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Egg-based coating preserves fresh produce – Feedstuffs
Posted: June 13, 2020 at 12:45 am
Eggs that would otherwise be wasted can be used as the base of an inexpensive coating to protect fruits and vegetables, Rice University researchers have discovered.
Brown School of Engineering lab of materials scientist Pulickel Ajayan and colleagues have developed a micron-thick coating that solves problems both for produce and its consumers.
When the coating was applied to produce by spraying or dipping, it showed a remarkable ability to resist rotting for an extended period comparable to standard coatings like wax, but without some of the inherent problems.
The coating provides an outlet for eggs that never reach the market, the researchers suggested, as manufacturers reject 3% of the more than 7 billion eggs produced each year in the U.S. In fact, they estimated that more than 200 million eggs end up in landfills each year.
Reducing food shortages in ways that dont involve genetic modification, inedible coatings or chemical additives is important for sustainable living, Ajayan said. The work is a remarkable combination of interdisciplinary efforts involving materials engineers, chemists and biotechnologists from multiple universities across the U.S.
Along with being edible, the multifunctional coating retards dehydration, provides antimicrobial protection and is largely impermeable both to water vapor to retard dehydration and to gas to prevent premature ripening. The coating is all-natural and washes off with water.
If anyone is sensitive to the coating or has an egg allergy, they can easily eliminate it, Jung said.
Egg whites (albumen) and yolks account for nearly 70% of the coating, the researchers explained. The majority of the rest of the coating consists of nanoscale cellulose extracted from wood -- which serves as a barrier to water and keeps produce from shriveling -- a small amount of curcumin for antimicrobial powers and a splash of glycerol to add elasticity.
Lab tests on dip-coated strawberries, avocadoes, bananas and other fruit showed that they maintained their freshness far longer than uncoated produce. Compression tests showed that coated fruits were significantly stiffer and firmer than uncoated fruits and demonstrated the coatings ability to keep water in the produce, thus slowing the ripening process.
An analysis of freestanding films of the coating showed it to be extremely flexible and able to resist cracking, allowing better protection of the produce. Tests of the films tensile properties showed it to be just as tough as other products, including synthetic films used in produce packaging. Further tests proved the coating to be nontoxic, and solubility tests showed that a thicker-than-usual film is washable. Rinsing in water for a couple of minutes can completely disintegrate it, Ajayan said.
The researchers continue to refine the coatings composition and are considering other source materials.
We chose egg proteins because there are lots of eggs wasted, but it doesnt mean we cant use others, said co-corresponding author Muhammad Rahman, a research scientist in Ajayans Rice lab who mentored and led the team.
Jung noted that the team is testing proteins that could be extracted from plants rather than animal production to make coatings.
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CRISPR-Based Therapeutics Market with Report In Depth Industry Analysis on Trends, Growth, Opportunities and Forecast – Cole of Duty
Posted: at 12:45 am
The orbisresearch.com has published CRISPR-Based Therapeutics market 2020 global trends and analysis report to its store
The Global CRISPR-Based Therapeutics market report is deep study of the present market dynamics. It consists of the detailed study of current market trends along with the past statistics. The past years are considered as reference to get the predicted data for the forecasted period. Various important factors such as market trends, revenue growth patterns market shares and demand and supply are included in almost all the market research report for every industry. A significant development has been recorded by the market of CRISPR-Based Therapeutics, in past few years. It is also for it to grow further. Various important factors such as market trends, revenue growth patterns market shares and demand and supply are included in almost all the market research report for every industry. A systematized methodology is used to make a Report on the Global CRISPR-Based Therapeutics market. For the analysis of market on the terms of research strategies, these techniques are helpful. All the information about the Products, manufacturers, vendors, customers and much more is covered in research reports.
