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Archive for the ‘Stem Cell Negative’ Category

British boy fighting rare cancer is discharged after coming to Singapore for experimental treatment – CNA

Sunday, April 12th, 2020

SINGAPORE: It was a moment of pure elation for the family of Oscar Saxelby-Lee the six-year-old has finally been discharged from hospital after staying cancer-free for nearly three months.

The British boy has been battling acute lymphoblastic leukaemia since December 2018, and arrived in Singapore forexperimental treatment at the National University Hospital (NUH) that only one other child in the world has received.

Doctors in the UK said that they had exhausted all conventional treatment and that there was only palliative care left for Oscar. Thefamily was told to prepare for the worst.

But after arriving in Singapore in November and starting treatment on Christmas Eve, Oscar has remained MRD (minimal residue disease) negative which means no cancer cells are detected for nearly three months.

He was discharged from hospital on Thursday (Apr 9) and will go back for check-ups every few days.

His mum Olivia told CNA it is the longest period her only son has remained cancer-free since he was diagnosed.

Oscar is defeating the odds. After being told end-of-life care was the only option left for Oscar about eight months ago, he has shown that miracles really do happen, she said.

He is the best he has been in a very long time full of life, living life and enjoying life again.

It has been a huge learning curve, and no doubt will continue to be, but we are grateful. Grateful for this chance, grateful for the team saving Oscars life and also grateful for the experience.

It still feels a little like a dream. We just cant believe it. NUH has saved Oscars life!

NUH TREATMENT WAS OSCARS LAST HOPE

The treatment in Singapore was Oscars last hope. All other treatments had failed to rid him of the cancer - he was still MRD positive after a stem cell transplant and rounds of chemotherapy.

The little boy from Worcester, England flew to Singapore after the family crowdfunded 500,000 (S$885,000) for a new form of treatment, in which immune cells from a patients blood is drawn and equipped with a Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR-T).

The receptor binds itself to a specific protein on the cancer cell and activates the CAR-T cells to kill the cancer cells.

This particular form of CAR-T treatment is different and more difficult because the leukaemia cells resemble Oscars immunity system, Associate Professor Allen Yeoh, head of paediatric oncology at NUH, explained previously.

This is compassionate treatment,which means it is not even in the medical trial stage yet.

By the time he arrived in Singapore, Oscar wasweak from the months in hospital isolation and from battling the rare blood cancer.

He got stronger and doctors started treatment on Christmas Eve. On Jan 15, his parents were told he was MRD negative but that was just the first major step towards a full recovery.

Over the last three months, Oscar has battled several conditions as a result of complications and undergone more surgeries and transplants.

He was diagnosed with both Graft versus host disease (GvHD) and Thrombotic microangiopathy(TMA) that caused him shaking spells, pain and weakness.

"WE NEEDED MUM HERE"

Over the last five months, Oscars family has remained in Singapore far from their loved ones in the UK.

Shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic broke out, Oscars grandmother Oomar travelled to Singapore to be with her grandson.

We needed her with us after such a long haul of trauma. She flew knowing of the risks (of contracting COVID-19) and was very worried, Olivia said.

Oomar completed her 14-day stay-home notice and was allowed to see Oscar just as he was overcoming the worst of the TMA.

This was the moment Oscar saw his grandmother for the first time in months:

Oscars life instantly became better, he was ecstatic, said Olivia.

She has been a huge lift for us all, for me especially as well. We all need our mums at times. An extra pair of hands, loving support and someone else to talk to.

The family will remain in Singapore and keep Oscar isolated at the apartmentwhere they've been staying as his immunity system is still recovering, and he will make frequent trips to outpatient clinics in hospital, his mum said.

He isnt out of the woods yet. Being post-transplant puts him even more at risk, and very vulnerable to not just COVID-19, but any cold or illness, she explained.

Thats nearly a year and a half of complete isolation and even in the future, we will have to be very vigilant.

"SINGAPORE IS AN AMAZING COUNTRY"

With the COVID-19 outbreak affecting countries around the world, including the UK and Singapore, the family will stay in Singapore until Oscar has been given the all-clear to fly home.

We all miss home. We miss our friends, our family, our society, our community, Olivia said.

We are really homesick, but we are safe, and we believe we are in the safest place. Singapore is an amazing country, and we feel privileged to be here, even at this difficult time.

We have met so many wonderful people here, from friends, to medics ... each has been an incredible support for us as a family.

Our lives have changed greatly.

The support has been so heartwarming. The well wishes and prayers truly mean so much to us. We are touched by peoples generosity, care and compassion for us as a family and cannot thank everyone both here and back home enough.

Its been one heck of a journey, and Im sure will continue to be, but the support makes it all that little easier.

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British boy fighting rare cancer is discharged after coming to Singapore for experimental treatment - CNA

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First Two Patients Enrolled in Randomized Phase 2, COVID-19 Trial with Leronlimab; Five More Severely Ill COVID-19 Patients Treated Under Emergency…

Sunday, April 12th, 2020

VANCOUVER, Washington, April 06, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CytoDyn Inc. (OTC.QB: CYDY), (CytoDyn or the Company), a late-stage biotechnology company developing leronlimab (PRO 140), a CCR5 antagonist with the potential for multiple therapeutic indications, announced today that the first two COVID-19 patients have been treated with leronlimab under the Companys Phase 2 randomized clinical trial, which is for patients with mild-to-moderate indications. The Company anticipates that enrollment of more patients will accelerate this week at multiple clinical sites.

In addition, the Companys investigational new drug, leronlimab, has now been administered to 15 severely ill COVID-19 patients at four hospitals, 10 patients treated at a leading medical center in the New York City area and five patients at three other hospitals, all under an emergency investigational new drug (EIND), which were granted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for each individual patient.

CytoDyn also anticipates initiating its other COVID-19 trial this week. This trial is a Phase 2b/3 for severely ill COVID-19 patients and is for 342 patients, double-blinded with a 2:1 ratio (drug to placebo ratio). Patients enrolled in this trial are expected to be administered leronlimab for two weeks, with the primary endpoint being the mortality rate at 14 days. The Company will perform an interim analysis on the data from 50 patients following two weeks of leronlimab therapy.

Bruce Patterson, M.D., Chief Executive Officer and founder of IncellDx, a diagnostic partner and advisor to CytoDyn, commented, We are encouraged by the positive results demonstrated with leronlimab in the New York patients. Our team is working hard to distribute leronlimab to multiple clinical sites to initiate therapy in patients with severe COVID-19 disease. While every patient is experiencing different comorbidities, we are seeing similar clinical responses, which we believe is a reflection of leronlimabs mechanism of action.

Nader Pourhassan, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of CytoDyn, said, Our partnership with the New York medical team and now other hospitals has been exemplary. We are collaborating in every aspect to deliver leronlimab to patients in order to provide proof of concept as soon as possible. The outstanding coordination among the physicians, the hospital administrators, the FDA, and our team, will hopefully help mitigate the deleterious effects from this pandemic should we prove leronlimab as a solution. The lead physician in New York is a true medical hero, who deserves to be recognized for his contribution to humanity in the pandemic of COVID-19. We are very hopeful of sending the day three and day seven results of the first ten EIND patients to the FDA by the end of this week.

About Coronavirus Disease 2019SARS-CoV-2 was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China. The origin of SARS-CoV-2 causing the COVID-19 disease is uncertain, and the virus is highly contagious. COVID-19 typically transmits person to person through respiratory droplets, commonly resulting from coughing, sneezing, and close personal contact. Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some causing illness in people and others that circulate among animals. For confirmed COVID-19 infections, symptoms have included fever, cough, and shortness of breath. The symptoms of COVID-19 may appear in as few as two days or as long as 14 days after exposure. Clinical manifestations in patients have ranged from non-existent to severe and fatal. At this time, there are minimal treatment options for COVID-19.

About Leronlimab (PRO 140) The FDA has granted a Fast Track designation to CytoDyn for two potential indications of leronlimab for deadly diseases. The first as a combination therapy with HAART for HIV-infected patients and the second is for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. Leronlimab is an investigational humanized IgG4 mAb that blocks CCR5, a cellular receptor that is important in HIV infection, tumor metastases, and other diseases, including NASH. Leronlimab has completed nine clinical trials in over 800 people, including meeting its primary endpoints in a pivotal Phase 3 trial (leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients).

In the setting of HIV/AIDS, leronlimab is a viral-entry inhibitor; it masks CCR5, thus protecting healthy T cells from viral infection by blocking the predominant HIV (R5) subtype from entering those cells. Leronlimab has been the subject of nine clinical trials, each of which demonstrated that leronlimab could significantly reduce or control HIV viral load in humans. The leronlimab antibody appears to be a powerful antiviral agent leading to potentially fewer side effects and less frequent dosing requirements compared with daily drug therapies currently in use.

In the setting of cancer, research has shown that CCR5 may play a role in tumor invasion, metastases, and tumor microenvironment control. Increased CCR5 expression is an indicator of disease status in several cancers. Published studies have shown that blocking CCR5 can reduce tumor metastases in laboratory and animal models of aggressive breast and prostate cancer. Leronlimab reduced human breast cancer metastasis by more than 98% in a murine xenograft model. CytoDyn is, therefore, conducting a Phase 1b/2 human clinical trial in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer and was granted Fast Track designation in May 2019.

The CCR5 receptor appears to play a central role in modulating immune cell trafficking to sites of inflammation. It may be crucial in the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) and other inflammatory conditions. Clinical studies by others further support the concept that blocking CCR5 using a chemical inhibitor can reduce the clinical impact of acute GvHD without significantly affecting the engraftment of transplanted bone marrow stem cells. CytoDyn is currently conducting a Phase 2 clinical study with leronlimab to support further the concept that the CCR5 receptor on engrafted cells is critical for the development of acute GvHD, blocking the CCR5 receptor from recognizing specific immune signaling molecules is a viable approach to mitigating acute GvHD. The FDA has granted orphan drug designation to leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD.

About CytoDyn CytoDyn is a late-stage biotechnology company developing innovative treatments for multiple therapeutic indications based on leronlimab, a novel humanized monoclonal antibody targeting the CCR5 receptor. CCR5 appears to play a critical role in the ability of HIV to enter and infect healthy T-cells. The CCR5 receptor also appears to be implicated in tumor metastasis and immune-mediated illnesses, such as GvHD and NASH. CytoDyn has successfully completed a Phase 3 pivotal trial with leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients. CytoDyn plans to seek FDA approval for leronlimab in combination therapy and plans to complete the filing of a Biologics License Application (BLA) in April of 2020 for that indication. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 3 investigative trial with leronlimab as a once-weekly monotherapy for HIV-infected patients. CytoDyn plans to initiate a registration-directed study of leronlimab monotherapy indication. If successful, it could support a label extension. Clinical results to date from multiple trials have shown that leronlimab can significantly reduce viral burden in people infected with HIV with no reported drug-related serious adverse events (SAEs). Moreover, a Phase 2b clinical trial demonstrated that leronlimab monotherapy can prevent viral escape in HIV-infected patients; some patients on leronlimab monotherapy have remained virally suppressed for more than five years. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 2 trial to evaluate leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD and a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial with leronlimab in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. More information is at http://www.cytodyn.com.

Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains certain forward-looking statements that involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Words and expressions reflecting optimism, satisfaction or disappointment with current prospects, as well as words such as believes, hopes, intends, estimates, expects, projects, plans, anticipates and variations thereof, or the use of future tense, identify forward-looking statements, but their absence does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. The Companys forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance, and actual results could vary materially from those contained in or expressed by such statements due to risks and uncertainties including: (i) the sufficiency of the Companys cash position, (ii) the Companys ability to raise additional capital to fund its operations, (iii) the Companys ability to meet its debt obligations, if any, (iv) the Companys ability to enter into partnership or licensing arrangements with third parties, (v) the Companys ability to identify patients to enroll in its clinical trials in a timely fashion, (vi) the Companys ability to achieve approval of a marketable product, (vii) the design, implementation and conduct of the Companys clinical trials, (viii) the results of the Companys clinical trials, including the possibility of unfavorable clinical trial results, (ix) the market for, and marketability of, any product that is approved, (x) the existence or development of vaccines, drugs, or other treatments that are viewed by medical professionals or patients as superior to the Companys products, (xi) regulatory initiatives, compliance with governmental regulations and the regulatory approval process, (xii) general economic and business conditions, (xiii) changes in foreign, political, and social conditions, and (xiv) various other matters, many of which are beyond the Companys control. The Company urges investors to consider specifically the various risk factors identified in its most recent Form 10-K, and any risk factors or cautionary statements included in any subsequent Form 10-Q or Form 8-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, the Company does not undertake any responsibility to update any forward-looking statements to take into account events or circumstances that occur after the date of this press release.

CYTODYN CONTACTSInvestors: Dave Gentry, CEO RedChip Companies Office: 1.800.RED.CHIP (733.2447) Cell: 407.491.4498 dave@redchip.com

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First Two Patients Enrolled in Randomized Phase 2, COVID-19 Trial with Leronlimab; Five More Severely Ill COVID-19 Patients Treated Under Emergency...

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Combination of two drugs better results in treating coronavirus patients: Dr Ata – UrduPoint News

Sunday, April 12th, 2020

ISLAMABAD, (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 12th Apr, 2020 ) :Chairman Task Force of Pakistan Science and Technology, Dr Ata ur Rehman on Sunday said that combination of two drugs would have better results in treating coronavirus patients.

The clinical trials of patients had been carried out in Karachi and Lahore for checking the results of Anti-malarial and Erythromycin drugs, he stated in a ptv programe.

The Americans had tested "Hydroxychloroquine in treatment of patients infected with coronavirus but the result was appearing negative. We hope that in Pakistan, Hydroxychloroquine" plus "Erthromycine" would produce results after treating patients of this spreading virus, he added.

The university of health sciences (UHS), was undergoing testing with some 1100 patients to check the effectiveness of the combination of two drugs, he said. "These are different approaches, where our scientists, experts and pathologists were working, " he said. The Chairman hoped that combination of two drugs would be helpful for patients of coronavirus. To a question about threshold of virus, he said intensity of COVID-19, here was less pernicious as compared to European regions.

The Chairman Task Force said the research was underway in different labs of Pakistan for identifying the stages of mutation. Expressing his view as an eminent scientist, he said some nine mutation were being observed in the virus that had entered into this part of the region from outside.

He said intensity of the virus was not as much higher as in the European countries. To another question, he said that Dr Tahir Shamsi, and his team was working on a project of plasma for treating coronavirus patients.

While Dr S.Shah Nawaz with her team was working on stem cell. The third approach, he said that a pharmaceutical company had acquired a shrub from China and for approval, the summery has been sent to Drugs Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP). About the families of virus, Dr Ata ur Rehman said that we simply called it a third family virus appeared before the world namely COVID-19. He said in the recent history, there was a middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

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Combination of two drugs better results in treating coronavirus patients: Dr Ata - UrduPoint News

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Editorial: Top 10 positive things going on right now – University of Pittsburgh The Pitt News

Wednesday, April 1st, 2020

Sarah Cutshall | Visual Editor

Not leaving home leaves plenty of time to spend with your pets.

Were sure youre up to date with all the bad news thats been circulating. Stocks are down. Schools are closed. People are under orders to stay home, etc. With all the depressing news of the last month or two, were almost certain youve been missing out on some of the good things that have happened around the world. That being said, the editorial board presents you with 10 positive things to briefly distract you from all the negative headlines.

You heard us right, ladies and gents. Jack Black is on TikTok. Whether youre a fan of his or not, this is probably going to be a wild and entertaining ride.

Across the world, people are recovering from COVID-19. Wuhan, China the site of the first outbreak is largely on the mend. Meanwhile, in Italy, a 101-year-old man recovered from the virus and was released from the hospital he was being treated in. Elsewhere, people are making similar recoveries.

Thats right college students who previously barely had time to eat, let alone cook, are now standing in front of the stove with a recipe pulled up on their phone screens. What exactly are we cooking? Well, it seems like the top choice is bread. Our take on this: nothing is more comforting than bread thats fresh out of the oven.

Yeah. That Toxic. On March 20, the one and only Andrew Hozier Byrne covered Toxic by Britney Spears on an Instagram live concert. We dont need to explain why this is positive.

Turns out even a global pandemic cant stop love. A couple in New York City got married in the street while their friend officiated from a fourth-floor window. Similarly, in Pittsburgh, a couple got married on their front porch with their neighbors as witnesses standing six feet away, of course.

Things are looking up, especially when it comes to the weather! As spring comes in, the outside world promises to get warmer and unless youre living in Pittsburgh sunnier.

With many places under orders to stay home, pets are bound to be less lonely. Their owners are at home with them, which is basically what dogs have been dreaming about forever. Cats could probably care less about this news, though they probably dont mind having their owners around to sit on.

Animal shelters have seen a large increase in people interested in fostering pets. This is great for both the pets and the people fostering them as the pets get to live with a family rather than in a shelter, and the family gets to experience the joys of having a pet.

Two years after he received a stem cell treatment to cure HIV, Adam Castillejo is still free from the virus. While doctors say that the treatment he received was high-risk and not a widespread solution, this is still by and large good news hopefully, we are moving towards finding a less invasive and more widely accessible cure.

Since the Montreal Protocol was enacted in 1987, the ozone layer has been on the mend. The protocol phased out numerous ozone depleting substances such as chlorofluorocarbons, and its clear now that this made a positive change for the ozone layer. The atmospheric presence of these substances is declining, allowing the ozone layer to heal itself.

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Editorial: Top 10 positive things going on right now - University of Pittsburgh The Pitt News

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INCYSUS THERAPEUTICS TO PRESENT AT THE NYC SPRING ONCOLOGY INVESTOR CONFERENCE – Yahoo Finance

Wednesday, April 1st, 2020

NEW YORK, March 31, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Incysus Therapeutics, Inc. (Incysus), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on delivering an innovative gamma-delta () T cell immunotherapy for the treatment of cancers, today announced that the Company will present at the 2020 NYC Spring Oncology Investor Conference being held on March 31st and April 1st. William Ho, President and Chief Executive Officer of Incysus Therapeutics, will present a company update. With the on-going COVID-19 concerns, the Companys presentation will be live broadcast over a premier, private, and secure Zoom conference account. Please see below for more information.

About The NYC Oncology Investor ConferenceThe NYC Oncology Investor Conference brings together leading life science and oncology venture capitalists, family offices, lawyers, pharma executives, startup public and private cancer companies and cancer foundations for a discussion on trends, opportunities and risks in oncology investing (www.oncologyinvestorconference.com).

About Incysus Therapeutics, Inc.Incysus is focused on delivering a novel off-the-shelf cell therapy for the treatment of cancer. By using genetically modified gamma-delta () T cells, the Companys technology addresses the challenges that immunotherapies face targeting cold, low mutation cancers. Incysus immuno-oncology programs include activated and gene-modified adoptive cellular therapies that protect cells from chemotherapy and allow novel combinations to disrupt the tumor microenvironment and more selectively target cancer cells. The Companys first clinical program delivering a genetically modified T cell for the treatment of newly diagnosed glioblastoma (GBM) can be found here: (NCT04165941) and its second clinical program with an allogeneic T cell therapy for leukemia and lymphoma patients undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplantation can be found here: (NCT03533816). For more information about the Company and its programs, visitwww.incysus.com.

Forward Looking StatementsCertain statements herein concerning the Companys future expectations, plans and prospects, including without limitation, the Companys current expectations regarding its business strategy, product candidates, and clinical development process and timing, constitute forward-looking statements. The use of words such as may, might, will, should, expect, plan, anticipate, believe, estimate, project, intend, future, potential, or continue, the negative of these and other similar expressions are intended to identify such forward looking statements. Such statements, based as they are on the current expectations of management, inherently involve numerous risks and uncertainties, known and unknown, many of which are beyond the Companys control. Consequently, actual future results may differ materially from the anticipated results expressed in such statements. In the case of forward-looking statements regarding investigational product candidates and continuing further development efforts, specific risks which could cause actual results to differ materially from the Companys current expectations include: scientific, regulatory and technical developments; failure to demonstrate safety, tolerability and efficacy; final and quality controlled verification of data and the related analyses; expense and uncertainty of obtaining regulatory approval, including from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration; and the Companys reliance on third parties, including licensors and clinical research organizations. Do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements included herein, which speak only as of the date hereof and which the Company is under no obligation to update or revise as a result of any event, circumstances or otherwise, unless required by applicable law.

Contact:William HoIncysus Therapeutics, Inc.+1 646.600.6GDTinfo@incysus.comwww.incysus.com

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INCYSUS THERAPEUTICS TO PRESENT AT THE NYC SPRING ONCOLOGY INVESTOR CONFERENCE - Yahoo Finance

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Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: Overview, Treatment, and More

Monday, March 30th, 2020

Triple-negative breast cancer is cancer that tests negative for estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and excess HER2 protein.

These results mean the growth of the cancer is not fueled by the hormones estrogen and progesterone, or by the HER2 protein. So, triple-negative breast cancer does not respond to hormonal therapy medicines or medicines that target HER2 protein receptors. Still, other medicines are used to successfully treat triple-negative breast cancer.

About 10-20% of breast cancers are triple-negative breast cancers. For doctors and researchers, there is intense interest in finding new medications that can treat this kind of breast cancer. Studies are trying to find out whether certain medications can interfere with the processes that cause triple-negative breast cancer to grow.

Cell receptors are special proteins found inside and on the surface of cells. These receptor proteins are the eyes and ears of the cells, receiving messages from substances in the bloodstream and then telling the cells what to do.

Hormone receptors inside and on the surface of healthy breast cells receive messages from the hormones estrogen and progesterone. The hormones attach to the receptors and provide instructions that help the cells continue to grow and function well. Most, but not all, breast cancer cells also have these hormone receptors. Roughly two of three breast cancers test positive for one or both of these hormone receptors. (For a more complete explanation, see the Hormone Receptor Status page.)

