distress syndrome with an underlying diagnosis of T-cell lymphoma.

His parents, Rhidian and Myra Mizen, decided to set up The Mathew Mizen Foundation in his memory as a way to give back to the community of Cwmavon.

"Mathew passed away suddenly in 2008 when he was 25," his father said. "He was a postman and then he went off work sick.

"He went into hospital on Boxing Day and passed away on January 4. He was taken into Singleton Hospital before they sent him to Cardiff.

"We found out that he had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We thought for a while that we should do something.

"Mathew was one of the village postmen and played for Cwmavon rugby and cricket clubs so we thought we will start something up because of his connections with the village and all the money raised we would use for people living in the village."

The foundation in his name has now been running for a decade and has built up a reputation for its annual January charity dip at Aberavon beach.

After first starting out with around 15 people heading into the freezing-cold sea, now around 50 people are brave enough to take the plunge.

Mr Mizen added: "It's been going for about 10 years now. At the time my wife and I had a caravan in Pendine and we went into the pub one day and they were advertising for a swim on Boxing Day and I thought 'I wouldn't mind trying that' so we set one up for the Sunday that's closest to when Mathew passed away.

"In the first year we had about 15 people doing it but this year we had about 48 so it seems to be growing bigger and bigger.

"We've also done a cycle ride between the Principality Stadium and Aberavon rugby club and we've put on shows. A husband and wife in the village have done a skydive.

"With the funds we have been able to buy interactive whiteboards for Cwmafan School, new kit for the rugby team in the school, a new walking frame for a girl with cerebral palsy, and the most we've given is 2,500 for a young boy to play cricket."

Mr Mizen said both he and his wife still get approached by people in the village with fond memories of their son.

"He was helpful. We often get people saying 'Mathew was my postman and he helped me'. One woman said that he helped her move her fridge," he added.

"He was outgoing and loved his rugby. He was full of fun and was known for his smile everybody remembers him for his smile.

"I think Mathew would be proud and if he was alive he would be doing the dip and the shows himself.

"I'm hoping that he's looking down on us and smiling."

In February 2012 Rhian Mannings' life was turned upside down when her one-year-old son George died suddenly after suffering a seizure at home.

It was later discovered that George was suffering with bronchial pneumonia and a severe strain of type A influenza.

Just five days later her grief-stricken husband Paul took his own life.

Amid her darkest hour the Pontyclun mum set up the charity 2 Wish Upon A Star which provides support to bereaved families.

"My one-year-old son died suddenly in an A&E department and we left with no idea where to go next," she said.

"Five days later my husband took his own life. We received no support and had nowhere to turn.

"Within a few months I knew I wanted to help our local community in Miskin as they were the only support we received.

"I set up a fund and within weeks it was clear that I had identified a gap across Wales.

"People contacted me saying 'this has happened to me' so I decided to give up my job as a teacher and tried to put things in place for people who have lost a child."

One of the aims that the charity has is to have memory boxes available at hospitals across Wales for families who have suffered a loss.

Families can also be offered a referral to the charity's counselling services if they wish to do so.

"When George died they had nothing to keep memories so we have put things in place at every hospital so families can leave with something," Rhian added.

"We make sure there are facilities for families and at the moment there are nine family rooms in hospitals to make sure there's somewhere for them to sit down.

"The ripple effect of such tragedy brought the community together and we have raised over 1m through fundraising alone.

"I can't thank the people of Miskin enough. So many families need our support."

Helping other families who are going through similar tragedy is Rhian's way of keeping her son's legacy going.

Earlier this year 2 Wish Upon A Star was given a boost when Coldplay recorded a special version of one of their biggest hits for the charity.

She added: "George was my youngest and he was the happiest, easiest little boy who completed our family.

"We were a lovely family of five and had everything we wanted life was brilliant.

"Life will never be the same but we share memories and photos around the house.

"It's my boy's legacy and it will always be bittersweet."

When Ben and Catherine Mullany married in July 2008 no-one could have predicted the tragedy that would take place just days later.

While on honeymoon in Antigua the health professionals, both aged 31 and from the Swansea Valley, were shot by intruders in their luxury chalet.

Mr Mullany was in his third year of training to become a physiotherapist while his new wife was a paediatrician training to become a GP.

Mrs Mullany died instantly after being shot in the head while her husband was taken to hospital before later being flown home on a life-support machine.

Doctors at Morriston Hospital proceeded with brain stem testing but the day after his arrival his life-support machine was switched off.

Following a two-month trial in Antigua Kaniel Martin and Avie Howell were found guilty of murdering the couple and sentenced to life imprisonment.

The Mullany Fund was set up in their memory with the aim of helping young people realise their potential.

The charity harnesses the couple's passion for life sciences and encourages and helps young people take a step closer to pursuing a career in the medical field.

Project manager at the charity, Sarah James, said: "The project was set up in 2008 as a remembrance charity for Ben and Catherine.

"As a whole we believe that all young people should have equal opportunities to succeed.