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Key Segmentation:
Key Players:Caribou BiosciencesAddgeneCRISPR THERAPEUTICSMerck KGaAMirus Bio LLCEditas MedicineTakara Bio USAThermo Fisher ScientificHorizon Discovery GroupIntellia TherapeuticsGE Healthcare Dharmacon
Types:Genome EditingGenetic EngineeringgRNA Database/Gene LibrarCRISPR PlasmidHuman Stem CellsGenetically Modified Organisms/CropsCell Line Engineering
Key Applications:Biotechnology CompaniesPharmaceutical CompaniesAcademic InstitutesResearch and Development Institutes
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CRISPR-Based Therapeutics Market with Report In Depth Industry Analysis on Trends, Growth, Opportunities and Forecast - Cole of Duty
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Gene Therapy and Editing : Novel options for inherited retinal blindness – ETHealthworld.com
Posted: at 12:45 am
(Representative image) by Dr. Indumathi MariappanResearch Scientist, LV Prasad Eye Institute, Hyderabad
Retinal Blindness
Millions of people the world over suffer visual disability as a result of retinal dystrophy that involves the death of retinal cells that are important for the light sensing function of the eye. Enormous progress has been made in other blinding conditions involving the cornea, lens, among others. However, the retinal dystrophies and optic nerve atrophies do not have any proven therapy till date. The major forms of retinal dystrophies such as Age-related macular degeneration (AMD), retinitis pigmentosa (RP), Lebers congenital amaurosis (LCA), Stargardts disease etc. are either inherited disorders or developed with aging. In most cases, the retinal cells are present at birth, but undergo gradual death during the later stages of life. It is typically characterized by initial symptoms of low vision and night blindness during early childhood, which progresses to severe visual impairment and total blindness at different stages of adulthood. Inherited defects in many genes involved in retina-specific functions and vitamin A metabolism are linked to various forms of retinal dystrophies. These genetic defects affect the normal cellular functions of the retina, leading to gradual cell death and ultimately the patient becomes legally blind.
Recent Technologies and Novel Treatment Options
The current modalities for the treatment of such patients mainly include dietary supplements, visual aids and rehabilitation support. However, a radical approach is required either to preserve or to restore visual function in these patients. Some of them include the replacement of either the lost retinal cells or the defective genes within the surviving, but non-functional retinal cells. This has been the principle behind the massive efforts involved in the development of cell and gene-based therapies. They are currently at different stages of product development and clinical trial evaluation. In cell therapy, normal retinal cells are prepared from specialized stem cells and are injected into the eye to replace the lost cells and to restore retinal functions. Clinical safety trials using cell therapy are ongoing in many countries such as USA, Japan, UK and others (Weblinks 1-4). In gene therapy, the prime strategy is to introduce a normal copy of the affected gene into the surviving retinal cells of the patient, to restore normal cellular functions and improvements in vision. This is achieved by engineering safe viral vectors to carry a normal copy of the desired gene as their cargo. When injected into the eye, the viruses can infect the retinal cells once and deliver the normal gene to restore cellular functions (Weblinks 5-7). A step further is an advanced method of DNA microsurgery, wherein, the defective part of the retinal cell DNA is precisely edited to correct the genetic defect and to restore cellular functions. This could be achieved using the latest gene editing tools such as ZFNs, TALENs, CRISPR/Cas systems etc. These are naturally occurring molecular scissors, employed as host defense mechanism and immune memory to combat viral infections in different species of bacteria. These systems are now engineered to enable DNA and RNA editing in almost any living cells. Such tools are now combined with either cell therapy or gene therapy to develop novel drugs for the treatment of various inherited genetic diseases (Weblink 8).
Gene therapy products approved for clinical use:
LUXTURNATM (Weblink 5)
This is the first commercial gene therapy drug approved by the US-FDA and European Commission for the treatment of an early childhood retinal dystrophic condition called the Leber Congenital Amaurosis 2 (LCA2). This disease is caused due to genetic defects in the gene called RPE65. LUXTURNA (AAV2-hRPE65v2 or Voretigene neparovec-rzyl) is an engineered adeno-associated virus 2 (AAV2) vector carrying a normal copy of the human RPE65 gene. This product was developed and marketed by Spark Therapeutics, a US-based startup now owned by Roche, a Swiss pharma company.
This drug has been tested on 20 patients, aged 3 years or older, in a randomized, controlled, open label, phase 3 interventional clinical trial at two sites in the US from June 2015. All treated individuals showed significantly improved functional vision, with no product-related serious adverse events or deleterious immune responses. The treated patient will be followed for further 15 years until March 2030 to assess the long-term retinal gene expression and stable maintenance of functional vision. It is administered as a onetime injection behind the retina of an eye of patients genetically diagnosed to carry mutations in RPE65 gene and also have sufficient viable retinal cells. It is priced at $850,000 for two eyes in the US and UK, which translates to about 6.5 crores in Indian rupees.
