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Groups Want NJ To Restore Immigrant Outreach Funds
"Immigrant and health-care advocacy groups" are calling on New Jersey to "restore $1 million in funding that has been eliminated in the latest round of budget tightening," the AP/Philadelphia Inquirer reports. "The money was earmarked for community-outreach efforts to educate legal immigrants on available state health programs." A report released yesterday by Rutgers University concluded that "New Jersey"s percentage of uninsured immigrant children is higher than the national average, and the state has a poor track record of making sure those children receive health coverage."

PeriCor Therapeutics Reports Positive Preclinical Results Of GP531 At The European Heart Failure Congress In Nice
PeriCor Therapeutics, Inc. announced that positive preclinical results of its novel cardioprotective agent, GP531, were reported in a poster presentation by Hani N. Sabbah, Ph.D., at the European Heart Failure Congress 2009 in Nice, France. The study was funded by PeriCor Therapeutics, Inc. and conducted by Dr. Sabbah and colleagues at the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine of the Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, Michigan. GP531 is an investigational drug under development by PeriCor Therapeutics under an Investigational New Drug (IND) application.
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Novel Biomarkers In Heart Failure At Heart Failure Congress 2009
Several new biomarkers have been recently described in Heart Failure (HF) syndrome either in stable chronic patients as in the settings of acute decompensation. Biomarkers are used to diagnose disease risk, to predict outcome and to tailor treatment to individuals.
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Doctor Works To Reduce Cancer Burden In Africa

In 2010, cancer will be the single leading cause of death worldwide, overtaking chronic illnesses such as heart disease and stroke. Already cancer causes more deaths than HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined. Almost three-quarters of new cases will occur in developing countries, with more than a million cases in sub-Saharan Africa by 2020, according to World Health Organization projections. Scot Remick, M.D., director of the Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center at West Virginia University, is leading U.S. efforts to help prepare for the growing cancer burden in Third World nations. He heads the International Working Group of the National Cancer Institute"s AIDS Malignancy Consortium, which has been instrumental in training doctors and building clinical trials for AIDS-related diseases in Uganda and Kenya. "Most people don"t realize that by 2010 cancer will be the single greatest cause of mortality worldwide," said Remick after returning from the May-June meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where he chaired an education session on the topic. "Anywhere from 15 to 20 percent of cancers are due to transmissible causes, and healthcare professionals in the industrialized world are likely to underestimate the role of infectious agents even though they constitute a significant burden." Transmissible causes include viruses such as Epstein-Barr virus, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C viruses, and the human papillomavirus. Viruses may hit the developing world particularly hard, but rising rates of obesity and tobacco use are a factor, too. "You"re beginning to see Western influences on lifestyle, and this is creating impact on the cancer rate," Remick said. Remick and an international team of researchers have just published results of the first clinical trial of its type in Africa a low-dose chemotherapy regimen for people with AIDS-related non-Hodgkin"s lymphoma. The trial showed dramatic results a 6 percent mortality rate, compared with an expected 20 percent to 66 percent rate in the Kenyan and Ugandan populations studied. The research team chose a low-dose chemotherapy regimen because it"s vital that cancer therapies in sub-Saharan Africa be less myelotoxic or damaging to bone marrow than conventional treatment plans. Money, means and blood products may not exist in re-challenged countries to counteract chemotherapy"s potentially destructive effects on bone marrow. Remick, senior researcher on the study published in the current issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, said the clinical trial represents a dozen years of work. Partners in the project are Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, Ohio State University, the Uganda Cancer Institute and Kenyatta National Hospital as well as medical schools in Uganda and Kenya. The AIDS Malignancy Consortium will be promoting measures such as vaccination and other strategies aimed at preventing cancer as well as screening programs to encourage early diagnosis. Development of more low-dose chemotherapy trials is also on the agenda. "The hope is that, as things will evolve, our efforts will be less about awareness and advocacy and more about action," Remick said. West Virginia University Health Sciences Center


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