PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New psoriasis drug is more effective than current treatment

Treatment leaves more of normal immune system intact

2015-07-09
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO --- A phase II clinical trial led by Northwestern Medicine investigators shows that a new psoriasis drug called guselkumab has greater efficacy than the current standard of care for the chronic skin condition.

In the study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, investigators compared guselkumab to adalimumab, the most common medication currently used to treat psoriasis.

"Research like this study is leading to a series of new medications that promise high levels of response for an increasing number of patients," said first author Kenneth Gordon, MD, professor in Dermatology. "The possibility of getting almost all patients nearly clear and able to live their lives without the burden of this disease impacting them every day is getting close to reality."

Psoriasis is an immune-mediated disease that causes itchy, dry and red skin. It also increases a patient's risk for depression, heart disease and diabetes, among other conditions. The disease affects nearly 3 percent of the world's population, according to the World Psoriasis Day consortium, but about half of all patients with psoriasis do not get any treatment, Dr. Gordon said.

"For patients, the concept that psoriasis is 'just something you live with' is no longer appropriate," he said. In the multi-center trial, 293 adult patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis (defined as covering 10 percent or more of the body) were randomly assigned to receive varying doses of one of the two drugs or a placebo over 52 weeks.

At weeks 16 and 40, efficacy of the drugs was measured on a scale of 0 to 5. A significantly higher proportion of patients in the guselkumab group had a score of 0 (cleared psoriasis) or 1 (minimal psoriasis) in both the short and long term periods compared to the adalimumab and placebo groups. At week 40, for example, 81 percent of patients taking a 200-mg dose of guselkumab had a score of 0 or 1, compared to 49 percent of patients taking adalimumab.

The new drug works by blocking a protein specifically implicated in psoriasis, called interluekin 23; older drugs affect the immune process more generally.

"Building on multiple layers of clinical and basic research, we are changing our understanding of how psoriasis works," Dr. Gordon said. "By doing so, we are able to build new treatments that specifically target the immunological processes of psoriasis while leaving even more of the normal immune system intact."

An ongoing phase III trial is continuing to test the safety and efficacy of guselkumab as a psoriasis treatment.

INFORMATION:

This study was supported by Janssen Research and Development, the manufacturer of guselkumab. Dr. Gordon is a former paid consultant for Janssen Research and Development.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Cost of low-risk childbirth varies widely among hospitals

Cost of low-risk childbirth varies widely among hospitals
2015-07-08
The cost of having a baby can vary by almost $10,000 depending on which hospital is chosen, Yale School of Medicine researchers have found in a study published in the July issue of the journal Health Affairs. Childbirth is the leading cause of hospital admission in the United States, but there has been little research on the cost of delivery in hospitals across the country. To seek some answers, the Yale research team, led by Xiao Xu, assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences at Yale School of Medicine, studied data from the ...

New study showed spawning frequency regulates species population networks on coral reefs

New study showed spawning frequency regulates species population networks on coral reefs
2015-07-08
MIAMI - New research on tropical coral reef ecosystems showed that releasing larvae more often is beneficial for a species' network. The study on reproductive strategies is critical to assess the conservation of coral reef ecosystems worldwide. Researchers from the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science used a computer model developed by UM Rosenstiel School scientist Claire Paris, known as the Connectivity Modeling System to track larval movements of three distinct reef species - the Carribean sea plume (Anthiellogorgia elisebeathae), ...

Disrupting cells' 'powerhouses' can lead to tumor growth, Penn study finds

2015-07-08
Cancer cells defy the rules by which normal cells abide. They can divide without cease, invade distant tissues and consume glucose at abnormal rates. Now a study by University of Pennsylvania researchers implicates defects in mitochondria, the energy-production centers of cells, as playing a key role in the transition from normal to cancerous. When the Penn scientists disrupted a key component of mitochondria, otherwise normal cells took on characteristics of cancerous tumor cells. The research is published in the journal Oncogene and was led by members of the lab of ...

New database documents submarine landslides

2015-07-08
Boulder, Colo., USA - Submarine landslides, also known as mass transport deposits (MTDs), are common in marine environments and pose risks to coastal communities and offshore infrastructure. This new 332-point database presented by Lorena Moscardelli and Lesli Wood is drawn from studies of multiple MTDs around the world. Understanding these MTDS, they write, will help determine the extent of ancient submarine landslides and contribute to the development geo-models for forecasting future submarine slides. FEATURED ARTICLE Morphometry of mass transport deposits as a predictive ...

Stratospheric accomplice for Santa Ana winds and California wildfires

Stratospheric accomplice for Santa Ana winds and California wildfires
2015-07-08
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Southern Californians and writers love to blame the hot, dry Santa Ana winds for tense, ugly moods, and the winds have long been associated with destructive wildfires. Now, a new study finds that on occasion, the winds have an accomplice with respect to fires, at least: Natural atmospheric events known as stratospheric intrusions, which bring extremely dry air from the upper atmosphere down to the surface, adding to the fire danger effects of the Santa Anas, and exacerbating some air pollution episodes. The findings suggest that forecast models with ...