Many such gene therapy vectors are currently under clinical trial evaluation for the delivery of other retinal gene such as REP1, PDE6B, RPGR, OAT (Ornithine aminotransferase), MERTK, sFLT1etc.
EDIT101 (Weblink 8)
This is the first gene editing based drug approved by US-FDA, for the treatment of another early childhood retinal dystrophic condition called LCA10, caused by defects in the CEP290 gene. Here, it is important to understand that a gene editing approach is different from a gene therapy. In gene therapy, a normal copy of entire gene is delivered to the retina to complement the defective gene. In CRISPR/Cas9 based gene editing, only the mutated region of the gene is edited/corrected in situ inside the target cells. This is an attractive approach for correcting a variety of gene mutations, especially those in large genes which exceed the cargo capacity of the commonly used AAV-based gene therapy vectors.
EDIT101 (AGN-151587) is an engineered adeno-associated virus 5 (AAV5) vector carrying a CRISPR/Cas9 based DNA editing machinery to locate and remove a specific mutation hotspot within the intron 26 of human CEP290 gene. When injected behind the retina, the virus will infect the surviving photoreceptor cells and deliver the CRISPRs to enable mutation editing. Successful DNA edits in photoreceptor cells would inactivate a spurious splice site created by the mutation and restore normal protein expression and retinal function.
Preclinical testing in mice and monkey eyes has proved significant edit efficiency of up to 28%, which was above the expected 10% threshold required for clinical efficacy in human trials. This drug was developed by the gene editing company, Editas Medicine, Inc. and is being tested in 18 participants in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial sponsored by Allergan, at four sites in the US from March 2019 and the outcomes are awaited.
Similar gene editing strategy is being explored at different centers for mutation correction in other retinal genes such as KCNJ13, RP1, USH2A, MYO7A, RDH12 etc.
Who can benefit?
Both gene therapy and gene editing approaches have opened up newer hopes for the treatment of various genetic condition affecting different cell types of the body. However, only a small subset of patients can benefit from such therapies at the moment. Such treatment considerations require a thorough genetic screening/genotyping to confirm the identity of the gene affected in a specific patient. Further, the patients should retain some viable cells in the retina for the treatment to be clinically effective.
Research efforts in India
Many labs in the country are developing gene therapies and gene editing based therapeutics for the treatment of various diseases affecting the blood, retina, liveretc. Researchers at the CMC, Vellore, CSIR-IGIB, Delhi, CSIR-CCMB, Hyderabad are developing gene therapeutics for the treatment of different forms of blood disorders. Narayana Nethralaya, Bangalore is engaged in developing AAV-based gene therapies for various retinal dystrophies. Our lab at the LV Prasad Eye Institute is collaborating with the research teams at IIT-Kanpur and CSIR-IGIB, Delhi to develop modified gene therapy vectors for retinal gene delivery and cell-based therapies using CRISPR edited stem cells and retinal cells respectively.
The way forward
As of May 2020, the RetNet database lists about 271 genes to be associated with different forms of retinal dystrophies. This requires a larger library of gene delivery vectors to be developed and made available at affordable costs for the treatment of a large number of patients. This mandates the need for developing indigenous and cost-effective therapeutics and ICMR has set up a dedicated task force on gene therapy research, to identify and support promising research ideas in this newly emerging area of biomedical research. A national guideline for gene therapy product development and clinical trials has been jointly formulated and released by the DBT and ICMR in 2019. It is hoped that the streamlined regulatory framework would fast track our basic and translational research efforts into developing novel and cost-effective treatment options in the near future.
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Gene Therapy and Editing : Novel options for inherited retinal blindness - ETHealthworld.com
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Fat cells remember their diets early in life – Massive Science
Posted: at 12:45 am
Our relationship to Neanderthals has been a point of contention for over a century. It all began with an inaccurate reconstruction of the first Neanderthal ever found, which portrayed them as brutish, stooped-over cavemen (turns out, that Neanderthal was an injured old man with arthritis).
But within the last half century, scientists have noticed the many biological and behavioral similarities that show just how close our species are. While these similarities are clear from hard objects like bones and tools, perishable objects, which comprise the majority of material culture items in humans, have been lacking.
