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#hiv
fromQueerty
1 month ago
Public health

A doctor's post about HIV in the mid '90s unlocks a flood of heartbreaking memories - Queerty

Cancer
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
16 hours ago

Person functionally cured of HIV after bone marrow transplant from sibling

A 63-year-old man achieved functional HIV cure through a bone marrow transplant from his brother with a rare genetic mutation.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
17 hours ago

From the Oslo to the Berlin patient: Lessons learned from 10 people cured' of HIV

Timothy Brown's case demonstrated that curing HIV is possible, leading to 10 confirmed cases of remission after stem cell transplants.
fromQueerty
1 month ago
Public health

A doctor's post about HIV in the mid '90s unlocks a flood of heartbreaking memories - Queerty

fromIndependent
1 day ago

Stage 4 Melanoma: 'I was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer in 2011 and given nine months. I have been in remission since 2016'

Maria Kilcommins was living life as normal with no symptoms whatsoever of cancer when she experienced a seizure on December 19, 2011. This unexpected event led to her cancer diagnosis, which drastically changed her life.
Cancer
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

This method to reverse cellular ageing is about to be tested in humans

Yuancheng Ryan Lu's research on reprogramming retinal nerve cells could lead to restoring eyesight and rejuvenating organs.
#car-t-therapy
fromwww.bbc.com
2 months ago
Medicine

First leukaemia patient to receive pioneering treatment on NHS says it is 'very sci-fi'

CAR-T immunotherapy now available on the NHS for adults with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia offers rapid, more effective, and potentially curative treatment.
fromNature
2 months ago
Medicine

Innovative CAR-T therapy destroys cancer cells without dangerous side effects

CART4-34 T cells target IGHV4-34–bearing cancer B cells, destroying tumors as effectively as CD19 CAR-T while sparing healthy B cells and preserving immune function.
Medicine
fromInsideHook
1 day ago

CAR T Therapy Shows Promise Against Autoimmune Diseases

CAR T therapy shows promise in treating autoimmune conditions, providing significant relief for patients previously unresponsive to traditional treatments.
Medicine
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

The Biggest Hope for Curing Autoimmune Disease

Experimental CAR-T cell treatment shows promise for severe autoimmune diseases, with one patient returning to a normal life after years of unsuccessful treatments.
Cancer
fromNews Center
19 hours ago

Targeting Novel Long Non-Coding RNA May Improve Glioblastoma Treatment - News Center

Increased expression of a novel long non-coding RNA drives glioblastoma cell growth and may inform new therapeutic strategies.
#autoimmune-diseases
fromNature
5 days ago
Medicine

One woman, three autoimmune diseases: CAR-T therapy vanquishes ultra-rare disease trio

Cancer
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 days ago

Cell therapy helps woman with three autoimmune diseases make remarkable' recovery

A woman with severe autoimmune diseases achieved treatment-free remission after innovative cell therapy at University Hospital Erlangen.
Medicine
fromNature
5 days ago

One woman, three autoimmune diseases: CAR-T therapy vanquishes ultra-rare disease trio

A woman with three autoimmune diseases experienced no symptoms after receiving engineered immune cells, marking a significant treatment breakthrough.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Woman with three deadly diseases has remarkable' recovery after cell therapy

A woman with three autoimmune diseases achieved remission after CAR T-cell therapy, marking a significant breakthrough in treatment options.
Medicine
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Clinical trial shows gene editing works for -Thalassaemia, too

An improved gene editing system reactivates a fetal hemoglobin gene to treat β-Thalassaemia, building on CRISPR's success with sickle-cell anemia.
fromWashingtonian - The website that Washington lives by.
3 weeks ago

Meet the Leaders Helping to Create a World Without Blood Cancer - Washingtonian

The funds raised through Visionaries of the Year are used for research to advance lifesaving therapies like immunotherapy, genomics and personalized medicine, which are saving lives today.
Fundraising
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

Inside a rare lab that's blazing a bold trail as it hunts for new drugs

Kelly Chibale describes the drug discovery process as a fairy-tale quest, stating, 'It doesn't mean that there aren't surprises or miracles. They do happen, but you have to kiss many frogs before you meet the prince.' This metaphor illustrates the challenges and unpredictability in finding effective medicines.
US news
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Can a mouse be cloned indefinitely? Decades-long experiment has answers

Asexual reproduction is ultimately unsustainable for mice, and potentially other mammals, too. The clones looked normal and lived as long as normal mice. But large mutations - including the loss of an entire chromosome - accumulated in the cloned lineage at an unusually high rate.
OMG science
Cancer
fromSlate Magazine
2 weeks ago

I Was Once Given Just Three Years to Live. A Specific Kind of Hope Could Help Cancer Patients Like Me.

A hip injury worsened over a year, leading to an MRI that revealed serious health issues requiring medical attention.
fromwww.nature.com
6 days ago

Engineered immunosuppressive dendritic cells protect against cardiac remodelling

Chronic inflammation is a central driver of pathological fibrosis after ischaemic or haemodynamic stress, but strategies that locally rebalance injurious and reparative immune responses without systemic immunosuppression are lacking.
Medicine
Medicine
fromTNW | Health-Tech
6 days ago

HexemBio raises $10.4M for a stem cell rejuvenation therapy

HexemBio develops a blood stem cell rejuvenation therapy using a recreated embryonic environment, targeting bone marrow transplants for blood cancers.
Higher education
fromCornell Chronicle
1 month ago