A smaller percentage of breast cancers about 20% make too much of the HER2 protein. In normal, healthy breast cells, the HER2 stimulates cell growth. When breast cancer cells have too much of the HER2 protein, however, the cells grow and divide too quickly. (For a more complete explanation, see the HER2 Status page.)

Hormonal therapies and HER2-targeted therapies disrupt the effects of estrogen, progesterone, and the HER2 protein on breast cancer, which can help slow or even stop the growth of breast cancer cells.

About 10-20% of breast cancers test negative for both hormone receptors and excess HER2 in the lab, which means they are triple-negative. Since hormones arent fueling the cancers growth, the cancer is unlikely to respond to hormonal therapy medicines, including tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors. Triple-negative breast cancer also is unlikely to respond to medicines that target the HER2 protein, such as Enhertu (chemical name: fam-trastuzumab-deruxtecan-nxki), Herceptin (chemical name: trastuzumab), Kadcyla (chemical name: T-DMA or ado-trastuzumab emtansine), Nerlynx (chemical name: neratinib), Perjeta (chemical name: pertuzumab), or Tykerb (chemical name: lapatinib).

Three common features of triple-negative breast cancer

Who gets triple-negative breast cancer?

Anyone can be diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer. Still, researchers have found that it is more common in:

If you are diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer

It can be upsetting and scary to find out that youve been diagnosed with a type of breast cancer that is often more aggressive than other types and isnt a good candidate for treatments that target the hormone receptors or HER2 protein.

Still, its important to remember that the lack of hormone receptors and excess HER2 protein are just two factors that you and your doctor will take into consideration when deciding on a treatment plan. The stage and grade of the cancer are also crucial to your prognosis.

Its also important to remember there are therapies available that can treat triple-negative breast cancer.

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Triple-negative breast cancer is typically treated with a combination of surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy.

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy

Research has shown that when triple-negative breast cancer is treated with chemotherapy before surgery what doctors call neoadjuvant chemotherapy and there is a pathologic complete response, disease-free survival and overall survival are better.

One way for doctors to judge the effectiveness of neoadjuvant treatment is to look at the tissue removed during surgery to see if any active cancer cells are present. If no active cancer cells are present, doctors call it a pathologic complete response or pCR.

Disease-free survival is how long a person lives without the cancer recurring. Overall survival is how long a person lives whether or not the cancer recurs.

PARP inhibitors

PARP inhibitors, such as Lynparza (chemical name: olaparib) and Talzenna (chemical name: talazoparib), have been approved to treat advanced-stage HER2-negative breast cancer in people with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation.

The poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) enzyme fixes DNA damage in both healthy and cancer cells. Research has shown that medicines that interfere or inhibit the PARP enzyme make it even harder for cancer cells with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation to fix DNA damage. This makes it harder for the cancer cells to survive. In other words, a PARP inhibitor makes some cancer cells less likely to survive their DNA damage.

Immunotherapy

The immunotherapy medicine Tecentriq (chemical name: atezolizumab) in combination with the chemotherapy medicine Abraxane (chemical name: albumin-bound paclitaxel or nab-paclitaxel) is approved as a first treatment for unresectable locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative, PD-L1-positive breast cancer.

Immunotherapy medicines work by helping your immune system work harder or smarter to attack cancer cells. Tecentriq is an immune checkpoint inhibitor medicine, which means it targets a specific protein that helps cancer cells hide from the immune system, in this case, the PD-L1 protein. By inhibiting PD-L1, Tecentriq essentially allows immune system cells to see the cancer cells and kill them.

You can visit Treatment and Side Effects for more information about surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapies such as PARP inhibitors, and immunotherapy.

Clinical trials using these and other therapies could play a key role in improving the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer. Talk to your doctor if you think you might be interested in taking part in a clinical trial.

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Your Guide to the Breast Cancer Pathology Report is an on-the-go reference booklet you can fill out with your doctor or nurse to keep track of the results of your pathology report. Order a free booklet by mail or download the PDF of the booklet to print it at home.

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Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: Overview, Treatment, and More

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Pros and Cons of Stem Cell Research – ThoughtCo

Monday, March 30th, 2020

Debates over the ethics of embryonic stem cell research have divided scientists, politicians, and religious groups for years.

However, promising developments in other areas of stem cell research have led to solutions that help bypass these ethical barriers and win more support from those against embryonic stem cell research; the newer methods don't require the destruction of blastocysts.

Many parties continue to have strong opinions that trigger ongoing debates about stem cell research, and the following pros and cons provide a snapshot of some the points on each side of the issue.

The excitement about stem cell research is primarily due to the medical benefits in areas ofregenerative medicineand therapeutic cloning. Stem cells provide huge potential for finding treatments and cures to a vast array of medical issues:

Different diseasesincluding cancers, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and morecan be treated with stem cells by replacing damaged or diseased tissue. This can include neurons that might affect neurological diseases and even entire organs that need to be replaced.

There is endless potential for scientists to learn about human growth and cell development from studying stem cells. For example, by studying how stem cells develop into specific types of cells, scientists potentially could learn how to treat or prevent relevant ailments.

One of the areas of potential is embryonic treatment. This stage of pregnancy is when many birth defects or other potential issues begin. Studying embryonic stem cells possibly could lead to a better understanding of how embryos develop and maybe even lead to treatments that can identify and address potential problems.

Because the cells can replicate at a high rate, a limited number of initial cells eventually can grow into a much greater number to be studied or used in treatment.

Medical benefits such as regenerating organ tissue and therapeutic cell cloning

May hold the answer to curing various diseases, including Alzheimer's, certain cancers and Parkinson's

Research potential for human cell growth and development to treat a variety of ailments

Possibility of use for embryonic treatment

Requires only a small number of cells because of the fast replication rate

The difficulty of obtaining stem cells and the long period of growth required before use

Unproven treatments often come with high rejection rates

Cost can be prohibitive for many patients

Ethical controversy over use of stem cells from lab-fertilized human eggs

Additional ethical issues regarding the creation of human tissues in a lab, such as cloning

Stem cell research presents problems like any form of research, but most opposition to stem cell research is philosophical and theological, focusing on questions of whether we should be taking science this far:

It's not easy to obtain stem cells. Once harvested from an embryo, stem cells require several months of growth before they can be used. Obtaining adult stem cells, such as from bone marrow, can be painful.

As promising as the field is, stem cell treatments still are unproven, and they often have high rejection rates.

The cost also can be prohibitive for many patients, with a single treatment costing well into the thousands of dollars, as of 2018.

The use of embryonic stem cellsforresearchinvolves the destruction of blastocysts formed from laboratory-fertilized human eggs. For those who believe that life begins at conception, the blastocyst is a human life, and to destroy it is unacceptable and immoral.

A similar theological problem is an idea of creating living tissue in a laboratory and whether that represents humans taking on the role of God. This argument also applies to the potential for human cloning. For those who believe God created people, the prospect of people creating people is troublesome.

In 1998, the first published research paper on the topic reported that stem cells could be taken from human embryos. Subsequent research led to the ability to maintain undifferentiated stem cell lines (pluripotent cells) and techniques for differentiating them into cells specific to various tissues and organs.

The debates over the ethics of stem cell research began almost immediately in 1999, despite reports that stem cells cannot grow into complete organisms.

In 20002001, governments worldwide were beginning to draft proposals and guidelines to control stem cell research and the handling of embryonic tissues and reach universal policies. In 2001, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) drafted a list of recommendations for stem cell research. In the U.S., the Clinton administration drafted guidelines for stem cell research in 2000. Australia, Germany, the United Kingdom, and other countries followed suit and formulated their own policies.

Debates over the ethics of studying embryonic stem cells continued for nearly a decade until the use of adult-derived stem cellsknown as induced pluripotent stem cells (IPSCs)became more prevalent and alleviated those concerns.

In the U.S. since 2011, federal funds can be used to study embryonic stem cells, but such funding cannot be used to destroy an embryo.

Use of adult-derived stem cellsknown as induced pluripotent stem cells (IPSCs)from blood, cord blood, skin, and other tissues have been demonstrated as effective in treating different diseases in animal models. Umbilical cord-derived stem cells obtained from the cord blood also have been isolated and used for various experimental treatments. Another option is uniparental stem cells. Although these cell lines are shorter-lived than embryonic cell lines, uniparental stem cells hold vast potential if enough research money can be directed that way: pro-life advocates do not technically consider them individual living beings.

Two recent developments from stem cell research involve the heart and the blood it pumps. In 2016, researchers in Scotland began working on the possibility of generating red blood cells from stem cells in order to create a large supply of blood for transfusions. A few years earlier, researchers in England began working on polymers derived from bacteria that can be used to repair damaged heart tissue.

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Kalytera Therapeutics: improving bone marrow transplants with CBD – Health Europa

Monday, March 30th, 2020

The development of bone marrow transplantation procedures is widely considered one of the greatest victories in the war against cancer. The vast majority of bone marrow transplant recipients are patients with various forms of blood cancers, such as leukaemia, lymphoma or multiple myeloma. A real game changer, bone marrow transplantation has boosted survival rates for some blood cancers from nearly zero to over 85%.

Unfortunately, however, patients receiving bone marrow transplants are at high risk of developing Graft versus Host Disease (GvHD), a life-threatening complication that occurs when the transplanted cells from the donor the graft identify the transplant recipient the host as foreign.

This triggers an immune reaction that can wreak havoc in the transplanted patients body as it is attacked by the donated cells. This can occur from just days (in the case of acute GvHD) up to months or years (for chronic GvHD) after the haematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) procedure has taken place.

The mortality rate of acute GvHD is very high in the case of grade 4 GvHD, it is over 90%. The overwhelmingly positive preliminary response of patients to CBD in preventing and treating GvHD shown in early trials, could be the key to significantly decreasing the incidence of this terrible condition.

Before we go on, there is a distinction to be made between a transplant rejection, which occurs when the immune system of the transplant recipient rejects the transplanted tissue, as may be the case in liver or heart transplants, and GvHD, which occurs when the while blood cells in the donors reject the recipient.

There are two types of bone marrow transplant: autologous (from the patients own stem cells) and allogeneic (stem cells from a donor). It is in the latter where GvHD may occur.

GvHD from allogeneic bone marrow transplants can manifest itself in many forms and degrees; ranging from mild, moderate or severe, to potentially fatal for the patient. Acute GvHD can cause rashes and blistering of the skin, nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps accompanied by diarrhoea, jaundice; and may attack the lungs, liver and eyes. It is often associated with chronic illness, infections, disability, reduced quality of life, and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality following HCT.

Researchers estimate that despite aggressive preventive measures with immunosuppressive treatments, 30% to 50% of transplanted patients whose donors were fully matching siblings and 50% to 70% of patients whose donors were unrelated to them develop some level of GvHD.

Though it may sound surprising, currently there are no FDA approved therapies for either the prevention or treatment of acute GvHD.

Enter Kalytera Therapeutics, a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company aiming to develop cannabidiol (CBD) for the treatment of serious diseases. The companys drug development expertise and intellectual property portfolio put it at the forefront in the development of CBD-based medicines for a range of important unmet medical needs. Currently, its resources are being focused mainly on mitigating the effects of GvHD following bone marrow transplantation.