Now, scientists have discovered a Neanderthal feat that hammers another nail in the coffin of supposed Neanderthal inferiority. Last month, an international team of researchers found a small section of a twisted cord attached to a stone flake in Neanderthal site in southeastern France, dated to over 40,000 years old. This constitutes the oldest direct evidence of fiber technology ever found.
A stone flake with three distinct twisted fibers preserved (indicated by the box).
M.-H. Moncel
When artifacts are recovered from archaeological sites, they are generally imaged using high powered microscopes to zoom in on tiny marks and details on the stones. Previously, plant fibers had been found on stones at this site, but they were too poorly preserved to be interpreted. When the team examined this particular flake, they were surprised to find three distinct twisted fibers, which were then twisted together in the opposite direction to form a 3-ply cord.
While it may not sound like much, this piece of string hints at something much more significant. For one, extracting and manipulating plant fibers requires working memory, as well as understanding plant seasonality and the concept of numbers. Also, such cords are the building blocks for creating other textiles, such as baskets, fabrics, and nets. Once adopted, these objects would have been indispensable in daily life.
This little piece of string provides unprecedented insight into the lives of our extinct relatives, which, despite an abundance of genetic, archaeological, and skeletal data, have been extremely difficult to interpret. It seems as though we humans arent as unique as we like to think.
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Do TNFis Reduce the Risk for Progression to PsA in Patients With Psoriasis? – Rheumatology Advisor
Posted: June 6, 2020 at 5:50 pm
Treatment with tumor necrosis factor inhibitors (TNFis) vs methotrexate alone is not associated with a decreased risk for progression to psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in patients with psoriasis, according to study results presented at the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) 2020 E-Congress, held online from June 3 to 6, 2020.
To determine if treatment with TNFis vs methotrexate alone reduce the risk of developing PsA in patients with existing psoriasis, researchers from Oregon Health and Science University, School of Medicine, Portland, assessed data from all patients with psoriasis seen at their clinic from January 2006 to June 2019. Diagnosis of PsA was made by a rheumatologist. Continuous covariates and categoric covariates were compared by the Students t-test and Pearsons chi-squared test or Fishers test, respectively.
A total of 154 patients (51.3% women) with psoriasis who did not have PsA at baseline were included in the study. A TNFi was administered to 55.2% (n=85) and methotrexate to 44.8% (n=69) of the patients during the study period. Patients in the TNFi cohort received therapy for a mean duration of 3.950.50 years and patients in the methotrexate cohort had a mean duration of therapy of 1.930.28 years. Mean follow-up time was 5.180.49 years and 2.710.37 years for the TNFi and methotrexate cohorts, respectively.
During the study period, 22.7% of patients (n=35) developed PsA. After adjusting for propensity score, nail pitting, body surface area involved in psoriasis, and depression, the investigators found that treatment with TNFi did not significantly reduce the risk for PsA, as compared with treatment with methotrexate (HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.32-1.41).
Use of TNFi was not associated with a statistically significant decreased risk of incident PsA compared to methotrexate in this study, but a larger cohort with longer follow-up will have better power to estimate the true association, the researchers concluded.
Reference
Lininger N, Siegel S, Kiwalkar S, Winthrop K, Ortega Loayza A, Deodhar A. Do TNF inhibitors decrease risk of incident psoriatic arthritis in psoriasis patients compared to those treated with methotrexate alone? Presented at: EULAR 2020 E-Congress; June 3-6, 2020. Abstract FRI0555.
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Do TNFis Reduce the Risk for Progression to PsA in Patients With Psoriasis? - Rheumatology Advisor
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Integrated Analysis Shows Long-Term Safety, Tolerability of Ixekizumab in Psoriasis, PsA, and axSpA – Rheumatology Advisor
Posted: at 5:50 pm
The long-term safety and tolerability is consistent with the known safety profile of ixekizumab in multiple chronic inflammatory diseases, including psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA), according to study results published in Rheumatology.
Ixekizumab is a monoclonal antibody that targets interleukin-17A and is used for the treatment of several inflammatory diseases. In an integrated analysis of 21 clinical trials, the investigators aimed to characterize the long-term safety and tolerability of ixekizumab in patients with psoriasis, PsA, and axSpA.
Using data from randomized controlled trials, the researchers examined the rates of adverse events (AEs) and treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), summarized by exposure-adjusted incidence rates, associated with ixekizumab use.
