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Researchers From CIC BioGUNE Have Found A Way To Treat Ischemic Pathologies
A team of researchers from CIC bioGUNE from the Cellular Biology and Stem Cell Unit, alongside a team from Paris" Cardiovascular Research Centre (INSERM U970) have developed a new area of research which looks extremely promising as regards the development of new therapeutic responses to ischemic pathologies and cardiovascular diseases in general. The results of this research project, which was initiated in 2005 and is supported by Bizkaia:Xede and the Basque Government"s Etortek programme, were published in the prestigious scientific journal Circulation.
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Chinese Women Join Global Breast Cancer Trial
Breast cancer patients have for the first time been recruited from China to take part in an international trial of breast radiotherapy.
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Organizations Partner For HIV Testing Initiative In Staten Island, N.Y.
As part of an effort to encourage Staten Island, N.Y., residents to be tested for HIV, the CARE Network, the Black Leadership Commission on AIDS and the City Council"s Communities of Color Faith Initiative, have partnered to launch the "Staten Island HIV Status Check Campaign," the Staten Island Advance reports. "Status Check" postcards that include information on free local HIV testing locations, HIV educational literature and condoms will be distributed by local organizations and businesses as part of the initiative. The goal is to reach the 56 percent of local residents who have never been tested for HIV, Karina Ryan, CARE Network coordinator, said (Slepian, Staten Island Advance, 6/18).
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Personalized Anti-Cancer Vaccine Pivotal Phase III Results To Be Presented At ASCO Plenary Session

Biovest International, Inc. (Other OTC:BVTI), a majority-owned subsidiary of Accentia Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (Other OTC:ABPIQ), announced that BiovaxID®, Biovest"s personalized anti-cancer vaccine targeting B-cell blood cancers, will be featured in an oral presentation during the Plenary Session at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting on Sunday, May 31st, 2009 in Orlando, Florida. Stephen J. Schuster, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine at the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania, will deliver the BiovaxID presentation titled, "Idiotype Vaccine Therapy (BiovaxID®) in Follicular Lymphoma in First Complete Remission: Phase III Clinical Trial Results." Note to editors: Pursuant to ASCO policy, this abstract is embargoed until 10:30 a.m. (EDT) on Sunday, May 31st, when it will be highlighted during ASCO"s official Press Program to the media. Dr. Schuster"s oral presentation is scheduled to be the second of four clinical trial results presentations at the ASCO Plenary Session on Sunday, which begins at 1:00 p.m. (EDT) at the Orlando Convention Center location Level 2, West Hall D2. In addition to the Plenary Session, BiovaxID will also be featured in a presentation to be delivered at ASCO by Larry Kwak, M.D., Ph.D., Chairman of the Department of Lymphoma and Myeloma and Associate Director of the Center for Cancer Immunology Research at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Dr. Kwak"s presentation will be part of a Panel Education Session titled, "Cancer Vaccines: Where do we go from here?" This presentation is scheduled for Sunday, May 31st at 4:45 p.m. (EDT) at location Level 2, West Hall F1. About BiovaxID® BiovaxID is a personalized, patient-specific therapeutic vaccine designed to stimulate the patient"s own immune system to recognize and destroy cancerous B-cells that may remain in the body or may arise after the patient has been treated with chemotherapy. Unlike many other approaches to treating non-Hodgkin"s lymphoma, BiovaxID is designed to kill only cancerous B-cells, with the initial indication of follicular Non-Hodgkin"s lymphoma. Additionally, it is anticipated that BiovaxID could be used to treat other types of B-cell cancers, such as Mantle Cell Lymphoma, Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia and Multiple Myeloma. A Unique Approach to Immunotherapy Targeting B-Cell Blood Cancers B-cells (a type of white blood cell or lymphocyte) are a vital part of the human immune system, as they produce antibodies that seek out and bind to foreign substances in the body. In lymphoma, as cancerous B-cells grow and multiply unrestrained, each malignant B-cell expresses a unique idiotype or biomarker on the cell"s surface, specific to each patient. Research at Stanford University and the National Cancer Institute led to the development of BiovaxID as a personalized, therapeutic vaccine capable of selectively targeting only cancerous B-cells, while sparing healthy cells. This is achieved by using the idiotype obtained from a sample of the patient"s tumor by biopsy, and through proprietary bioengineering techniques in a patented cell line, a patient-specific vaccine is created that stimulates the immune system by recruiting a patient"s T-cells (immune cells that kill cancerous cells) to seek out and destroy only the diseased B-cells. Unlike other failed cancer vaccine therapies that attempted to target lymphoma, BiovaxID is the only hybridoma (fusion of human lymphocyte with cancer cell) anti-cancer vaccine that consists of a high-fidelity copy of the complete idiotype, believed to be critical in mounting a full and complete immune response against the cancer, as well as "training" the immune system to maintain continuous response if cancerous cells were to return. Biovest International, Inc.


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