Kalytera Therapeutics lead programme, in which we are evaluating CBD for the prevention and treatment of GvHD, is in late-stage clinical testing. Kalytera Therapeutics have an ongoing open label Phase 2 clinical study to evaluate the pharmacokinetic profile, safety and efficacy of CBD for the prevention of acute GvHD with encouraging preliminary results; we are currently approaching the end of cohort 2. A series of Phase 1 studies requested by the FDA, such as the effect of food intake on the absorption of oral CBD, have also been completed.

At this stage, Kalytera Therapeutics are ready to plan a meeting with the FDA to discuss the possibility of starting a pivotal study later this year. Following the approval of Epidiolex for Dravet Syndrome by GW Pharma, the FDA has encouraged that Kalytera apply for a 505(b)2 regulatory pathway, which provides manufacturers of some types of drugs to apply for FDA approval without performing all the work required in a new drug application.

Kalytera Therapeutics have also received a Fast Track Designation to aid in the development and expedite review of drugs intended for serious or life-threatening disease and addressing an unmet medical need, for the companys CBD products for prevention and treatment of acute GvHD. This could accelerate the approval process for these products.

The obvious first step in attempting to prevent GvHD is to find donor cells that match the genetics of the immune system of the transplant recipient as closely as possible. But even in the ideal case of the donors being a sibling, the patient still must rely on drugs specially developed to cause immunosuppression of the donor cells, through either T-cell depletion or drugs. Treatments usually used for this include methotrexate, cyclosporine, tacrolimus, sirolimus, mycophenolate mofetil and antithymocyte globulin (ATG), as determined by each medical team and institution.

When it comes to treating GvHD, the grafts immune cell activation needs to be suppressed with medication, so that donor-host immune tolerance can be established once again. Most patients are given corticosteroids, which directly suppress the donors immune cell attack on the hosts tissues. This also raises the risk of infection and the relapse of cancer.

As of now, there are guidelines but there is no standard treatment for either prevention or treatment of acute GvHD. Only 30% to 50% of patients with moderate to severe GvHD respond to corticosteroids, leaving many at risk of fatal outcomes. Everyone in the healthcare system should be aware that more research is necessary to discover better treatment options to reduce the rates of mortality and morbidity in transplantation patients.

The programme Kalytera is now implementing is based on previous Phase 2a clinical trials, which showed outstanding preliminary results in the prevention of the disease by giving patients CBD orally. In the first study, 48 patients received CBD for seven days prior to the bone marrow transplant procedure and for 30 days thereafter, as opposed to a group of 101 historical controls who had been given the usual GvHD prophylaxis and treated in the same BMT unit by the same medical team.

Remarkably, results showed none of the 48 patients had developed acute GvHD in the 30 days of treatment with CBD. Those who developed GvHD did so within a median time of 60 days, whereas the control group of 101 historical controls began to develop acute GvHD in a median time of 20 days only (ranging from nine to 137).

In the CBD treated group, the rates of grade 2 to grade 4 acute GvHD by day 100 were 12.1%, compared with 46% in the control. The rate of severe grade 3 to grade 4 was 5%, compared to 10% in the control. Equally important is the finding that CBD was also safe and well tolerated, with no severe adverse events attributed to its consumption. This is consistent with safety data previously reported on CBD administered to humans, even with three to four times higher doses and even when taken over extended periods of time.

In light of these encouraging initial results, it was decided to test the efficacy of a prolonged treatment covering 100 days: the time window in which acute GvHD usually occurs. In a second study, 12 patients were administered CBD at the same dose starting from seven days before the bone marrow transplant procedure until 100 days post-transplantation. No safety issues were observed here either and only one noncompliant patient, representing 8% of the CBD treatment group, developed acute GvHD; compared to a 46% incidence at the same institution in the historical group of 101 patients described above. This is despite the fact that the majority of the patients (10 out of 12) received stem cells from unrelated donors, including five patients who received stem cells from non-fully matched donors, which would normally increase their chance of developing GvHD.

In a third Phase 2a study, which was performed for treatment of already sick patients, 10 patients with acute GvHD, who were refractory to standard treatment with high dose steroids (only 60% of patients respond to first line therapy with high dose steroids), were administered daily doses of CBD for up to three months. Strikingly, nine of the 10 patients enrolled in the study responded to treatment, seven of them achieving complete remission of GvHD and two more achieving a near-complete response.

These results are impressive when we take into account that the 12-month mortality rate among patients with grade 3 and grade 4 GvHD who do not respond to steroids exceeds 60% and 80%, respectively. Indeed, these preliminary results compare favourably with the results of the historical control group of 29 patients with steroid-refractory grades 3 and 4 GvHD, among which 26 patients died from GvHD and its complications.

With a median follow-up period of 13 months, six patients were still alive. Two patients died from leukaemia relapses, and two patients died from GvHD-related infectious complications. No patient deaths were determined to be associated with CBD treatment. This underlines the urgency of developing a product that can prevent and treat GvHD.

On the list of the 10 most expensive medical procedures, allogeneic BMT ranked fourth; while autologous BMT, at less than half the outrageous cost, still made it to the eighth place. Depending on the country and institution, costs range from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars per procedure. The need and incentive to increase the rate of success are indisputable.

The life-saving ability of Kalyteras CBD products for the prevention and treatment of acute GvHD, currently classified as an orphan disease, means the company has good chances of obtaining premium pricing for a course of treatment. Over 20,000 patients suffer from acute GvHD following bone marrow transplantation in the six major markets of the US, Germany, the UK, France, Spain and Japan every year.

According to the January 2018 Market Forecast Report by DelveInsight Perspective, the potential market for a successful drug for prevention and treatment of GvHD in the seven major jurisdictions of the US, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the UK and Japan is estimated to be over $408m in 2018; and could grow to approximately $1.3bn by 2027.

Once Kalyteras CBD products are approved by the FDA, the company believes that treating physicians would not be expected to prescribe anything other than its approved formulation of CBD (as opposed to a non-approved CBD that might be available online or from other commercial sources), especially since patients are often in isolation in the intensive care unit. It is safe to assume that neither private insurance nor government provided healthcare reimbursement would be available for non-prescription generic CBD in the jurisdictions where Kalytera intends to market its CBD product.

Conducting proper, large scale clinical trials with CBD is of utmost importance. Although in some areas CBD seems to be generally safe in the broader healthy population, it can be harmful to some groups, such as young adults, women of childbearing age, pregnant women, children, people with known heart conditions or low blood pressure, and the elderly.

Despite all the hype about the multiple health benefits of cannabis-based products trumpeted by many (though not clearly stated due to possible risks of liabilities for unsubstantiated claims), so far only one CBD-based drug has received FDA approval for the treatment of two rare and serious types of epilepsy.

Contrary to popular belief and anecdotal evidence, CBD is not a biologically inert compound. Rather, CBD has a complex pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profile similar to any other medication with the potential to interact with other medications and medical conditions. CBD is metabolised in the liver by enzymes responsible for metabolising a large percentage of other drugs. When taken concomitantly, CBD may reduce or neutralise the intended action of those other medications. Kalytera has completed drug to drug interaction testing in vitro and is now planning to start testing in healthy subjects.

CBD oil can have negative side effects too, such as drowsiness, drop in blood pressure when taken in large doses, being potentially harmful for people with low blood pressure. Other problems are dizziness or light-headedness, appetite changes, diarrhoea, hormonal changes, hypokinesia and resting tremor when used for epilepsy. In psychotic disorders it has side effects too, but they are milder than on other drugs used until today. It can benefit some Parkinsons patients, but not all of them.

Kalytera has a solid, experienced leadership team and very strong intellectual property portfolio. We have three issued US and European patents covering the use of CBD in the prevention and treatment of GvHD, as well as four orphan drug designations for the treatment and prevention of GvHD in the US and Europe.

Our promising preliminary results indicate we will be able to help BMT patients and their donated bone marrow get along better. This will greatly improve patients quality of life, productivity and life expectancy by keeping them GvHD free.

Dr Sari SagivStero Biotechs+972 36176173david@sela.co.il

Please note: Kalytera Therapeutics Inc. have recently acquired Stero Biotechs.

This article will appear in the second issue ofMedical Cannabis Network which will be available to read in April 2020.

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Leronlimab Used in Seven Patients with Severe COVID-19 Demonstrated Promise with Two Intubated Patients in ICU, Removed from ICU and Extubated with…

Monday, March 30th, 2020

VANCOUVER, Washington, March 27, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CytoDyn Inc. (OTC.QB: CYDY), (CytoDyn or the Company"), a late-stage biotechnology company developing leronlimab (PRO 140), a CCR5 antagonist with the potential for multiple therapeutic indications, announced today the three-day results post-leronlimab treatment of the first four patients under an Emergency Investigational New Drug (EIND) granted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). A total of seven patients have been enrolled thus far under EIND in the same leading medical center in the New York City area.

The treatment with leronlimab is targeted as a therapy for patients who experience respiratory complications as a result of contracting SARS-CoV-2 causing the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). Leronlimab is believed to provide therapeutic benefit by enhancing the immune response while mitigating the cytokine storm that leads to morbidity and mortality in these patients.

Bruce Patterson, M.D., Chief Executive Officer and founder of IncellDx, a diagnostic partner and advisor to CytoDyn, said, IncellDx has developed specific companion diagnostic tests to determine the efficacy and dosing of leronlimab in these severe cases of COVID-19. We found that patients with severe COVID-19 disease are in the midst of immunologic chaos which includes the cytokine storm. Our companion diagnostics showed that after three days of therapy, the immune profile in these patients approached normal levels and the levels of cytokines involved in the cytokine storm were much improved.

Jacob Lalezari, M.D., Interim Chief Medical Officer of CytoDyn, commented, These preliminary results give hope that leronlimab may help hospitalized patients with COVID-19 recover from the pulmonary inflammation that drives mortality and the need for ventilators. A leading medical center in the heart of the New York City epidemic was instrumental in giving the preliminary data.

Nader Pourhassan, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of CytoDyn said: We are extremely pleased for the coronavirus patients under the care of the treating medical team and that the FDA is so responsive to advance our Phase 2 clinical trial. I am very hopeful that leronlimab can help to reduce the rate of mortality among COVID-19 patients with severe symptoms of ARDS and to assist our government to fight this battle.

About Coronavirus Disease 2019SARS-CoV-2 was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China. The origin of SARS-CoV-2 causing the COVID-19 disease is uncertain, and the virus is highly contagious. COVID-19 typically transmits person to person through respiratory droplets, commonly resulting from coughing, sneezing, and close personal contact. Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some causing illness in people and others that circulate among animals. For confirmed COVID-19 infections, symptoms have included fever, cough, and shortness of breath. The symptoms of COVID-19 may appear in as few as two days or as long as 14 days after exposure. Clinical manifestations in patients have ranged from non-existent to severe and fatal. At this time, there are minimal treatment options for COVID-19.