"We work with partners to promote and encourage the ability of young people particularly aged between 14 and 19.

"In 2015 the charity was successful in gaining funding for an online mentoring project for young people where we work with volunteers across the UK.

"We work with schools, community groups, and students in Swansea, Neath Port Talbot, Rhondda Cynon Taf, Bridgend, and Merthyr Tydfil."

The mentoring scheme introduces young people to professional mentors who offer them advice and guidance as well as an insight into life sciences.

The charity's objective is to give every young person, regardless of their background, the opportunity to access a career in life sciences by providing the support they need to follow their aspirations.

"About 600 people across the five areas have registered for Mullany e-mentoring," Sarah added.

"We have had very positive feedback from the people involved and the mentors are happy to be involved as they feel like they are giving back."

Paul Popham battled kidney failure for more than half of his life but in the words of his daughter "you wouldn't have known he was ill".

From the age of 30 he was undergoing kidney dialysis but in later life he was dealt another blow as he was diagnosed with kidney cancer.

In October 2008 Mr Popham, from Swansea, was given just nine months to live and told that his only hope of living longer was to take a drug called Sutent.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence initially refused to fund the 30,000-plus treatment but when Mr Popham's family began collecting signatures, lobbying politicians, and even taking their fight to Downing Street, the Assembly finally made the drug available in January 2009.

It wasn't until four years after his prognosis that Mr Popham died at the age of 67 in October 2012.

In the following months his family and friends decided to set up the Paul Popham Fund to help other renal patients across Wales.

His daughter Joanne said: "The Paul Popham Fund was set up in memory of my father.

"He had kidney failure for over half his life but he dealt with it in a positive manner. You wouldn't have known he was ill. It did not define him.

"He played football, worked shifts at Alcoa, and brought up a family of four.

"From the age of 30 he was on dialysis and in the later years he got kidney cancer."

Mr Popham was actively involved with St Joseph's AFC throughout his life and was even a founding member.

"He was very fun-loving and very positive," his daughter added.

"He played football all of his life and was a founding member of St Joseph's football club and they still support the charity.

"He absolutely loved that club and I think it was his second family.

"He was also a member of the Labour party. He loved his music and was a family man."

Mr Popham's family and friends hoped that the charity could help other patients "lead a better quality of life".

After initially setting out to raise funds for Morriston Hospital's renal unit, the charity has since gone on to offer a befriending and counselling service.

"He was a positive man and we wanted to do something positive in his memory so we got family and friends together to talk about what we wanted to do," Joanne added.

"We set it up in March 2013 with the aim was to raise funds in memory of my father and donate them to Morriston Hospital's renal unit.

"It's for his legacy and to do what my father did to help people lead a better quality of life.

"We now also run a befriending and counselling service and train kidney patients to befriend and provide support to new patients.

"He would be proud of the work that we are doing but he wouldn't want his name on it as he was a private man.

"In terms of the work, he owed his life to the NHS and would always champion it.

"To think we are supporting them and patients like him, he would be over the moon."

It was in the run-up to Christmas that the lives of one young family from Cardiff changed forever.

While the Bates family were returning home from a festive party the lives of the happy family of four were destroyed in a split second as a car ploughed into two of them as they crossed a road near Miskin.

Dad Stuart was tragically killed while seven-year-old son Fraser was left fighting for his life.

He was rushed to a specialist hospital in Bristol for emergency care but sadly died several hours later as his injuries were too severe.

Mum Anna Louise and daughter Elizabeth, who was just three at the time, were not injured during the incident but have had to live with the pain of losing both Stuart and Fraser.

Just over a week after the unimaginable loss Anna Louise made the decision to focus her energy and grief on helping others going through similar heartache.

She set up the charity Believe to offer support and education around organ donation as her husband and son saved several lives when their organs were donated.

"We set the charity up within a week of the loss of my husband and son," Anna Louise said.

"I had a situation that you would not wish on anybody. I had had this conversation with my husband just a few weeks before about organ donation and I knew what they would have wanted me to do.

"It just struck me that no-one knew about organ donation and I did not realise that I could override my husband's wishes, even though he had opted in.

"It became really clear that it was time to talk about this and we wanted to break down the taboo and talk about it.

"Death and grief; it's a very traumatic time and I wanted to assist and provide support to others."

In recent years the charity has managed to create an animation aimed at children to help them understand organ donation, which has reached eight million people around the world.

The animation even went on to win at the Charity Film Awards in 2019, while Anna Louise has also received numerous awards for her work including a Pride of Britain award and The Points of Light.

The charity has also been working with schools throughout Cardiff, as well as the WJEC, to incorporate organ donation into the national curriculum.

See more here:
The special legacies left by people who died too soon - Wales Online

Read More...

Where Will Vertex Pharmaceuticals Be in 10 Years? – Nasdaq

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

It's easy to grasp how Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: VRTX) got to where it is today. A decade ago, the biotech's market cap hovered around $8 billion. Vertex's lead pipeline candidate was hepatitis C virus (HCV) drugtelaprevir, which went on to win FDA approval in 2011. The drug was marketed under the brand name Incivek -- but only briefly. Vertex quit selling the HCV drug in 2014 because Gilead Sciences'HCV franchise was dominating the market.

