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Northwestern researchers call for better survivorship care for cancer patients

, 2025-04-30 00:34:00 More Americans are beating cancer than ever, yet many still grapple with treatment’s long shadow – especially on their mental health. A new Northwestern Medicine study found most head-and-neck cancer survivors who underwent radiation don’t know about “survivorship care,” even as many grapple with side effects such as lingering dry mouth, swallowing…

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More Than Half of Primary Aldosteronism Patients Have HPT

, 2025-04-29 12:00:00 TOPLINE: More than 50% of patients with primary aldosteronism had hyperparathyroidism (HPT), primarily secondary HPT. These patients also exhibited higher rates of atrial fibrillation and hypokalaemia, in addition to experiencing more severe aldosteronism. METHODOLOGY: Researchers in Spain conducted a retrospective multicentric study to examine the prevalence of HPT in patients with primary…

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Novo Nordisk Forms GLP-1 Partnership with Hims & Hers

Marissa Plescia , 2025-04-29 23:23:00 Pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk is teaming up with direct-to-consumer telehealth company Hims & Hers to offer discounted access to Wegovy, a GLP-1 manufactured by Novo Nordisk, the companies announced on Tuesday. Hims & Hers provides treatments for weight, anxiety, sexual health and other conditions. Through the partnership, consumers can now…

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Supreme Court sides with HHS on hospital payment formula

Tara Bannow , 2025-04-29 20:53:00 Tara Bannow covers hospitals, providers, and insurers. You can reach Tara on Signal at tarabannow.70. The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected hospitals’ argument that the federal government doesn’t pay them enough for treating low-income patients. The seven-justice majority instead sided with the Department of Health and Human Services’ interpretation of…

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Too few ward nurses linked to longer hospital stay, readmission, and risk of death

, 2025-04-29 22:30:00 Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Employing too few permanent nurses on hospital wards is linked to longer inpatient stays, readmissions, patient deaths, and ultimately costs more in lives and money, finds a long-term study published online in the journal BMJ Quality & Safety. Redressing the balance is cost-effective, saving an estimated £4,728 for…

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Tailored treatment guided by dual biopsy approach may improve outcomes for patients with advanced cancers

, 2025-04-29 19:32:00 Patients with advanced solid tumors experienced significantly improved survival outcomes when receiving a tailored therapy based on the detection of the same genomic alteration in both tissue and liquid biopsies compared with both standard-of-care treatment and tailored therapy that was based on either biopsy on its own, according to results from the…

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Essential Heart Failure Drugs Remain Underused in the UK

, 2025-04-29 12:00:00 TOPLINE: Despite an increase in prescription rates of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) for patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) in the United Kingdom from 2014 to 2019, half of the eligible patients did not receive the therapy. Older age, sex, and the presence of comorbidities were linked to lower…

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DK Klinik Develops Hair Donor Index After Thousands of Clinical Cases

, 2025-04-29 20:37:00 In a study conducted by an internationally recognised association of hair restoration surgeons, doctors specialising in hair transplantation reported that 6 out of every 100 procedures are corrective surgeries for transplants previously conducted at black market clinics. Considering that not every individual who underwent a transplant at a black market clinic seeks…

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Pregnancy-related proteins in tumors linked to worse survival in female lung cancer patients

, 2025-04-29 20:30:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Lung cancer can co-opt genes that normally help a fetus develop and evade the mother’s immune system. And while these pregnancy-specific glycoproteins (PSGs) can get activated in the cancers of both men and women, female patients had poorer outcomes, a Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) research team…

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FDA Okays Upadacitinib for Giant Cell Arteritis

, 2025-04-29 16:00:00 The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new indication for upadacitinib as a treatment for giant cell arthritis (GCA) in adults. This is the first oral JAK inhibitor indicated for GCA, according to the drug manufacturer AbbVie.  “This FDA approval will now provide an alternative treatment option that can…

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Atropos Health collaborates with Ontada oncology network

, 2025-04-29 17:07:00 Atropos Health, a company that translates real-world clinical data (RWD) into real-world evidence, announced a strategic partnership with Ontada, a McKesson business involved in community oncology. Ontada is connected to The US Oncology Network, a wholly owned subsidiary of McKesson, which delivers real-time data, insights and research on how cancer is treated…

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What’s on the health care policy agenda in Congress

John Wilkerson , 2025-04-29 16:50:00 You’re reading the web edition of D.C. Diagnosis, STAT’s twice-weekly newsletter about the politics and policy of health and medicine. Sign up here to receive it in your inbox on Tuesdays and Thursdays. I finally attended a White House Correspondents’ Dinner after being a reporter in this town for longer than I’d…

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Genetic predisposition to muscle strength linked to lower cardiovascular mortality

, 2025-04-29 17:20:00 A study conducted by the Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, found that men with a genetic predisposition supporting higher muscle strength had a lower risk of dying from cardiovascular diseases, regardless of their leisure-time physical activity levels or other lifestyle-related factors.   Low muscle strength,…

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FDA Approves First One-Time Treatment for RDEB Wounds

, 2025-04-29 17:44:00 Today, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved prademagene zamikeracel cellular sheets (pz-cel, Zevaskyn), the first autologous cell-based gene therapy for treating wounds in adults and children with recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB), a rare, debilitating genetic skin disease. RDEB has no cure, and patients often have large open wounds with…

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How Employers Can Leverage Value-Based Care to Drive Retention and Improved Health Outcomes for Employees

Robert Andrews , 2025-04-29 13:41:00 American workers are currently facing a shifting labor market: with job openings at a four-year low, employees are both seeking stability and bringing an increased level of discernment to potential job changes. But one thing remains consistent. Even in this environment of heightened economic uncertainty, a critical factor determining whether…