The pooled population included 8228 patients, of whom 5898 had psoriasis, 1401 had PsA, and 929 had axSpA. The percentage of men ranged from 48.5% to 69.9% in the analysis, with all groups including predominantly white patients (74%-91.3%). The cumulative exposure time was 20,895.9 person-years (PYs), with up to 5, 3 and 2 years of exposure for patients treated for psoriasis, PsA, and axSpA, respectively.
The overall incidence rates of patients with 1 TEAE were 29.5 per 100 PYs in the psoriasis group (86.6% of patients), 50.6 per 100 PYs in the PsA group (80.5% of patients), and 55.9 per 100 PYs in the axSpA group (80.4% of patients). Severe TEAEs were reported by 8.1% to 16.7% of patients across all groups. The most frequently reported events among all groups were nasopharyngitis (14.4%-25.7%), upper respiratory tract infections (10.5%-15.6%), and injection site reactions (9.7%-11.1%). The most commonly reported TEAEs of special interest were infections, including nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis. Infections were most common during the first year, with incidence rates ranging from 49.5 to 56.6 per 100 PYs, and decreased over time to 40.1 per 100 PYs across all groups.
Major cardiovascular events, malignancies, and inflammatory bowel disease were rare, with incidence rates of <1 per 100 PYs across all groups. Serious adverse events were reported at an incidence rate of 5.4 to 6.0 per 100 PYs and remained stable over time. Discontinuation from the study due to adverse events was reported in <10% of patients in all groups.
Among the pooled population, 43 deaths were reported, including 35, 6, and 2 in the psoriasis, PsA, and axSpA groups, respectively. The predominant cause of death was major cardiovascular events in the psoriasis and PsA groups, though ixekizumab was not associated with individual causes of death.
The most significant limitation of the analysis included the survival bias that occurs in long-term study extensions, since only patients who continue to respond to treatment are enrolled in such studies.
Chronic diseases such as [psoriasis], PsA and axSpA require long-term treatment management. Therefore, long-term assessment of safety is needed to evaluate the benefit-risk of treatment, the researchers concluded. This long-term analysis on the safety of ixekizumab was consistent with previously published reports and did not show any new safety signals.
Disclosures: The clinical trial was supported by Eli Lilly and Company. Several authors declared affiliations with the pharmaceutical industry. Please see the original reference for a full list of disclosures.
Reference
Genovese MC, Mysler E, Tomita T, Papp KA, Salvarani C, Schwartzman S, et al. Safety of ixekizumab in adult patients with plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis and axial spondyloarthritis: data from 21 clinical trials [published online May 25, 2020]. Rheumatology (Oxford). doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keaa189
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Integrated Analysis Shows Long-Term Safety, Tolerability of Ixekizumab in Psoriasis, PsA, and axSpA - Rheumatology Advisor
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Infection-Related Hospitalization & Mortality in Patients With Psoriasis – Physician’s Weekly
Posted: at 5:50 pm
Although previous studies suggest that psoriasis may be independently associated with an increased risk of serious infectionthat which leads to hospitalizationthe research had various limitations, and thus, the relationship remains unclear, explains Zenas Yiu, PhD. In a study published in the British Journal of Dermatology, Dr. Yiu and colleagues sought to determine if patients with psoriasis, when compared with those without the condition, have a higher risk of hospitalization due to any infection, respiratory infections, soft tissue and skin infections, or death due to infection.
Using data from the nationally representative UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink linked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) and Office for National Statistics (ONS) mortality records between January 2003 and December 2016, the researchers matched adults with psoriasis with up to six comparators on age, sex, and general practice. Hospitalization due to infection was ascertained from HES records and death from ONS mortality records. Stratified Cox proportional hazard models were estimated, with stepwise adjustment in different models for confounding factors, including body mass index, smoking, alcohol intake, socioeconomic status, and comorbid conditions. Approximately 70,000 patients with psoriasis and nearly 340,000 comparators were followed for a median of about 5 years.
People with psoriasis had a higher incidence rate of serious infection, at 20.5 per 1,000 person-years, than the comparators, at 16.1 per 1,000 person-years, says Dr. Yiu. After adjustment, people with psoriasis had a 36% increased relative probability of developing a serious infection during follow-up compared with the general population (hazard ratio, 1.36). However, this only translated to three out of 100 more people with psoriasis developing a serious infection after 10 years of follow-up, compared with the general population.