About Leronlimab (PRO 140) The FDA has granted a Fast Track designation to CytoDyn for two potential indications of leronlimab for deadly diseases. The first as a combination therapy with HAART for HIV-infected patients and the second is for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.Leronlimab is an investigational humanized IgG4 mAb that blocks CCR5, a cellular receptor that is important in HIV infection, tumor metastases, and other diseases, including NASH.Leronlimab has completed nine clinical trials in over 800 people, including meeting its primary endpoints in a pivotal Phase 3 trial (leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients).

In the setting of HIV/AIDS, leronlimab is a viral-entry inhibitor; it masks CCR5, thus protecting healthy T cells from viral infection by blocking the predominant HIV (R5) subtype from entering those cells. Leronlimab has been the subject of nine clinical trials, each of which demonstrated that leronlimab could significantly reduce or control HIV viral load in humans. The leronlimab antibody appears to be a powerful antiviral agent leading to potentially fewer side effects and less frequent dosing requirements compared with daily drug therapies currently in use.

In the setting of cancer, research has shown that CCR5 may play a role in tumor invasion, metastases, and tumor microenvironment control. Increased CCR5 expression is an indicator of disease status in several cancers. Published studies have shown that blocking CCR5 can reduce tumor metastases in laboratory and animal models of aggressive breast and prostate cancer. Leronlimab reduced human breast cancer metastasis by more than 98% in a murine xenograft model. CytoDyn is, therefore, conducting aPhase 1b/2 human clinical trial in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer and was granted Fast Track designation in May 2019.

The CCR5 receptor appears to play a central role in modulating immune cell trafficking to sites of inflammation. It may be crucial in the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) and other inflammatory conditions. Clinical studies by others further support the concept that blocking CCR5 using a chemical inhibitor can reduce the clinical impact of acute GvHD without significantly affecting the engraftment of transplanted bone marrow stem cells. CytoDyn is currently conducting a Phase 2 clinical study with leronlimab to support further the concept that the CCR5 receptor on engrafted cells is critical for the development of acute GvHD, blocking the CCR5 receptor from recognizing specific immune signaling molecules is a viable approach to mitigating acute GvHD. The FDA has granted orphan drug designation to leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD.

About CytoDynCytoDyn is a late-stage biotechnology company developing innovative treatments for multiple therapeutic indications based on leronlimab, a novel humanized monoclonal antibody targeting the CCR5 receptor. CCR5 appears to play a critical role in the ability of HIV to enter and infect healthy T-cells.The CCR5 receptor also appears to be implicated in tumor metastasis and immune-mediated illnesses, such as GvHD and NASH. CytoDyn has successfully completed a Phase 3 pivotal trial with leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients. CytoDyn plans to seek FDA approval for leronlimab in combination therapy and plans to complete the filing of a Biologics License Application (BLA) in the first quarter of 2020 for that indication. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 3 investigative trial with leronlimab as a once-weekly monotherapy for HIV-infected patients. CytoDyn plans to initiate a registration-directed study of leronlimab monotherapy indication. If successful, it could support a label extension. Clinical results to date from multiple trials have shown that leronlimab can significantly reduce viral burden in people infected with HIV with no reported drug-related serious adverse events (SAEs). Moreover, a Phase 2b clinical trial demonstrated that leronlimab monotherapy can prevent viral escape in HIV-infected patients; some patients on leronlimab monotherapy have remained virally suppressed for more than five years. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 2 trial to evaluate leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD and a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial with leronlimab in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. More information is atwww.cytodyn.com.

Forward-Looking StatementsThis press releasecontains certain forward-looking statements that involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Words and expressions reflecting optimism, satisfaction or disappointment with current prospects, as well as words such as believes, hopes, intends, estimates, expects, projects, plans, anticipates and variations thereof, or the use of future tense, identify forward-looking statements, but their absence does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. The Companys forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance, and actual results could vary materially from those contained in or expressed by such statements due to risks and uncertainties including: (i)the sufficiency of the Companys cash position, (ii)the Companys ability to raise additional capital to fund its operations, (iii) the Companys ability to meet its debt obligations, if any, (iv)the Companys ability to enter into partnership or licensing arrangements with third parties, (v)the Companys ability to identify patients to enroll in its clinical trials in a timely fashion, (vi)the Companys ability to achieve approval of a marketable product, (vii)the design, implementation and conduct of the Companys clinical trials, (viii)the results of the Companys clinical trials, including the possibility of unfavorable clinical trial results, (ix)the market for, and marketability of, any product that is approved, (x)the existence or development of vaccines, drugs, or other treatments that are viewed by medical professionals or patients as superior to the Companys products, (xi)regulatory initiatives, compliance with governmental regulations and the regulatory approval process, (xii)general economic and business conditions, (xiii)changes in foreign, political, and social conditions, and (xiv)various other matters, many of which are beyond the Companys control. The Company urges investors to consider specifically the various risk factors identified in its most recent Form10-K, and any risk factors or cautionary statements included in any subsequent Form10-Q or Form8-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, the Company does not undertake any responsibility to update any forward-looking statements to take into account events or circumstances that occur after the date of this press release.

CYTODYN CONTACTSInvestors: Dave Gentry, CEORedChip CompaniesOffice: 1.800.RED.CHIP (733.2447)Cell: 407.491.4498dave@redchip.com

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Two Additional Coronavirus Patients Treated at Leading New York Hospital with CytoDyn’s Leronlimab, Bringing the Total to Four Patients – Associated…

Tuesday, March 24th, 2020

VANCOUVER, Washington, March 23, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CytoDyn Inc. (OTC.QB: CYDY), (CytoDyn or the Company), a late-stage biotechnology company developing leronlimab (PRO 140), a CCR5 antagonist with the potential for multiple therapeutic indications, announced today that the third and fourth coronavirus patients were treated with the Companys investigational new drug, leronlimab. The treatment of the third patient occurred on Friday and the fourth coronavirus patient was treated on Saturday. These patients are under the care of the same leading medical center in the New York City area that treated the first and second patients.

The treatment with leronlimab is being administered under an emergency IND recently granted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The treatment with leronlimab is intended to serve as a therapy for patients who experience respiratory complications as a result of contracting SARS-CoV-2 causing the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Bruce Patterson, M.D., CEO of IncellDx, a diagnostic partner and advisor to CytoDyn, said, IncellDx has developed specific companion diagnostic tests to determine the efficacy and dosing of leronlimab in these severe cases of COVID-19. We believe that leronlimab acts by enhancing the immune response while mitigating the cytokine storm that leads to morbidity and mortality in these patients.

Nader Pourhassan, Ph.D., president and chief executive officer of CytoDyn said, We are encouraged that the onsite medical team is reporting no safety issues and our team continues to be responsive and supportive in any way we can.

About Coronavirus Disease 2019SARS-CoV-2 was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China. The origin of SARS-CoV-2 causing the COVID-19 disease is uncertain and it is unclear how easily the virus spreads. COVID-19 is thought to be transmitted person to person through respiratory droplets, commonly resulting from coughing, sneezing and close personal contact. Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some causing illness in people and others that circulate among animals. For confirmed COVID-19 infections, symptoms have included fever, cough and shortness of breath. It is believed that symptoms of COVID-19 may appear in as few as two days or as long as 14 days after exposure, and that symptoms in patients have ranged from non-existent to severe and fatal. At this time, there are very limited treatment options for COVID-19.

About Leronlimab (PRO 140) The FDA has granted a Fast Track designation to CytoDyn for two potential indications of leronlimab for deadly diseases. The first as a combination therapy with HAART for HIV-infected patients, and the second is for metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. Leronlimab is an investigational humanized IgG4 mAb that blocks CCR5, a cellular receptor that is important in HIV infection, tumor metastases, and other diseases including NASH. Leronlimab has successfully completed nine clinical trials in over 800 people, including meeting its primary endpoints in a pivotal Phase 3 trial (leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients).

In the setting of HIV/AIDS, leronlimab is a viral-entry inhibitor; it masks CCR5, thus protecting healthy T cells from viral infection by blocking the predominant HIV (R5) subtype from entering those cells. Leronlimab has been the subject of nine clinical trials, each of which demonstrated that leronlimab can significantly reduce or control HIV viral load in humans. The leronlimab antibody appears to be a powerful antiviral agent leading to potentially fewer side effects and less frequent dosing requirements compared with daily drug therapies currently in use.

In the setting of cancer, research has shown that CCR5 plays an important role in tumor invasion and metastasis. Increased CCR5 expression is an indicator of disease status in several cancers. Published studies have shown that blocking CCR5 can reduce tumor metastases in laboratory and animal models of aggressive breast and prostate cancer. Leronlimab reduced human breast cancer metastasis by more than 98% in a murine xenograft model. CytoDyn is, therefore, conducting a Phase 1b/2 human clinical trial in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer and was granted Fast Track designation in May 2019. Additional research is being conducted with leronlimab in the setting of cancer and NASH with plans to conduct additional clinical studies when appropriate.

The CCR5 receptor appears to play a central role in modulating immune cell trafficking to sites of inflammation and may be important in the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) and other inflammatory conditions. Clinical studies by others further support the concept that blocking CCR5 using a chemical inhibitor can reduce the clinical impact of acute GvHD without significantly affecting the engraftment of transplanted bone marrow stem cells. CytoDyn is currently conducting a Phase 2 clinical study with leronlimab to further support the concept that the CCR5 receptor on engrafted cells is critical for the development of acute GvHD and that blocking this receptor from recognizing certain immune signaling molecules is a viable approach to mitigating acute GvHD. The FDA has granted orphan drug designation to leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD.

About CytoDyn CytoDyn is a biotechnology company developing innovative treatments for multiple therapeutic indications based on leronlimab, a novel humanized monoclonal antibody targeting the CCR5 receptor. CCR5 appears to play a key role in the ability of HIV to enter and infect healthy T-cells. The CCR5 receptor also appears to be implicated in tumor metastasis and in immune-mediated illnesses, such as GvHD and NASH. CytoDyn has successfully completed a Phase 3 pivotal trial with leronlimab in combination with standard antiretroviral therapies in HIV-infected treatment-experienced patients. CytoDyn plans to seek FDA approval for leronlimab in combination therapy and plans to complete the filing of a Biologics License Application (BLA) in the first quarter of 2020 for that indication. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 3 investigative trial with leronlimab as a once-weekly monotherapy for HIV-infected patients and plans to initiate a registration-directed study of leronlimab monotherapy indication, which if successful, could support a label extension. Clinical results to date from multiple trials have shown that leronlimab can significantly reduce viral burden in people infected with HIV with no reported drug-related serious adverse events (SAEs). Moreover, results from a Phase 2b clinical trial demonstrated that leronlimab monotherapy can prevent viral escape in HIV-infected patients, with some patients on leronlimab monotherapy remaining virally suppressed for more than five years. CytoDyn is also conducting a Phase 2 trial to evaluate leronlimab for the prevention of GvHD and a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial with leronlimab in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer. More information is at http://www.cytodyn.com.

Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains certain forward-looking statements that involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Words and expressions reflecting optimism, satisfaction or disappointment with current prospects, as well as words such as believes, hopes, intends, estimates, expects, projects, plans, anticipates and variations thereof, or the use of future tense, identify forward-looking statements, but their absence does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. The Companys forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance, and actual results could vary materially from those contained in or expressed by such statements due to risks and uncertainties including: (i) the sufficiency of the Companys cash position, (ii) the Companys ability to raise additional capital to fund its operations, (iii) the Companys ability to meet its debt obligations, if any, (iv) the Companys ability to enter into partnership or licensing arrangements with third parties, (v) the Companys ability to identify patients to enroll in its clinical trials in a timely fashion, (vi) the Companys ability to achieve approval of a marketable product, (vii) the design, implementation and conduct of the Companys clinical trials, (viii) the results of the Companys clinical trials, including the possibility of unfavorable clinical trial results, (ix) the market for, and marketability of, any product that is approved, (x) the existence or development of vaccines, drugs, or other treatments that are viewed by medical professionals or patients as superior to the Companys products, (xi) regulatory initiatives, compliance with governmental regulations and the regulatory approval process, (xii) general economic and business conditions, (xiii) changes in foreign, political, and social conditions, and (xiv) various other matters, many of which are beyond the Companys control. The Company urges investors to consider specifically the various risk factors identified in its most recent Form 10-K, and any risk factors or cautionary statements included in any subsequent Form 10-Q or Form 8-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, the Company does not undertake any responsibility to update any forward-looking statements to take into account events or circumstances that occur after the date of this press release.

CYTODYN CONTACTSInvestors: Dave Gentry, CEO RedChip Companies Office: 1.800.RED.CHIP (733.2447) Cell: 407.491.4498 dave@redchip.com

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Lessons from cancer patients in the time of coronavirus – Fred Hutch News Service

Friday, March 20th, 2020

SCCA psychiatrist Dr. Nicole Bates, who splits her time between patients with cancer and those without, said uncertainty can either demoralize or empower people. Some cancer patients, she said, become depressed or anxious, while others develop incredible resilience.

So many of us are grappling with the initial affront and lack of control, she said, regarding the current crisis. Ive been struck by how my patients find strength through uncertainty, how they use it to crystallize priorities for living each day.

Fred Hutch psychologist and patient outcomes researcher Dr. Salene Jones described resilience as the ability to adapt to stressful events.

A person can be sad, unhappy or stressed, and still, ultimately, be resilient, she said, pointing to resiliency tips recently published by the American Psychological Association. Resilience is not the absence of feeling stressed but finding a way to cope with it. Its OK to be a mess sometimes. Just not all the time.

Cancer patients have also been staying connected, while apart, for years.

#BCSM (short for breast cancer social media) holds weekly Twitter chats, drawing patients and survivors from around the world. Ditto for other patient communities on Twitter, including for brain cancer, lung cancer, pancreatic cancer and many more. People living with disease also regularly gather in closed Facebook groups or vast online patient communities like Inspire, Smart Patients, Colontown and others to ask for advice, grouse about side effects and gain strength from others.

Its easy to become isolated and lonely, said Renee Kaiman, a 38-year-old metastatic breast cancer patient and mother of two from Toronto, Canada. Right now, its good to reach out to people via FaceTime or have phone calls. Try to do things you enjoy to keep your mood up.

Staying connected with yourself is also key, especially when dealing with isolation and angst.

This is a great time to explore creative projects, to listen to music, to try new recipes theyve never tried before, Kleinhofer said. We cant control whats happening right now, but we can control how we respond to it. Things may seem crazy but every day theres something to be thankful for. Find what makes you happy and focus on that, whether its family or friends or the sound of birds chirping outside. And if you start to spin out of control, thats when yoga, meditation and mindfulness can come into play.

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Stem Cell-Derived Cells Value Projected to Expand by 2019-2025 – 3rd Watch News

Friday, March 20th, 2020

In this new business intelligence Stem Cell-Derived Cells market report, PMR serves a platter of market forecast, structure, potential, and socioeconomic impacts associated with the global Stem Cell-Derived Cells market. With Porters Five Forces and DROT analyses, the research study incorporates a comprehensive evaluation of the positive and negative factors, as well as the opportunities regarding the Stem Cell-Derived Cells market.

With having published myriads of Stem Cell-Derived Cells market reports, PMR imparts its stalwartness to clients existing all over the globe. Our dedicated team of experts deliver reports with accurate data extracted from trusted sources. We ride the wave of digitalization facilitate clients with the changing trends in various industries, regions and consumers. As customer satisfaction is our top priority, our analysts are available 24/7 to provide tailored business solutions to the clients.

Request Sample Report @ https://www.persistencemarketresearch.co/samples/28780

The Stem Cell-Derived Cells market report has been fragmented into important regions that showcase worthwhile growth to the vendors Region 1 (Country 1, Country 2), region 2 (Country 1, Country 2) and region 3 (Country 1, Country 2). Each geographic segment has been assessed based on supply-demand status, distribution, and pricing. Further, the study provides information about the local distributors with which the Stem Cell-Derived Cells market players could create collaborations in a bid to sustain production footprint.

key players in stem cell-derived cells market are focused on generating high-end quality cardiomyocytes as well as hepatocytes that enables end use facilities to easily obtain ready-made iPSC-derived cells. As the stem cell-derived cells market registers a robust growth due to rapid adoption in stem cellderived cells therapy products, there is a relative need for regulatory guidelines that need to be maintained to assist designing of scientifically comprehensive preclinical studies. The stem cell-derived cells obtained from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) are initially dissociated into a single-cell suspension and later frozen in vials. The commercially available stem cell-derived cell kits contain a vial of stem cell-derived cells, a bottle of thawing base and culture base.

The increasing approval for new stem cell-derived cells by the FDA across the globe is projected to propel stem cell-derived cells market revenue growth over the forecast years. With low entry barriers, a rise in number of companies has been registered that specializes in offering high end quality human tissue for research purpose to obtain human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) derived cells. The increase in product commercialization activities for stem cell-derived cells by leading manufacturers such as Takara Bio Inc. With the increasing rise in development of stem cell based therapies, the number of stem cell-derived cells under development or due for FDA approval is anticipated to increase, thereby estimating to be the most prominent factor driving the growth of stem cell-derived cells market. However, high costs associated with the development of stem cell-derived cells using complete culture systems is restraining the revenue growth in stem cell-derived cells market.

The global Stem cell-derived cells market is segmented on basis of product type, material type, application type, end user and geographic region:

Segmentation by Product Type

Segmentation by End User

The stem cell-derived cells market is categorized based on product type and end user. Based on product type, the stem cell-derived cells are classified into two major types stem cell-derived cell kits and accessories. Among these stem cell-derived cell kits, stem cell-derived hepatocytes kits are the most preferred stem cell-derived cells product type. On the basis of product type, stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes kits segment is projected to expand its growth at a significant CAGR over the forecast years on the account of more demand from the end use segments. However, the stem cell-derived definitive endoderm cell kits segment is projected to remain the second most lucrative revenue share segment in stem cell-derived cells market. Biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies followed by research and academic institutions is expected to register substantial revenue growth rate during the forecast period.

North America and Europe cumulatively are projected to remain most lucrative regions and register significant market revenue share in global stem cell-derived cells market due to the increased patient pool in the regions with increasing adoption for stem cell based therapies. The launch of new stem cell-derived cells kits and accessories on FDA approval for the U.S. market allows North America to capture significant revenue share in stem cell-derived cells market. Asian countries due to strong funding in research and development are entirely focused on production of stem cell-derived cells thereby aiding South Asian and East Asian countries to grow at a robust CAGR over the forecast period.

Some of the major key manufacturers involved in global stem cell-derived cells market are Takara Bio Inc., Viacyte, Inc. and others.

The report covers exhaustive analysis on:

Regional analysis includes

Report Highlights:

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Readers can get the answers of the following questions while going through the Stem Cell-Derived Cells market report:

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

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Magenta Therapeutics Inc (NASDAQ:MGTA) Expected to Post Earnings of -$0.61 Per Share – Redmond Register

Friday, March 20th, 2020

Equities research analysts predict that Magenta Therapeutics Inc (NASDAQ:MGTA) will announce ($0.61) earnings per share (EPS) for the current fiscal quarter, according to Zacks. Zero analysts have issued estimates for Magenta Therapeutics earnings. The lowest EPS estimate is ($0.68) and the highest is ($0.57). Magenta Therapeutics reported earnings of ($0.44) per share in the same quarter last year, which suggests a negative year over year growth rate of 38.6%. The business is expected to report its next earnings results on Thursday, May 14th.

On average, analysts expect that Magenta Therapeutics will report full-year earnings of ($2.17) per share for the current year, with EPS estimates ranging from ($2.25) to ($2.13). For the next fiscal year, analysts anticipate that the business will post earnings of ($1.90) per share, with EPS estimates ranging from ($2.13) to ($1.58). Zacks Investment Researchs EPS calculations are an average based on a survey of research analysts that follow Magenta Therapeutics.

Magenta Therapeutics (NASDAQ:MGTA) last issued its quarterly earnings data on Tuesday, March 3rd. The company reported ($0.59) EPS for the quarter, missing the Zacks consensus estimate of ($0.58) by ($0.01).

In other news, insider John C. Davis, Jr. sold 11,294 shares of the stock in a transaction on Thursday, January 2nd. The stock was sold at an average price of $15.04, for a total value of $169,861.76. Following the completion of the transaction, the insider now owns 19,598 shares of the companys stock, valued at $294,753.92. The transaction was disclosed in a document filed with the SEC, which is available at the SEC website. Also, insider Jason Gardner sold 11,200 shares of the stock in a transaction on Friday, January 10th. The stock was sold at an average price of $15.25, for a total value of $170,800.00. Following the completion of the transaction, the insider now directly owns 251,212 shares of the companys stock, valued at approximately $3,830,983. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. In the last three months, insiders sold 25,391 shares of company stock valued at $384,406. Company insiders own 10.90% of the companys stock.

Several large investors have recently added to or reduced their stakes in the company. Bank of Montreal Can boosted its stake in Magenta Therapeutics by 57.3% during the fourth quarter. Bank of Montreal Can now owns 2,652 shares of the companys stock valued at $40,000 after buying an additional 966 shares in the last quarter. Bank of New York Mellon Corp boosted its stake in Magenta Therapeutics by 5.0% during the fourth quarter. Bank of New York Mellon Corp now owns 62,868 shares of the companys stock valued at $953,000 after buying an additional 2,985 shares in the last quarter. Citigroup Inc. boosted its stake in Magenta Therapeutics by 248.7% during the fourth quarter. Citigroup Inc. now owns 6,876 shares of the companys stock valued at $104,000 after buying an additional 4,904 shares in the last quarter. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co NY bought a new position in Magenta Therapeutics during the third quarter valued at about $76,000. Finally, Ikarian Capital LLC bought a new position in Magenta Therapeutics during the fourth quarter valued at about $131,000. 65.41% of the stock is owned by institutional investors.