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You might be interested in…Heart Failure

Dr Ray O’Connor , 2025-04-29 07:30:00 Dr Ray O’Connor takes a look at the latest clinical articles on the subject of heart failure Heart failure (HF) is a complex and rapidly increasing syndrome, with an estimated prevalence of 1.1–5.5 per cent, accounting for 30 to 64 million people worldwide. In European countries, the median incidence…

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Enhancing Productivity in a Private Practice with Online Support

MNB Guest , 2025-04-29 15:33:00 Running a private medical practice is one of the most difficult tasks. Physicians are faced with a unique combination of clinical responsibilities and administrative burdens, along with coordination of patient care that continuously competes for their time and focus. Under pressure to see more patients, document accurately, and comply with…

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Q&A: Microsoft’s breakthrough AI tool makes it easier to study how proteins are built

, 2025-04-29 15:42:00 Microsoft’s AI for Good Lab has created Seq2Symm, an open-source AI tool that helps scientists determine the 3D shapes of certain proteins, including those found in viruses. Seq2Symm uses AI to predict a protein’s 3D shape and structure from a one-dimensional sequence. The tool could help researchers better understand diseases, develop drugs…

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A look a the health tech exec leading Medicare

Mario Aguilar , 2025-04-29 15:53:00 You’re reading the web edition of STAT’s Health Tech newsletter, our guide to how technology is transforming the life sciences. Sign up to get it delivered in your inbox every Tuesday and Thursday. As of last week, Chris Klomp is in charge of the Center for Medicare. Unlike predecessors, he’s not a policy…

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‘Magic mushrooms’ show promise for improving motor function and mood in Parkinson’s patients

, 2025-04-29 16:09:00 Credit: Marek Piwnicki from Pexels Psilocybin, a natural compound found in certain mushrooms, has shown promise in treating depression and anxiety. UC San Francisco researchers wanted to know if it could be used to help Parkinson’s patients who often experience debilitating mood dysfunction in addition to their motor symptoms and don’t respond…

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Friend or Foe to the Brain?

, 2025-04-29 12:29:00 People of all ages now grow up — and grow old — immersed in digital screens, generating concerns about the potential effects on the brain. On the one hand, researchers warn of “digital dementia” in which excessive use of digital devices, especially among youth and young adults, may lead to cognitive decline…

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The AIQ Imperative: A New Competitive Paradigm for BioPharma

Ram Yalamanchili , 2025-04-29 13:45:00 Artificial intelligence is redrawing the boundaries of what’s possible in drug development. For decades, the pharma business model has been built on delivering human intelligence as a service. Study teams from CROs, sites and sponsors have been the backbone of this system, meticulously managing studies through complex, manual and highly…

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COVID vaccine may help to reduce inflammation in other infections – Irish study

Michael McHale , 2025-04-29 07:30:00 Pfizer-BioNTech inoculation may have broader effects on the immune system, helping to reduce inflammation in a way similar to anti-inflammatory trained immunity, new paper suggests One of the ground-breaking vaccines developed to prevent the worst effects of COVID-19 has also been found to reduce and control inflammation in other infections,…

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Thyroid cancer AI assistant developed in Hong Kong

, 2025-04-29 10:40:00 A large language model-powered AI assistant developed in Hong Kong has demonstrated high accuracy in thyroid cancer staging and risk classification. A team of researchers from the Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine of the University of Hong Kong (HKUMed), the InnoHK Laboratory of Data Discovery for Health, and the London School…

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Cuando los abuelos ya no te reconocen

Paula Span , 2025-04-28 13:23:00 Ocurrió hace más de una década, pero el momento permanece en su memoria. Sara Stewart conversaba con su madre, Barbara Cole, entonces de 86 años, en el comedor de su casa de Bar Harbor, en Maine. Stewart, abogada tenía en ese momento 59 años y estaba haciendo una de sus…

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Platform technology screens millions of drugs and genes to reveal new therapeutic pathways

, 2025-04-29 13:37:00 Credit: CC0 Public Domain Researchers from the University of Adelaide have developed a new technology for drug and functional genomics screenings, which could reshape the way diseases are treated. The technology called dFLASH (dual FLuorescent transcription factor Activity Sensor for Histone-integrated live-cell reporting) is a modular biological pathway sensor which enables identification…

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Hormone therapy boosts heart health markers but raises some risks

, 2025-04-29 08:12:00 Women’s Health Initiative study finds CEE and CEE+MPA improve cholesterol and insulin levels but increase triglycerides and clotting factors. Study: Long-Term Changes to Cardiovascular Biomarkers After Hormone Therapy in the Women’s Health Initiative Hormone Therapy Clinical Trials. Image Credit: Worawee Meepian / Shutterstock.com A recent study published in Obstetrics and Gynecology assesses hormone…

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Sham, Real PT Yield Similar Results for Meniscal Tear + OA

, 2025-04-29 12:57:00 INCHEON, South Korea — A randomized controlled trial of physical therapy (PT) for pain relief in people with meniscal tear and osteoarthritis found no significant difference between sham and standard PT, but both showed slightly greater benefits than home-based exercise, according to a presentation at the World Congress on Osteoarthritis (OARSI) 2025…

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Could A Common Pregnancy Disorder Help Explain Rising ADHD Cases?

, 2025-04-29 07:10:00 While scientists and health experts scramble to find answers for the rising number of ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) cases, a recent study offers clues from an unexpected direction. Researchers now reveal that gestational diabetes, a health issue during pregnancy that is on the rise globally may increase the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in…

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