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Search resuls for: "European Society for Medical"


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The Food and Drug Administration expanded the approval of Kisqali, a drug for metastatic breast cancer, to also treat patients with earlier stages of the disease, drugmaker Novartis said Tuesday. The approval means that tens of thousands of women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer will have access to a medication that can help prevent their cancer from coming back. The expanded approval is for patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, the most common form of the disease. It comes as rates of breast cancer are increasing in younger women: From 2000 to 2019, rates of breast cancer in women ages 20 to 49 increased by 15.6% according to a study published earlier this year in JAMA Network Open. “You’re always going to be faced with the fact every single day that you have had breast cancer,” she said.
Persons: , Eleonora Teplinsky, it’s, Kisqali, Vandana Abramson, Teplinksy, Nikki Odum, ‘ I’m, ’ ”, Odum, Justin, Denise Yardley, ” Odum, Yardley, Sarah Cannon, Komal, Abramson, ” Teplinsky, that’s, “ You’re, Organizations: Drug Administration, Novartis, Health, European Society for Medical Oncology, Breast Cancer Research, Vanderbilt, Ingram Cancer Center, Kisqali, Sarah, Sarah Cannon Research Institute, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Locations: New Jersey, Barcelona, , Nashville , Tennessee, , Smyrna , Tennessee, Nashville, New York
Pfizer 's experimental drug for a common, life-threatening condition that causes cancer patients to lose their appetite and weight showed positive results in a midstage trial, the drugmaker said Saturday. Patients with the condition, called cancer cachexia, who took Pfizer's treatment saw improvements in body weight, muscle mass, quality of life and physical function, according to the drugmaker. The condition affects about 9 million people worldwide, and 80% of cancer patients suffering from it are expected to die within one year of diagnosis, according to the company. Cancer cachexia is currently defined as a loss of 5% or more body weight over the past six months in cancer patients, along with symptoms such as fatigue, according to the National Cancer Institute. Allerton said a work group of experts defines a weight gain of greater than 5% as a "clinically meaningful difference in cancer patients with cachexia."
Persons: cachexia, Charlotte Allerton, Pfizer's, Allerton Organizations: Pfizer, National Cancer Institute, CNBC, European Society for Medical Oncology, The New England, of Medicine Locations: U.S, cachexia, Barcelona, Spain, The, Allerton
This is one of several new studies exploring ways to improve how bladder cancer is treated. “Ever since I was in med school, a metastatic bladder cancer treatment was gemcitabine and platinum. Urothelial cancer is a type of bladder cancer that begins in the urothelial cells, which line the inside of the bladder. The drug became the first therapy targeting a genetic alteration to be approved by the FDA to treat patients with the most common type of bladder cancer, metastatic urothelial cancer. “These results support nivolumab plus cisplatin-based chemo as a new standard approach for the treatment of metastatic urothelial cancer.”
Persons: vedotin, hadn’t, , Thomas Powles, ” Powles, we’ve, , Powles, Toni Choueiri, Dana, , enfortumab, ” Choueiri, drugmaker Janssen, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, nivolumab, Matthew Galsky Organizations: CNN, Society for Medical Oncology, University of London, Barts Cancer, US, Inc, Astellas Pharma, Merck, Co, Food and Drug Administration, FDA, EMA, Lank, Genitourinary Oncology, Farber Cancer Institute, ESMO, New England, of Medicine, University of Texas, Anderson Cancer Center, US Food and Drug Administration, National Library of Medicine, CNN Health, Bristol Myers Squibb, Ono Pharmaceutical Company, Cancer, The Tisch Cancer Institute Locations: Madrid, United Kingdom, United States, Europe, Mount Sinai
A company logo is seen at the AstraZeneca site in Macclesfield, Britain, May 11, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 18 (Reuters) - Shares in AstraZeneca (AZN.L) fell more than 4% on Wednesday after the publication of an abstract on its experimental precision drug's use in lung cancer in a late-stage trial disappointed some analysts. The abstract was published ahead the European Society for Medical Oncology's (ESMO) congress that kicks off in Madrid on Friday. By 1219 GMT, AstraZeneca shares were dwon 3.7% in London, while the broader STOXX Health Care (.SXDP)index was off 1%. Reporting by Danilo Masoni and Maggie FickOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Phil Noble, Danilo Masoni, Maggie Fick Organizations: AstraZeneca, REUTERS, European Society for Medical, Thomson Locations: Macclesfield, Britain, Madrid, London
REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 18 (Reuters) - Shares in AstraZeneca (AZN.L) fell more than 4% on Wednesday after a data abstract on its experimental precision drug's use in lung cancer patients in a late-stage trial disappointed some analysts. Fernandez added that progression-free survival in lung cancer patients came in below expectations. Barclays analyst Emily Field also said in a note that safety looked better than expected for lung cancer patients and the data abstracts were "collectively positive" for AstraZeneca. London-listed shares of AstraZeneca were down 3.7% at 1219 GMT, while the broader STOXX Health Care (.SXDP) index was off 1%. Shares of AstraZeneca's Japanese partner Daiichi Sankyo (4568.T), which is jointly developing the cancer drug, closed 4.6% lower on Tuesday.
Persons: Phil Noble, datopotamab deruxtecan, Jefferies, Stephen Barker, Barker, Seamus Fernandez, Fernandez, Emily Field, GSK's, Danilo Masoni, Maggie Fick, Bhanvi, Shinjini Organizations: AstraZeneca, REUTERS, European Society for Medical, Friday, Guggeinheim, Barclays, AstraZeneca ., Thomson Locations: Macclesfield, Britain, Madrid, AstraZeneca . London, U.S, Milan, London, Bengaluru
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