Shares of MGTA opened at $6.70 on Friday. The company has a market cap of $391.31 million, a P/E ratio of -3.27 and a beta of 2.77. The stock has a fifty day moving average price of $11.43 and a 200 day moving average price of $11.87. Magenta Therapeutics has a 12 month low of $6.18 and a 12 month high of $21.00.

About Magenta Therapeutics

Magenta Therapeutics, Inc, a clinical-stage biotechnology company, develops novel medicines to extend the curative power of stem cell transplant, gene therapy, genome editing, and cell therapy to patients. It is developing C100, C200, and C300 targeted antibody-drug conjugates for transplant conditioning; MGTA-145, a novel stem cell mobilization product candidate to control stem cell mobilization; MGTA-456, an allogeneic stem cell therapy to control stem cell growth; E478, a small molecule aryl hydrocarbon receptor antagonist for the expansion of gene-modified stem cells; and G100, an antibody-drug conjugate program to prevent acute graft and host diseases.

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China reports new progress in drug, therapies against Covid-19 – The Star Online

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

BEIJING: China has completed the clinical research of Favipiravir, an antiviral drug that has shown good clinical efficacy against the Covid-19 (coronavirus) outbreak, according to an official on Tuesday (March 17).

Favipiravir, the influenza drug which was approved for clinical use in Japan in 2014, has shown no obvious adverse reactions in the clinical trial, said Zhang Xinmin, director of the China National Center for Biotechnology Development under the Ministry of Science and Technology, at a press conference.

More than 80 patients have participated in the clinical trial in The Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, including 35 patients taking Favipiravir and 45 patients on a control group.

Results showed that patients receiving Favipiravir treatment turned negative for the virus in a shorter time compared with patients in the control group.

A multi-centred randomised clinical study led by the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University also suggested that the therapeutic effect of Favipiravir is much better than that of the control group.

Favipiravir has been recommended to medical treatment teams and should be included in the diagnosis and treatment plan for Covid-19 as soon as possible, Zhang said.

A Chinese pharmaceutical company has been approved by the National Medical Products Administration to mass-produce the drug and ensure stable supply, Zhang added.

China is also pushing forward the utilization of some advanced technologies such as stem cell and artificial liver and blood purification in the treatment of severe cases.

Zhang said stem cell therapy proves effective in reducing severe inflammatory reactions caused by Covid-19, as well as reducing lung injury and pulmonary fibrosis in patients.

China has initiated several clinical research programs on stem cell therapy against Covid-19, including a stem cell drug that has been approved for clinical trial and a mesenchymal stem cell therapy.

Stem cell therapy has been used to treat 64 patients in severe and critical condition. Those patients' breathing difficulties were gradually relieved and they were generally cured in eight to 10 days.

The therapy also showed advantages in preventing pulmonary fibrosis and improving the long-term prognosis for patients.

The Chinese Society for Cell Biology and the Chinese Medical Association have jointly issued a guideline to standardize the clinical research and application of stem cell therapy against Covid-19.

Zhang said China is trying to use artificial liver and blood purification technology to treat critically ill patients. Patients receiving this treatment have seen reduced levels of inflammatory factors and improvement in chest imaging.

Their time on ventilator support has been decreased by an average of 7.7 days and the required ICU monitoring time has been shortened. - Xinhua/Asian News Network

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Back to the drawing board for triple-negative breast cancer targets, researchers propose new combo approach – Endpoints News

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

The reason why triple-negative breast cancer is such a tough disease to treat is largely given away in its name. Such tumors cant be defined by traditional biomarkers neither estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, nor excess HER2 protein forcing drug hunters down uncharted new pathways.

Researchers at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center explored one of them, and turned up with some new suggestions.

In a new paper, the scientists began with the observation that deregulated MYCN a member of the transcription factor family that activates expression of some oncogenes has been implicated in a subset of breast cancers with unfavorable prognostic features and clinical outcomes. They ended by putting forth a new drug regimen that could spark new hope.

Given that patients with TNBC primarily receive systemic cytotoxic chemotherapies that frequently result in unfavorable outcomes, they wrote in Science Translational Medicine, we propose the clinical development of combination BETi and MEKi for patients with advanced TNBC, with parallel evaluation of MYCN as a potential marker for patient selection.

Johanna Schafer, a graduate student working in Jennifer Pietenpols lab, is the first author, while the professor is the senior author.

The MYCN protein, sometimes dubbed N-Myc, has long been studied as a target in neuronal or neuroendocrine tumors, but its role in breast cancer is less clear. Its distinct from MYC (c-Myc), though the two are believed to affect each other.

Their intricate relationship would prove crucial in therapeutic development. But the first question is just how common they are, and according to the study, the two family members are heterogeneously expressed in separate cell nuclei within a given tumor in at least 40% of TNBC tumors. In fact, the expression of MYCN appeared to increase after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, part of the current standard of care.

The prevalence gave them enough reason to think about how to target it. When the team selected a cell line model, they had another finding that MYCN-expressing cells were essentially more prone to resistance to PI3K inhibitors, which block an alternative pathway for tumor growth.

Because the MYC family lack catalytic domains, the team resorted to epigenetic regulators, screening 158 compounds against the cell lines. BET drugs, which block the bromodomain (BRD)-containing family of transcriptional regulators, emerged as the winner.

It echoes an earlier study, done at Michigan State University, showing that the experimental class of molecules can prevent the growth of breast and lung cancers.

But thats not it and heres where the MEK inhibitors come in.

Most of the MYNC-expressing TNBCs also contain MYC-expressing cells, the researchers noted, which can still drive cancer growth. In fact, single-agent treatment with a BETi seemed to have increased MYC expression. Adding trametinib (Mekinist) to the cells, however, decreased the amount of both proteins. The results were further tested and confirmed in mouse models.

As a next step, our research team is proposing the further development and clinical trials of this combination therapy, Pietenpol, the director of Vanderbilt-Ingram and EVP for research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said in a statement.

Incyte, which has a pact in place to fund Vanderbilt research such as this study, has a BET inhibitor in early development.

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Splanchnic Vein Thrombosis at Presentation of Polycythemia Vera or Essential Thrombocythemia Associated With Increased Mortality – Hematology Advisor

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

Patients with splanchnic vein thrombosis (SVT) as a presenting condition of polycythemia vera (PV) or essential thrombocythemia (ET) had a higher risk of death compared with those without SVT at the time of PV or ET diagnosis, according to results of a retrospective study published in Annals of Hematology.

The Philadelphia chromosome-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), including PV, ET, and primary myelofibrosis (PMF), are a group of hematopoietic stem cell disorders that result in an overproduction of red blood cells, white cells, and/or platelets. All 3 of these conditions are characterized by an increased risk of thrombosis, a major cause of morbidity in patients with these diseases.

Rarely,patients with MPN present with thrombosis in splanchnic veins, which supplyblood to the gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen, and pancreas.

Resultsof previous studies have shown that patients with MPN presenting with SVT aremore likely to be younger and to have disease characterized by specificfeatures, such as a slower rate of disease progression. These findings suggest thatPV and ET in patients presenting with SVT may be a biologically distinct entityassociated with a specific natural history.

In this study, 113 patients with SVT at theinitial presentation of PV or ET were identified in 2 Spanish registries thatincluded 1831 and 1304 patients with PV and ET, respectively, as well as aseparate registry of 926 patients with MPN. The remaining patients with PV orET (n=3587), including those patients who developed SVT following diagnosis ofMPN, comprised the control group. The primary study outcome was survival, withsecondary outcomes including thrombosis,bleeding, disease progression, and second cancer.

Genotypinginformation, available for nearly 90% of cases and controls showed that JAK2 and CALR mutations were detectable in 97% and 2% of cases, and 87% and9% of controls, respectively. In addition MPLmutations were detected in 1.5% of controls.

Themedian ages of patients of the cases and controls were 42 years and 65 years,respectively (P =.0001). Thosepresenting with SVT were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with PVcompared with ET or an unclassified MPN (P<.0001), and to have lower hemoglobin levels (P =.0004), and higher leukocyte (P =.0004), and lower platelet counts (P =.0004) at diagnosis.

This article originally appeared on Oncology Nurse Advisor

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A Second Person Has Been Cured of HIV – Nerdist

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

Although most of the news from the world of health and medicine has been quite bleak lately, there are still major strides being made in the sector in an effort to combat the worst illnesses that plague humankind. One such stride was just announced, and its certainly worth celebrating: A second person has been cured of HIV.

In a study published in the medical journal, The Lancet, which comes via Medical News Daily, researchers in London say theyve been able to cure a patient of HIV; meaning the patient tested negative for HIV for an extended period of time (30 months as of March, 2020) despite the lack of antiretroviral therapy.

The person whos been cured, Adam Castillejo, was formerly known only as the London patient in order to protect his identity. But Castillejo, who lives in London, came forward recently, and said that he aims to be an ambassador of hope.

The first person to be cured of HIV, Timothy Ray Brown, an American known originally as the Berlin patient, revealed his identity in 2010, saying that I wanted to do what I could to make [a cure] possible. My first step was releasing my name and image to the public. Brown lived and was treated in Berlin. Incidentally, he is technically the second Berlin patient because the results from treatment of the first one are debatable.

AIDS Policy Project with Timothy Ray Brown (third from left with sunglasses). Griffin Boyce.

Castillejo, as well as Brown, were cured of HIV not by antiretroviral medications, which are often able to drastically mitigate the effects, and transmission rate of, HIV, but rather by stem cell transplants from donor bone marrow. Both Castillejo and Brown hadand may still have, that is unclearcancer along with HIV, and were treated with the stem cell transplants primarily to tackle the former disease. (It seems in Castillejos case doctors and researchers were hoping to cure both simultaneously.)

Both Brown and Castillejo underwent a procedure known as a Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (or HSCT), which involves injecting bone marrow stem cells from a donor, whos often times a parent or sibling, into the recipients bloodstream. Castillejos HSCT treatment was different from Browns, as well as many others, because it was performed with cells that expressed the CCR5 gene.

A video from the MD Anderson Cancer Center that gives a brief outline of how bone marrow stem cell transplants work.

In Castillejos case, stem cells with genomes that express the CCR5 gene were selected because of the fact that it allows for the production of the CCR5 protein: a protein that makes people far more resistant to HIV-1, which accounts for the vast majority of global HIV infections.

While Castillejo received stem cells that did express the CCR5 gene, Brown did notat least according to the study in The Lancet. In fact, according to a 2017 article in New Scientist (which says that Brown received cells with a mutated CCR5 gene, rather than an unexpressed CCR5 gene), some experts believe the curing of Browns HIV was actually due to a potential side effect of his procedure, known as graft-versus-host disease. According to New Scientist, these experts believe that the donor cells attacked Browns native, HIV-infected immune cells, subsequently killing off the virus.

In Castillejos case, on the other hand, it seems there was no graft-versus-host issue that could account for his diminishment of HIV infection levels beyond whats expected to be detectable. Instead, the authors of the study say that one of the implications here is that the Long-term remission of HIV-1 can be achieved utilizing these kinds of cells. The authors also say this method does not require total body irradiation, which would usually be required in cases like these to weaken a recipients immune system in order to allow them to accept donor cells.

