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Gene Variant That Increases Ovarian Cancer Risk Discovered
By searching millions of DNA variations in the genomes of thousands of women with and without ovarian cancer, scientists have discovered a
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New Jersey Senator Proposes Plan To Avert HIV/AIDS Drug Copayments
New Jersey state Sen. Joseph Vitale (D) -- chair of the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee -- earlier this week proposed a plan to temporarily reduce rebate checks to senior citizens earning $100,000 to $150,000 in an effort to alleviate the effects of possible budget cuts on certain populations, the Newark Star-Ledger reports. Vitale"s proposal also would avert planned $6 to $15 prescription drug copayments for people living with HIV/AIDS in the state (Livio, Newark Star-Ledger, 5/12). The copayments are part of Gov. Jon Corzine"s (D) $29.8 billion spending proposal for the state"s new fiscal year and would collect $1.36 million by creating copayments for HIV/AIDS drugs based on a sliding scale determined by income. The copayments would affect 9,000 people living with HIV/AIDS who have obtained no-cost medicine from the state because they do not qualify for other assistance programs. Advocates said that the copayments will hurt patients who are already struggling because of the poor economy (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 4/23). According to the Star-Ledger, Vitale"s proposal would save the state $15.7 million, including $9.7 million needed to allow 17,000 low-income families to enroll in the state"s health insurance program, FamilyCare. Senate Budget Committee Chair Barbara Buono (D) said that she does not believe it is possible to restore program cuts "given the collapse of revenues." According to the Office of Legislative Services, the current deficit for this year"s budget, which ends June 30, is at least $1.2 billon. Vitale said, "Our convictions are going to be tested as we come to terms with the fact that we simply don"t have enough money to fund all of the state"s priorities." He added, "But unless funding is restored for programs like NJ FamilyCare, Medicaid drug benefits and the AIDS Drug Distribution Program, I will be voting against the" fiscal year 2010 budget (Newark Star-Ledger, 5/12).
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Increased Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Expression In Patients With Bladder Pain Syndrome/Interstitial Cystitis
UroToday.com - Angiogenesis is thought to be important in many chronic inflammatory disorders, including diabetic retinopathy, atherosclerosis, and inflammatory bowel disease. It has also been suggested that the angiogenic components of these diseases contribute to and exacerbate disease conditions. Increased levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) have been detected in patients with asthma and have been shown to be correlated with the severity of the disease. Anti-VEGF therapy has been shown to ameliorate inflammation in animal models of chronic inflammatory bowel disease. This background forms the prelude to a very interested study by Kiuchi and colleagues from Osaka, Japan.
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MIT Researchers Develop Implantable Device To Monitor Cancer, Tissue Scaffold To Regrow Cartilage And Bone

Surgical removal of a tissue sample is now the standard for diagnosing cancer. And while biopsies are accurate, they only offer a snapshot of the tumor at a single moment in time. Monitoring a tumor for weeks or months after the biopsy, tracking its growth, and studying how it responds to treatment would be much more valuable, says Michael Cima, professor of materials science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who has developed the first implantable device to do just that. "What this does is basically take the lab and put it in the patient," says Cima. The devices, which are designed to be implanted at the time of biopsy, could be tailored to monitor chemotherapy agents, allowing doctors to determine whether cancer drugs are reaching the tumors. They also can be designed to measure pH or oxygen levels, which would reveal a tumor"s metabolism and response to therapy. The cylindrical, 5-millimeter implant contains magnetic nanoparticles coated with antibodies specific to the target molecules. Target molecules enter the implant through a semipermeable membrane, bind to the particles, and cause them to clump together -- a process that can be detected by MRI. The device is composed of polyethylene, which is commonly used in orthopedic implants. The semipermeable membrane, which allows target molecules to enter but traps the magnetic nanoparticles inside, is fabricated of polycarbonate, a compound used in many plastics. Cima"s team studied the device by transplanting human tumors into mice, then using the implants to track levels of human chorionic gonadotropin, a hormone produced by human tumor cells, for more than a month. They reported their findings in ronics. Biosensors & Bioelectronics. Cima believes an implant to test for pH levels could be commercially available in a few years, followed by devices to test for complex chemicals such as hormones and drugs. In another MIT development, researchers constructed a tissue scaffold that can stimulate bone and cartilage growth when transplanted into knees and other joints. The scaffold could offer a potential new treatment for sports injuries and other cartilage damage, such as arthritis, says Lorna Gibson, professor of materials science and engineering and co-leader of the research team with William Bonfield, professor of medical materials at Cambridge University, U.K. "If someone had a damaged region in the cartilage, you could remove the cartilage and the bone below it and put our scaffold in the hole," she explains. The new scaffold, which researchers described in a series of articles in the Journal of Biomedical Materials Research, could offer a more effective, less expensive, easier, and less painful alternative to conventional therapies, Gibson adds. The team started with an existing method to produce a skin scaffold composed of collagen from bovine tendon and glycosaminoglycan, a long polysaccharide chain. To mimic the structure of bone, they developed a technique to mineralize the collagen scaffold by adding s of calcium and phosphate. They next created a two-layer, osteochondral scaffold to regenerate both bone and cartilage. When implanted into a joint, the scaffold can stimulate mesenchymal stem cells in the bone marrow to produce new bone and cartilage. During a 16-week study, the scaffold successfully stimulated bone and cartilage growth after being implanted in the knees of goats. The technology has been licensed to Orthomimetics, a British company that has started clinical trials in Europe. Nanowerk and PhysOrg.com


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