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News From The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, May 26, 2009
ONCOLOGY: Targeting the more lethal form of the cancer rhabdomyosarcoma
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ZymoGenetics Reports Encouraging Phase 2 Results In Renal Cell Cancer For IL-21 With Nexavar(R)
ZymoGenetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:ZGEN) announced positive final results from a Phase 2 clinical trial in patients receiving 2nd or 3rd line therapy for advanced renal cell carcinoma with the combination of recombinant Interleukin 21 (IL-21) and Nexavar® (sorafenib) tablets. The combination demonstrated considerable clinical benefit, with an overall response rate (as assessed by an independent review) of 21%, a disease control rate of 82%, and progression-free survival (PFS) of 5.7 months in this heavily pretreated population. Results were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting.
News of the day
News Reports Examine Patients Unable To Pay Health Bills In Kenya's "Cash Starved" Hospitals; "Bad Shape" Of Uganda's Facilities
The Los Angeles Times examines several stories of patients too poor to pay their hospital bills in Kenya that were held in a "makeshift patients" prison," until they escape or settle their debt. "Tragically, healthcare horror stories are common in Africa, where developing countries rarely have medical safety nets for the poor. But an increase in cases of cash-starved public hospitals and mortuaries detaining patients and even corpses over unpaid bills is spurring outrage in Kenya," writes the newspaper.
Endocrinology

Prevalence Of Artemisinin Monotherapies Raising Risk Of Resistence

Almost half of all artemisinin manufacturers and malaria-endemic countries are "failing to comply" with WHO requirements to sell the treatment in combination with other drugs, which is increasing the risk that malaria parasites will develop resistance to artemsinin, Nature reports. "Of the 69 manufacturers of artemisinin monotherapies that the WHO has identified, 21 have withdrawn monotherapies, and 14 say they intend to comply with the WHO"s recommendations. But the remaining 34 have not yet disclosed their intentions," Nature writes. Andrea Bosman, an official at the WHO"s Global Malaria Program, said, many manufacturers have not replied to multiple WHO requests for information. In addition, regulatory authorities in 39 of the 76 countries using malaria drugs have either complied or said they intend to comply with the WHO"s recommendations. "Artemisinin and its derivatives are the leading treatments for the disease" and are the only malaria drugs "that have not yet seen widespread resistance in malaria parasites," writes Nature. The WHO will soon publish a briefing about the full scope of the problem and will call for "governments to empower national drug-regulatory authorities to clamp down on offending companies," according to Nature. In January 2006, the WHO recommended that artemisinin be given in combination with other drugs for at least three days to reduce the chances of resistance. Now the need to move away from monotherapies has become "all the more urgent" with recent reports of resistance arising in Cambodia, Nature reports (Butler, 7/14). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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