An HIV-infected T cell. NIAID

Unfortunately, it seems the treatment that cured Castillejo of HIV is a nonstarter when it comes to mass deployment. There are fatal side effects associated with HSCT, with host-versus-graft chief among them, and doctors say that it should only be performed when there are no other options left.

Prof. Ravindra Kumar Gupta from the University of Cambridge in the U.K., the lead author of the study, told Medical News Daily that [Its] important to note that this curative treatment is high risk and only used as a last resort for patients with HIV who also have life threatening hematological [blood] malignancies.

But Gupta and the other authors of the study still appear to be optimistic that this stands as a proof-of-concept for the idea of using CCR5 gene editing to cure HIV on a larger scale. They warn in their study, however, that several barriers, including the need for increased gene editing efficiency and a lack of robust safety data, still stand in the way of something that could be used as a scalable strategy for tackling HIV.

What do you think about this method of treating HIV? Do you think gene editing will play a big role in curing HIV, or do you think there are other, more promising treatments worth pursuing instead? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Feature image: C. Goldsmith / Eliot Lash

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Coronavirus tests stepped up to stop exodus of frontline NHS staff – HeraldScotland

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

Testingfor coronavirus will be ramped up amid criticism that NHS staff are being lost from the frontline over potentially harmless coughs, while private clinics report being inundated by people who can afford to pay for swab checks.

The Scottish Government says some Covid-19 testing on healthcare workers has already started at a local level anda national approach is being developed which will scale up these initial efforts.

It comes amid speculation that a new four-hour test could be made available in Britain.

Scotland reported its third coronavirus death on Wednesdayand First Minister Nicola Sturgeon confirmed schools across Scotland would close by the end of this week as a result of new advice from Government scientists.

They will also close in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Ms Sturgeon said many schools had reached a point where they have lost too many staff to continue as normal and would not necessarily reopen after Easter, or even before the summer holidays.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said schools and nurseries across the UK would be expected to accommodate vulnerable children or the children of critical workers, such as NHS staff and police during the closure, with free school meals continuing to be provided to all eligible youngsters.

He added that exams would not go ahead as planned in May or June, but that pupils would get the qualifications they deserve.

Earlier Mr Johnson told the House of Commons the number of tests that can be carried out each day for coronavirus will be increased from 5,000 to 10,000, with a goal to expand it to 25,000 per day in England within four weeks.

North of the Border, there are three NHS laboratories currently processing tests and the Scottish Government is working with a range of partners to increase capacity to exceed 2,000 tests per day in the coming weeks.

A number of options to expand that further, and as quickly as possible, are being explored.

The Prime Minister said: We are prioritising testing of NHS staff for the obvious reason that we want them to be able to look after everybody else with confidence that theyre not transmitting the disease, and this country is actually far ahead of many other comparable countries in testing huge numbers of people.

It comes as a coronavirus test that reveals who has had Covid-19 but not shown symptoms is close to becoming available in a move being hailed as a game-changer.

The Governments chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, said Public Health Englands (PHE) work on the antibody test is progressing very fast, and will provide valuable insight into the pandemic.

Mr Johnson said: The great thing about having a test to see whether youve had it is suddenly a green light goes on above your head and you can go back to work safe and confident in the knowledge that you are most unlikely to get it again.

So for an economic point of view, from a social point of view, it really could be a game-changer.

You can really see the potential of that advance, which, as I say, is coming down the track.

Sir Patrick added: It is a gamechanger. And the reason its a gamechanger is that it allows you to understand the proportion of the asymptomatic population whos had this disease, but hasnt had symptoms.

Going forward its going to be critically important to be able to monitor this disease well because only by being able to monitor it can we start relaxing measuresagain.

The Scottish Government is increasing community surveillance by enabling 200 GP practices, representing a population of 1.2 million, to test patients for the virus.

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman has also promised to roll out testing to frontline NHS staff so that they do not self-isolate unnecessarily.

However, there has been criticism from medics that the process has been too slow and has left key services understaffed at a time when demand is soaring.

Glasgow GP Margaret McCartney tweeted: Our workload has increased 30-40 per cent in last two days.

I know everyone is very busy but a negative test in a symptomatic person would surely allow us to have a hope of functioning?

British Medical Association Scotland chairman Dr Lewis Morrison said: The impact Covid-19 will have on the NHS could be huge. Frontline workers will be working in very different ways and we will need every pair of hands we can possibly get at this time.

That is why it is essential for NHS staff to be tested for the virus if they suspect they have it.

The Scottish Government has assured us this will happen and we now need to see the details of how staff can access testing as soon as possible, to minimise the number of NHS staff who would otherwise be self-isolating.

Professor Michael Griffin, president of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh, said: The recommendation from the UK Government on Monday that pregnant women should self-isolate, as well as a 14-day isolation of those who have been exposed to family members with symptoms, though understandable, has already put a huge pressure on the NHS workforce.

Thats why its absolutely imperative that healthcare workers are tested for Covid-19 to confirm whether they are infected in order to help prevent the unnecessary exclusion of essential NHS staff at the frontline when the epidemic hits its peak.

A test is available for 375 at the Private Harley Street Clinic in London.

Mark Ali, a doctor at the clinic, said it had been inundated with requests for the test, which can be couriered to and from a client for them to take swabs from their own nose and throat.

Mr Ali said: We are testing lords and ladies, knights, and even doctors and dentists who are worried about catching the disease.

As of March 12, the UK had tested just under 30,000 people more than any other European nation except Italy, which had tested 86,000 and Russia which had tested 80,000.

The US had tested fewer than 14,000 in official Centre for Disease Control (CDC) laboratories, compared to 250,000 in South Korea.

Scotland has carried out 6,091 tests to date. US firm ThermoFisher held talks this week with the Prime Minister, HealthSecretary Matt Hancock, Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty, Chief Scientific Advisor Sir Patrick Vallance and representatives from Boots, Amazon and pharmaceutical giant Roche.

The firm is believed to have been demonstrating its four-hour testing kit which has been approved for use in the US.

The UK death toll from the virus has reached 104 exceeding 100 for the first time and the number of new cases is accelerating, with 676 new cases confirmed yesterday.

Organisers announced that the Glastonbury music festival and Eurovision Song Contest would not go ahead due to the coronavirus outbreak, with filming also suspended temporarily on BBC soaps including Eastenders and Casualty.

It comes as Chinas top coronavirus expert has warned that herd immunity will not contain the global pandemic because the disease is highly infectious and lethal.

Dr Zhong Nanshan, Chinas senior medical adviser, said: We dont yet have the evidence to prove that if you are infected once, you would be immune for life.

Clinical trials for potential vaccines are under way in China and the US, but is not expected to be ready until at least 2021.

Meanwhile, an antiviral drug used in Japan to treat influenza has shown potential to speed recovery from the novel coronavirus that causes Covid-19. The drug, called called Favipiravir or Avigan, was tested on 340 people in China who had been diagnosed with Covid-19.

Half tested negative for the virus within four days of being given the drug compared to 11 days for the patients not on the antiviral.

Lung conditions were also shown in X-rays to have improved in 91 per cent of participants.

There were also claims in China that patients could be cured using stem cell therapy.

Dr Dongcheng Wu, a doctor and stem cell expert based in Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, said he had successfully treated nine patients who were hospitalised with novel coronavirus pneumonia.

All nine reportedly made a full recovery following stem cell transplants and conventional treatment. Dr Wu said: Yes, it is a cure but it is still very early in the process.

It came as Italy recorded 475 coronavirus deaths in a single day the highest 24-hour spike for any country since the infection emerged in China.

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Heres how 3D printing could help fight this aggressive type of cancer – TechRadar

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

A 3D printer has been used to isolate stem cells from one of the most aggressive types of breast cancer, in a bid to develop a drug which can help in the fight against that particular cancer.

This breakthrough comes from a team of researchers at the University of Girona in Spain, who employed the BCN3D Sigma 3D printer in order to make three-dimensional scaffolds which replicate the structures found in human tissues.

The aforementioned triple negative breast cancer which affects young women is highly aggressive and even after treatment using chemotherapy or radiotherapy, tumor cells still remain in the body.

As a result, one of the most dangerous facets of this cancer is its high relapse rate, and the idea is the 3D scaffolds are used to separate the stem cells which are responsible for causing those relapses so that they can be studied in the laboratory.

And the hope is that could lead to the development of a drug which can exclusively attack those cells, without damaging other parts of the body, therefore avoiding the danger of a relapse after treatment.

Dr Teresa Puig, one of the researchers involved in the project, noted that with triple negative breast cancer, relapses happen with 20% to 30% of patients, and they occur within three to four years.

Before the 3D printing technology became involved, the researchers had been producing cell cultures two-dimensionally, but this technique didnt allow the cells to be effectively separated.

Now that isolation can be achieved, close investigation of the stem cells will hopefully find the bio-indicators responsible for the tumors, and a suitable drug along the aforementioned lines can then be developed.

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Heres how 3D printing could help fight this aggressive type of cancer - TechRadar

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For the second time in the world, an HIV patient is cured – Medical Progress – Medical Progress

Wednesday, March 18th, 2020

An HIV patient recovered with a stem cell transplant. He became the second patient in the world to recover from this disease.

an HIV patient who received a stem cell transplant is now cured. He has become the second patient in the world to recover from the disease, his doctors announced Tuesday, March 10.

Almost ten years after the first confirmed case of an HIV patient who managed to get rid of it, this second case, known as the London patient, has shown no signs of the virus for 30 months, according to the results published in the journal The Lancet HIV.

In March 2019, Professor Ravindra Gupta, of the University of Cambridge, announced that this man diagnosed with HIV in 2003 was in remission, having shown no sign of the virus for 18 months. The doctor had however called for caution, insisting on the term of remission and not healing, asking for more time.

We suggest that our results represent a cure for HIV

A year later, his team took this step. We suggest that our results represent a cure for HIV, they write, after testing samples of blood, tissue, sperm. We tested a fairly considerable number of places where the virus likes to hide and practically everything was negative, apart from a few fossil remains of non-active virus, Pr Gupta told AFP. It is hard to imagine that all traces of a virus that infects billions of cells have been eliminated, he said.

Like the Berlin patient, the American Timothy Ray Brown considered cured in 2011, this London patient underwent a bone marrow transplant to treat blood cancer, and thus received stem cells from donors carrying a rare genetic mutation that prevents HIV from taking hold, CCR5.

Scientists point out that the procedure used for the two recovered patients is very cumbersome and risky, asking ethical questions, as Professor Gupta points out.

Is the London patient really healed? Asked Sharon Lewin of the University of Melbourne. The data () is of course exciting and encouraging, but in the end, only time will tell, she noted, saying it would take more than a handful of HIV-cured patients to assess the likelihood of a late and unexpected resumption of virus replication .

Almost 38 million people are living with HIV worldwide, but only 62% are receiving triple therapy. Nearly 800,000 people died in 2018 from HIV-related conditions. The emergence of drug-resistant forms of HIV is also a growing concern.

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For the second time in the world, an HIV patient is cured - Medical Progress - Medical Progress

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