Groundbreaking treatment for patients with cystic fibrosis
Promising news for patients with cystic fibrosis
2015-05-17
(Press-News.org) Chicago, Illinois, May 17, 2015 -- Treatment with two medications that target the most common genetic cause of cystic fibrosis improves lung function and lowers the rate of pulmonary exacerbations, according to the results from a Phase III international clinical trial published online in the New England Journal of Medicine on May 17, 2015. Combined lumacaftor-ivacaftor therapy was shown to be safe and effective for cystic fibrosis patients with two copies of the cystic fibrosis gene mutation (F508del) found in nearly half of the patients with this disease.
"These groundbreaking findings will benefit around 15,000 patients in U.S. alone," said Susanna McColley, MD, one of the study's authors and Professor of Pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. She also is the Director of the Clinical and Translational Research Program at the Stanley Manne Children's Research Institute, the research arm of Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago.
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease that causes the body to make thick, sticky mucus. In the lungs, the mucus leads to chronic infections and increasing loss of lung function. In the pancreas, the thick mucus keeps enzymes from reaching the gut to digest food. The median life expectancy is 37 years, and available treatments mostly focus on managing symptoms and consequences of the disease.
"While significant progress has been made with supportive therapies for cystic fibrosis, developing treatments that address the underlying genetic cause has been a challenge," said McColley who also is the Associate Director of the Cystic Fibrosis Center at Lurie Children's. "Just a few years ago, ivacaftor became the only FDA-approved drug for the genetic defect in cystic fibrosis, but it only works for genetic mutations found in a small portion of cystic fibrosis patients. Our study showed that combining ivacaftor with lumacaftor helps patients with the most common cystic fibrosis mutation. This is an exciting step forward."
The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial included a total of 1,108 patients, 12 years of age and older, who were treated for 24 weeks in multiple centers.
"We will need more analyses and longer-term data to see if this treatment can alter the disease course and further extend the life expectancy of our patients," said McColley.
The FDA Pulmonary-Allergy Drugs Advisory Committee met on May 12 to consider the results of this study. Final FDA approval is pending.
INFORMATION:
Lurie Children's Cystic Fibrosis Center is the largest cystic fibrosis center in the state and has been an accredited cystic fibrosis care center since 1963 by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
Lurie Children's is one of the top 10 children's hospitals ranked by U.S. News & World Report and is the pediatric teaching arm for Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. It is one of a handful of pediatric hospitals with a research center, Stanley Manne Children's Research Institute, where McColley also serves as the Deputy Director for Clinical Research. She also is Associate Director for Child Health at the Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-05-17
ATS 2015, DENVER - In recent years and months, peanut allergies in children have been in the news frequently, as scientists reveal new insights into why more and more children are developing them and what can be done to avoid them. However, until now, few have studied the connection between peanut allergy and childhood asthma.
A new study has shown that many children who have asthma have a sensitivity to peanuts, but did not know it. Conducted by researchers in the U.S., the study specifically looked at pediatric asthma patients at a pediatric pulmonary clinic.
The ...
2015-05-17
ATS 2015, DENVER--Lung transplant candidates who are about 5'3" or shorter have longer waiting times than taller candidates and are more likely to die within a year while waiting for a lung transplant, according to a study presented at the 2015 American Thoracic Society International Conference.
Shorter adults are also more likely to be placed on mechanical ventilation while they wait for lung transplantation, said lead author Jessica Sell, MPH, of the Columbia University Medical Center in New York.
The researchers retrospectively reviewed information from 13,341 adults ...
2015-05-17
ATS 2015, DENVER -- Caucasian and Hispanic children who undergo lung transplantation appear to be at greater risk for developing chronic kidney disease, or CKD, according to a small retrospective study conducted at Texas Children's Hospital.
The study, believed to be the first to look at CKD in children who have received lung transplants, also found that those children with high levels of tacrolimus, a powerful immunosuppressant given to fight organ rejection, circulating in the blood and those who experience at least one episode of acute kidney injury during their recovery ...
2015-05-17
Washington, DC (May 17, 2015) -- While a new generation of safer, more effective oral medications to treat hepatitis C patients may cost tens of thousands of dollars for a 12-week regiment, investing in these new therapies could generate savings estimated at more than $3.2 billion annually in the U.S. and five European countries, according to a new study (abstract 228) released today at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2015. These savings would have a significant economic impact on society.
The higher cure rate and lessened side-effects of treating patients with an all-oral ...
2015-05-15
The American Cancer Society estimated that 220,800 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed in the United States in 2015. Approximately 27,540 men will die of the disease, accounting for 5 percent of all cancer deaths.
A common treatment for prostate cancer is a prostatectomy, in which all or part of the prostate gland is removed. Recent studies have shown that this procedure is often over-prescribed. As early as 2010, the New England Journal of Medicine reported that such a procedure extended the lives of just 1 patient in 48. Side effects from the surgery, including ...
2015-05-15
We all know intuitively that normal liquids flow more quickly as the channel containing them tightens. Think of a river flowing through narrow rapids.
But what if a pipe were so amazingly tiny that only a few atoms of superfluid helium could squeeze through its opening at once? According to a longstanding quantum-mechanics model, the superfluid helium would behave differently from a normal liquid: far from speeding up, it would actually slow down.
For more than 70 years, scientists have been studying the flow of helium through ever smaller pipes. But only recently ...
2015-05-15
The MODIS instrument on the Aqua satellite captured this image of the Little Bobtail Lake fire in British Columbia, Canada. It is unclear how the fire started and was first spotted on Saturday, May 9. Since then the fire has grown significantly and has burned over 13,000 hectares (32,123 acres) and is zero percent con The wildfire is located about 70 km southwest of Prince George. Eighty people have already been evacuated and close to 700 homes are in danger of being consumed should the fire spread.
British Columbia Wildfire Management reports that the fire is unpredictable ...
2015-05-15
Washington D.C. - Friday, May 15, 2015- Investigators found that nearly half of the 50 chicken meat samples purchased from supermarkets, street markets, and butchers in Austria contained viruses that are capable of transferring antibiotic resistance genes from one bacterium to another--or from one species to another. "Our work suggests that such transfer could spread antibiotic resistance in environments such as food production units and hospitals and clinics," said corresponding author Friederike Hilbert, DVM. The research is published ahead of print May 1, in Applied ...
2015-05-15
At the forefront of a field known as "neurocriminology," Adrian Raine of the University of Pennsylvania has long studied the interplay between biology and environment when it comes to antisocial and criminal behavior. With strong physiological evidence that disruption to the emotion-regulating parts of the brain can manifest in violent outbursts, impulsive decision-making and other behavioral traits associated with crime, much of Raine's research involves looking at biological interventions that can potentially ward off these behavioral outcomes.
A new study by Raine ...
2015-05-15
An article, "Smaller amygdala and medial prefrontal cortex predict escalating stimulant use," published online on May 13 in Brain: A Journal of Neurology has found that individual differences in brain structure could help to determine the risk for future drug addiction. The study found that occasional users who subsequently increased their drug use compared with those who did not, showed brain structural differences when they started using drugs.
In the two studies, researchers, led by Dr. Benjamin Becker, scanned the brain structure of 66 participants to provide the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Groundbreaking treatment for patients with cystic fibrosis
Promising news for patients with cystic fibrosis