Dr. Yiu notes that while patients with psoriasis were found to have a small but increased risk of serious infection when compared with those without the condition, because the absolute increased probability of serious infection is small, people with psoriasis should not be unduly concerned. We recommend further research to investigate whether this slight increase in the risk of infection can be explained by biological mechanisms.
Risk of Hospitalization and Death due to Infection in People with Psoriasis: a Populationbased Cohort Study using the Clinical Practice Research Datalinkhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/bjd.19052
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Infection-Related Hospitalization & Mortality in Patients With Psoriasis - Physician's Weekly
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Upadacitinib Application for Active Psoriatic Arthritis Submitted for Review – Monthly Prescribing Reference
Posted: at 5:49 pm
AbbVie has submitted an application to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for review of upadacitinib in the treatment of active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in adults.
The application is supported by data from two phase 3 studies (SELECT-PsA 1 and SELECT-PsA 2) that assessed the efficacy and safety of upadacitinib (15mg and 30mg) in more than 2000 adults with active PsA. SELECT-PsA 1 compared upadacitinib with placebo and adalimumab; SELECT-PsA 2 compared upadacitinib with placebo. The primary end point for both studies was the proportion of patients who achieved an American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 20 response at week 12.
Results from SELECT-PsA 1 showed that upadacitinib 15mg and 30mg achieved noninferiority at week 12 compared with adalimumab, with the 30mg dose showing superiority. Both doses of upadacitinib achieved statistically significant ACR20, ACR50, and ACR70 responses at week 12 compared with placebo, along with significant improvements for key secondary end points, including the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI), Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 75), and Minimal disease activity (MDA).
Additionally, findings from SELECT-PsA 2 demonstrated both doses of upadacitinib achieved statistically significant ACR 20, ACR50, and ACR70 responses at week 12 compared with placebo. Both doses of upadacitinib also achieved statistically significant responses for PASI 75 and MDA compared with placebo.
With regard to safety, upadacitinib demonstrated a profile consistent with that seen in previous clinical studies.
Upadacitinib, a selective and reversible Janus Kinase (JAK) inhibitor, is currently marketed under the brand name Rinvoq and is indicated for the treatment of moderately to severely active rheumatoid arthritis in adults who have had an inadequate response or intolerance to methotrexate.
For more information visit abbvie.com.
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Upadacitinib Application for Active Psoriatic Arthritis Submitted for Review - Monthly Prescribing Reference
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AbbVie, Pfizer, Novartis and more air TV ads to offer COVID-19 thank-you’s, support – FiercePharma
Posted: at 5:49 pm
The challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic have spurred many marketers to create reassuring and empathetic TV ads, including some pharma companies. Several pharmas have adjusted TV strategies to run, along withtypical DTC or disease awareness commercials, ads that offerthanks to frontline healthcare workers ordetails about help to payfor medicine.
AbbVie is leading the way in televised financial support messages, starting with the Humira and Rinvoq brands. The pharma added messages to the end of those ads directed at people who have lost jobs or insurance during the crisis, with re-directs to where they can find assistance.
For Skyrizi, its newer-to-the-airwaves psoriasis medication, AbbVie created an entirely new spot talking about the challenging times and the potential for financial help. The commercial, which aired several times during the popular ESPN Sunday night series The Last Dance about basketball star Michael Jordan, speaks directly to patients who take Skyrizi, telling them financial assistance may be available to help you afford your medication.
RELATED:Pharma ups April TV spending for stuck-at-home viewers with AbbVie leading the way
The TV ads are part of the Illinois drugmaker'sbroader efforts to help patients continue to get their medications,AbbVie said in an emailed statement.
AbbVie understands this is a difficult time for patients affected by the COVID-19 crisis, and we are here to support them. Patients access news in a variety of ways, so AbbVie has updated television spots with COVID-19 support information, in addition to newspaper and social media ads to help increase awareness about our patient assistance resources, the statementsaid.
Other pharma companies offering financial assistancethat may be especially needed during the pandemic include Novo Nordisk for its diabetes brand Ozempic, Novartis for psoriasis med Cosentyx and Sunovion for bipolar depression treatment Latuda.