Common hormone could help treat breast cancer

2015-07-08
AROUND half of all breast cancer patients could one day benefit from having the cheap and widely-available female hormone progesterone added to their treatment, according to Cancer Research UK funded research published in Nature today (Thursday)*. Tumours fuelled by the female hormone oestrogen are treated with drugs like tamoxifen to block oestrogen receptors, which cause cancer cells to grow. Women whose tumours have progesterone receptors as well are known to have a better outlook. But for decades scientists have been unable to pinpoint why. Scientists at Cancer ...

This week from AGU: Ice cave collapse, learning geoscience and 4 new research papers

2015-07-08
From a Glacier's Perspective Big Four glacier & ice caves, WA: a short future? Early summer melting led to the collapse of Washington ice caves, the death of one person, and the injury of five others. Mauri Pelto asks questions about the future of Washington's Big Four glacier on his blog From a Glacier's Perspective. Eos.org Learning geoscience by doing geoscience A pilot project helps teachers bring scientific practice into the classroom. New research papers Response of the Amazon carbon balance to the 2010 drought derived with CarbonTracker South America, ...

Bonelike 3-D silicon synthesized for potential use with medical devices

Bonelike 3-D silicon synthesized for potential use with medical devices
2015-07-08
Researchers have developed a new approach for better integrating medical devices with biological systems. The researchers, led by Bozhi Tian, assistant professor in chemistry at the University of Chicago, have developed the first skeleton-like silicon spicules ever prepared via chemical processes. "Using bone formation as a guide, the Tian group has developed a synthetic material from silicon that shows potential for improving interaction between soft tissue and hard materials," said Joe Akkara, a program director in the National Science Foundation materials research ...

New tropical depression forms and moves into central Pacific Ocean

New tropical depression forms and moves into central Pacific Ocean
2015-07-08
Tropical Depression 4E formed in the Eastern Pacific and crossed the 140 West longitude line as of the 0300 UTC time, which brought it into the Central Pacific Ocean. NOAA's GOES-West satellite captured an infrared image of the depression at 0900 UTC (5 a.m. EDT) on July 8 that showed the large storm in the Central Pacific. At 8 p.m. PDT/11 p.m. EDT on July 7, (0300 UTC on July 8), the center of newly formed Tropical Depression Four-E was located near latitude 15.4 North, longitude 140.2 West. The depression was moving toward the west-northwest near 17 mph (28 kph) and ...

Hybrid cells cause chaos around cancers

Hybrid cells cause chaos around cancers
2015-07-08
Rice University researchers have built a simulation to show how cancerous tumors manipulate blood-vessel growth for their own benefit. Like all cells, those in tumors need access to the body's fine network of blood vessels to bring them oxygen and carry away waste. Tumors have learned to game the process called angiogenesis in which new vessels sprout from existing ones, like branches from a tree. But some details have been hidden until now. The ability to stop tumors through anti-angiogenesis is one goal of cancer therapy. The new work by scientists at Rice's Center ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Terrestrial biodiversity grows with tree cover in agricultural landscapes

Experts call for AED placement on every commercial aircraft to boost in-flight cardiac arrest survival rates from 6% to up to 70%

“Proton‑iodine” regulation of protonated polyaniline catalyst for high‑performance electrolytic Zn‑I2 batteries

Directional three‑dimensional macroporous carbon foams decorated with WC1−x nanoparticles derived from salting‑out protein assemblies for highly effective electromagnetic absorption

Tropical Australian study sets new standard for Indigenous-led research

Invitation to co-edit a special issue on intelligent additive manufacturing

Success in measuring nano droplets, a new breakthrough in hydrogen, semiconductor, and battery research​

Shopping for two is stressful

Micro/nano‑reconfigurable robots for intelligent carbon management in confined‑space life‑support systems

Long-term antidepressant use surges in Australia, sparking warnings of overprescribing

To bop or to sway? The music will tell you

Neural network helps detect gunshots from illegal rainforest poaching

New evidence questions the benefit of calcium supplements in pregnancy for preventing pre-eclampsia

A molecular ‘reset button’ for reading the brain through a blood test

Why do some lung transplant patients face higher rejection risk?

New study offers a glimpse into 230,000 years of climate and landscape shifts in the Southwest

Gender-specific supportive environment key to cutting female athletes’ injury risks

Overreliance on AI risks eroding new and future doctors’ critical thinking while reinforcing existing bias

Eating disorders in mums-to-be linked to heightened risk of asthma and wheezing in their kids

Global study backs mandatory strength warm-ups for female athletes

Global analysis: Nearly one in five child deaths linked to growth failure

Flood risks in delta cities are increasing, study finds

New strategic support for UK clean industry with £2 million funding boost

Night workers face inequalities in pay, health, safety and dignity

Black carbon from wheat straw burning shown to curb antibiotic resistance spread in farmlands with plastic mulch residues

SCAI and CRT announce partnership to advance interventional cardiology education, advocacy, and research

Mindfulness may help people disconnect from their smartphones

Event aims to unpack chaos caused by AI slop

Tracking forever chemicals across food web shows not all isomers are distributed equally

November research news from the Ecological Society of America

[Press-News.org] New psoriasis drug is more effective than current treatment
Treatment leaves more of normal immune system intact