Popular Articles

Multiple Sclerosis Treatment Pioneer's Helium Suicide
Police are investigating the suicide of an academic who pioneered treatment for multiple sclerosis but could no longer live with the disease herself.
new payday loan lenders
Proposed California Budget Cuts To State HIV/AIDS Programs Will 'Cost Lives', Opinion Piece Says
"California will not be saving money," in its proposal to cut funding from HIV/AIDS programs, including the state AIDS Drug Assistance Program, Ken Owens, member of the Inland Empire HIV Planning Council and former member of the Desert AIDS Client Committee, writes in a Desert Sun opinion piece. He adds, "Instead, it will have more people looking for places to live and needing more state services because they are sick, need welfare funds and state healthcare." Owens continues, "Their plan of balancing the budget will surely cost lives if HIV/AIDS funding is cut" (Owens, Desert Sun, 6/18).
News of the day
Baylor Dallas Opens Nation's First Neurosurgical OR Suite Featuring BrainSUITE IMRI, GE Healthcare MR Surgical Technology
Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas is the first hospital in the country to collaborate with GE Healthcare and BrainLAB to open technically advanced neurosurgery operating room (OR) suites that will allow neurosurgeons to use real-time, intra-operative images of the brain during surgery. The $16.5 million operating suites will be the first to combine the BrainSUITE(R) iMRI and GE Healthcare MR Surgical Suite.
Public Health

Genzyme Receives Positive Opinion For European Approval Of Mozobil

Genzyme Corporation (Nasdaq: GENZ) announced that the European Medicines Agency"s Committee for Human Medicinal Products (CHMP) has adopted a positive opinion on the marketing authorization application for Mozobil ® (plerixafor injection). The committee"s opinion will be forwarded to the European Commission, which will make a final decision on the authorization. The Commission has 66 calendar days to act on the CHMP"s opinion. In the EU, Mozobil would be indicated in combination with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor to enhance mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells to the peripheral blood for collection and subsequent autologous transplantation in patients with lymphoma and multiple myeloma whose cells mobilize poorly. "For many patients with lymphoma or multiple myeloma, moving on to a transplant is their only hope for remission or a cure," said Gerhard Ehninger, Professor of Medicine at Dresden Technology University and Chairman of the German Society of Hematology and Oncology. "Mozobil is an innovative treatment that, upon approval, can give these patients an opportunity to achieve a timely and successful transplant." In order for a blood stem cell transplant to take place, a minimum number of such cells must be collected. For many patients, this process can take three or four hours over multiple days to complete. Even then, some patients are not able to mobilize enough cells, and a transplant is not possible. Mozobil has been shown in clinical studies to rapidly and effectively increase the number of stem cells in circulation in the blood in patients with lymphoma and multiple myeloma. In Europe, patients have received Mozobil through compassionate use and named patient programs. In addition to its benefits for patients, Mozobil offers potential economic benefits to transplant centers by decreasing the number of days needed to collect stem cells, a procedure known as apheresis. This can provide transplant centers with a more predictable and efficient use of their apheresis centers. Mozobil may also reduce the number of patients who require a second mobilization procedure because of a failure to mobilize a sufficient number of cells. Genzyme received FDA approval of Mozobil in December 2008. The company plans to submit additional applications in up to 60 countries. About Mozobil Mozobil, a novel small molecule CXCR4 chemokine receptor antagonist, has been shown in multiple earlier studies to rapidly and effectively increase the number of stem cells in circulation in the blood in patients with non-Hodgkin"s lymphoma and multiple myeloma. Once circulating in the blood, stem cells can be collected for use in an autologous stem cell transplant. Genzyme Corporation


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):