Some other pharma companies joined the broader thank you-themed TV ad trend that many brands have adopted. Marketers from Google and McDonalds to Dove and Glad are airing commercials expressing appreciation and pledging donations to help.
Pfizer, Amgen and Johnson & Johnson all created TV ads with messages of gratitude to people helping in the fight against COVID-19and offered hope for the future. Novartis also included thank-yous to heroic healthcare workers in a commercial for heart failure medicine Entresto as well as in the Cosentyx Connect financial assistance ad.
RELATED:AstraZeneca tackles COPD, asthma patients' COVID-19 concerns in new YouTube series
While the new ads offer help and hope, theyre also likely reaching more viewers. During the pandemic, the number of TV watchers has grown for the first time since 2012, according to market researcher eMarketer. It predicts an increase of 3% in TV viewer growth for the year, driven by stay-at-home orders during COVID-19, after more than seven years of single-digit slides. Still, the trend may not last for longeMarketer predicts a reversal in 2021 and an overall dip again next year.
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AbbVie, Pfizer, Novartis and more air TV ads to offer COVID-19 thank-you's, support - FiercePharma
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Novartis’ Cosentyx chases Lilly’s just-approved Taltz with long-term data in spondyloarthritis – FiercePharma
Posted: at 5:49 pm
Novartis' Cosentyx lost a race against Eli Lilly's Taltz after the latter scored an FDA approval in spondyloarthritis earlier this week. But Cosentyx, which facesan FDA review in that indication, is touting long-term data that will help it keep the pressure on Lilly's rival.
The drugbestedplacebo atreducing the symptoms ofnon-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis in patients after 52 weeks, according to long-term data from the phase 3 Prevent study released Thursday at the European League Against Rheumatology (EULAR)meeting.
The 52-week data adds to earlier 16-week data that showed Cosentyx significantly reduced disease symptoms over placebo. More than 35%of patients treated with Cosentyx hit the study's primary endpoint of reducing a targeted set of disease symptoms at 52 weeks compared with 19% of patients taking placebo. At 16 weeks, 42.2% of patients hit the same markversus 29.2% for placebo.
Cosentyx notched a European MedicinesAgency approval to treat non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis in April and has already filed for regulatory approval in the U.S. and Japan.
The newest Cosentyx data will keep things competitive with Lilly's Taltz, which scored an FDA approval earlier this week as the first IL-17 inhibitor green-lighted in that indication.
RELATED:Eli Lilly's Taltz beats Novartis to the punch with FDA approval in spondyloarthritis
Taltz won its approval based onresults from the phase 3 Coast-X trial, which showed 30% of patients treated with Taltz saw reduced targeted disease symptoms after 52 weeks of treatment compared with 13% of patients treated with placebo.
At 16 weeks, 35% of Taltz patients stayed above that mark compared with 19% of placebo patients.
Non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis is believed to affect more than 1 million U.S. patients each year, Lilly said.An FDA approval for Cosentyx would be the drug'sfourth, as it was for Taltz; both drugs are also cleared in psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis and psoriasis.
In March, UCBs anti-TNF antibody Cimzia became the first FDA-approved drugfor non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis. But that drug carries a boxed warning about the increased risk of serious infections.
RELATED:Novartis' Cosentyx can't top AbbVie's Humira in head-to-head psoriatic arthritis contest
Lilly and Novartis are not only jockeying for position in spondyloarthritis. The companies are also battling it out across their other indications.
In June, Lilly posted head-to-head phase 3 trial data showing TaltzbestedAbbVie's megablockbuster Humira at reducing psoriatic disease activity by half and completely clearing patient skin after 24 weeks. Lilly also went after Johnson & Johnson's Tremfya in psoriasis with a round of phase 4 data, showing in early August its drug hadtoppedTremfya at achieving total skin clearance after 12 weeks of treatment.
Meanwhile, Cosentyx posted middling results in November in a head-to-head matchup with Humira,failing to outdo AbbVie's behemothin active psoriatic arthritis patients.
While Cosentyx helped more patients numerically reach ACR20a benchmark on a commonly used scale from the American College of Rheumatology to measure joint swelling and moreits lead wasnt statistically relevant, Novartis said.
Editors' Note: This story has been updated to correct an error.
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Novartis' Cosentyx chases Lilly's just-approved Taltz with long-term data in spondyloarthritis - FiercePharma
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