However, Vertex had another program in development targeting cystic fibrosis (CF). Its first CF drug, Kalydeco, won FDA approval in 2012. The rest is history. Vertex went on to gain FDA approvals for three other CF drugs. It's now highly profitable with annual revenue approaching $4 billion. And its stock has skyrocketed more than 500% over the last 10 years.

Trying to predict where Vertex will be 10 years from now isn't as easy. But there are some clues from the present that point to the prospects for another highly successful decade for the biotech.

Image source: Getty Images.

The safest prediction of all for Vertex is that it will remain a juggernaut in CF in 2030. Vertex won FDA approval for its most powerful CF drug yet -- Trikafta -- in October 2019. European approval for the drug is likely on the way this year.

Vertex expects that Trikafta will expand the addressable patient population for its CF therapies by more than 50%. The company also has three other CF drugs in its pipeline, including two programs that, like Trikafta, are triple-drug combos.

Currently, there are no other approved drugs that treat the underlying cause of CF. AbbVie is evaluating a triple-drug CF combo that it picked up from Galapagosin a phase 1 clinical study, but it's way behind Vertex. Even if AbbVie's drug proves to be successful, it would at best be several years before the drug could win approval. By that time, Vertex will already have further entrenched itself in the CF market.

Although the patents for Kalydeco, Orkambi, and Symdeko will expire near the end of the decade, Vertex's patents for Trikafta won't expire until 2037. The company could face generic rivals for its older CF drugs, but there's no reason to expect that Vertex's CF franchise won't still be racking up huge sales.

Vertex doesn't plan on being a one-indication company 10 years from now, though. The biotech has been busy expanding its pipeline and advancing the most promising programs.

The most likely addition to Vertex's lineup in 2030 will be a pain medication. Vertex has already completed phase 2 clinical studies for experimental pain drug VX-150. Chief Medical Officer and soon-to-be CEO ReshmaKewalramanisaid in Vertex's Q3 conference call in October that the company is "advancing multiple selective NaV1.8 inhibitors through late-stage research and early clinical development."

I think that Vertex and its partner CRISPR Therapeutics also have a good chance of launching a few years from now a gene-editing therapy that effectively cures rare blood disorders beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease. The two companies are currently evaluating gene-editing therapy CTX001 in phase 1/2 studies targeting both indications and have reported encouraging preliminary results.

Another indication that could be a big winner for Vertex by the end of this decade is alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD). Like CF, AATD is a rare genetic disease caused by misfolding proteins. Vertex has two experimental AATD drugs in early stage testing. My hunch is that the company's CF expertise combined with the similarity between AATD and CF could boost the odds of success for this program.

Vertex also has an early stage program targeting APOL-1 mediated kidney diseases. The biotech hopes to advance a drug to phase 2 testing this year. If all goes well, this could be yet another new arena for Vertex to dominate by the end of the decade.

Then there's the huge potential game-changer. Vertex acquired privately held Semma Therapeutics for $950 million last year. Semma is developing a drug that could cure type 1 diabetes.

Semma's approach is to turnpluripotent stem cells into islets that produce insulin in the needed amounts to keep blood sugar levels in check. This program is in its very early innings right now. So far, Semma has conducted promising lab tests but hasn't initiated any clinical studies in humans.

Curing type 1 diabetes presents an enormous opportunity for Vertex. Over 1.5 million people have type 1 diabetes in the U.S. alone. Vertex has had its eye on several companies in recent years that have made progress in addressing issues related to islet transplantation to treat type 1 diabetes. The big biotech thinks that Semma has a solution and is confident enough about its prospects to write a really big check to acquire the small drugmaker.

Will Vertex really have successful drugs on the market that target five or more rare genetic diseases in addition to more common indications like pain and type 1 diabetes 10 years from now? There's no way to know for sure. Many promising early stage programs fail along the way.

However, there are some things we can be certain about with Vertex. It claims a commanding lead in CF. It has the expertise needed to develop therapies targeting other rare genetic diseases. It has plenty of money to continue investing in research and development and acquisitions. And it has multiple shots on goal. Not all of them have to pan out for Vertex to win.

My view is that Vertex is the best biotech stock on the market right now. I think that it's future looks really bright.

10 stocks we like better than Vertex PharmaceuticalsWhen investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.*

David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Vertex Pharmaceuticals wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

See the 10 stocks

*Stock Advisor returns as of December 1, 2019

Keith Speights owns shares of AbbVie, Gilead Sciences, and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends CRISPR Therapeutics and Gilead Sciences. The Motley Fool recommends Vertex Pharmaceuticals. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

Continued here:
Where Will Vertex Pharmaceuticals Be in 10 Years? - Nasdaq

Read More...

Page 14«..10..13141516..2030..»


2024 © StemCell Therapy is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) Comments (RSS) | Violinesth by Patrick