Stem-cell registry drive will mobilize campus to save lives | Cornell Chronicle

Cornell is hosting a stem-cell donor campaign March 13-20 to recruit 10,000 participants aged 18-35 for the national registry, addressing critical shortages of Black and Latino donors needed for patients like Max Uribe.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Following the initial trials in Africa of the groundbreaking drug that could put an end to AIDS

On that sunny March morning, in a small health center in Lobamba, a rural area of Eswatini, this 32-year-old sex worker has just become one of the first people in the world to receive lenacapavir, a drug that, administered twice a year, offers nearly 100% protection against HIV.
Medicine
fromThe Washington Post
3 weeks ago

J. Michael Bishop, who illuminated genetic roots of cancer, dies at 90

Dr. Bishop and Varmus showed that oncogenes - genes that cause cancer - are not foreign genes introduced into the body by viruses, as was widely believed at the time. Instead, normal versions of oncogenes are present in healthy cells, where they help regulate normal growth.
Cancer
#car-t-cell-therapy
Medicine
fromNews Center
1 month ago

CAR T-cell Therapy Improves Survival in Relapsed or Refractory Lymphoma - News Center

CAR T-cell therapy lisocabtagene maraleucel significantly improved progression-free and overall survival in patients with relapsed or refractory marginal zone lymphoma.
Medicine
fromNews Center
1 month ago

CAR T-cell Therapy Improves Survival in Relapsed or Refractory Lymphoma - News Center

CAR T-cell therapy lisocabtagene maraleucel significantly improved progression-free and overall survival in patients with relapsed or refractory marginal zone lymphoma.
Cancer
fromIndependent
4 weeks ago

'I survived breast cancer but I lost three siblings to the disease'

A mammogram in 2015 detected breast cancer in Síle Nic Suibhne, whose family history included her sister's previous diagnosis, prompting her participation in BreastCheck screening.
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Masked mitochondria slip into cells to treat disease in mice

When mitochondria are exposed to tissue or blood, they lose the electrical gradient across their outer membrane. Mitochondria that lack such a gradient are recognized by a cell's internal machinery as damaged and quickly destroyed. The vast majority of previous studies involved injecting 'naked' mitochondria directly into the bloodstream or tissue sites, but the approach isn't very efficient, so researchers often have to use 'ridiculous' doses of mitochondria.
Medicine
Medicine
fromABC7 San Francisco
3 weeks ago

Cook surviving on artificial heart saved with donor heart in first-ever UCSF transplant

UCSF surgeons successfully implanted an artificial heart in a patient as a bridge to transplant, later replacing it with a donor heart, marking a first for the institution.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Now is not the time to defund human fetal tissue research

Restricting federal funding for human fetal tissue research will impede development of replacement technologies and slow discovery of new medicines.
Medicine
fromNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
1 month ago

Immunotherapies for HIV Eradication in the CNS Compartment

Immunotherapeutic strategies using broadly neutralizing antibodies must overcome blood-brain barrier limitations to effectively target persistent HIV in the central nervous system while preventing neuroinflammatory damage.
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Man kept alive on artificial lung for two days while he waited for double transplant

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
Media industry
#pancreatic-cancer
Medicine
fromWIRED
1 month ago

Japan Approves the World's First Treatment Made With Reprogrammed Human Cells

ReHeart and Amusepri represent breakthrough cell transplant therapies addressing severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease by replacing damaged tissue with functional cells derived from iPS cells.
Public health
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

The near death and last-minute reprieve of a trial for an HIV vaccine

A $45 million USAID-funded African-led HIV vaccine initiative was disrupted when a 2025 U.S. executive order froze foreign aid, halting funding and derailing trials.
Medicine
fromBusiness Matters
1 month ago

Flavia Pichiorri: Turning Cancer Research Into Real Therapies

Dr. Flavia Pichiorri bridges laboratory discoveries and clinical applications in blood cancer research, focusing on therapeutic targets and radiation strategies to accelerate patient treatment outcomes.
Science
from48 hills
2 months ago

HIV denialist Peter Duesberg is dead. Good. - 48 hills

Peter Duesberg promoted false AIDS denialism claiming HIV is harmless and blamed drugs, causing harm by undermining effective HIV treatment and prevention.
OMG science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Why did that cancer cell become drug-resistant? - Harvard Gazette

TimeVault records and stores cellular gene-expression history inside living cells, enabling retrieval of past gene-activity information to study differentiation, stress responses, adaptation, and drug resistance.
Cancer
fromVulture
1 month ago

Bruce Campbell Diagnosed with 'Treatable' But Not 'Curable' Cancer

Bruce Campbell announced a treatable cancer diagnosis and will prioritize treatment over public appearances this summer before touring with his film Ernie & Emma in fall.
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Americans living longer after cancer diagnosis - Harvard Gazette

New findings on cancer survival rates offer hope for the more than 2 million Americans diagnosed each year. Seven out of 10 Americans diagnosed with cancer now survive five years or more, according to the American Cancer Society, a 7 percent increase since the mid-1990s, when the rate stood at 63 percent. The survival rate data - from patients diagnosed with cancer between 2015 and 2021 - showed, significantly, that those with high-mortality cancers and advanced diagnoses had the largest gains.
Public health
#hiv-treatment
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

Monthly HIV-drug injections offer potent alternative to daily tablets

Monthly injectable antiretroviral drugs effectively suppress HIV in patients with mental illness and adherence challenges who cannot maintain daily tablet regimens.
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

Monthly HIV-drug injections offer potent alternative to daily tablets

Monthly injectable antiretroviral drugs effectively suppress HIV in patients with mental illness and adherence challenges who cannot maintain daily tablet regimens.
Medicine
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 month ago

I'm 12 and had a heart transplant because of a disease that affects only 13 people'

An 11-year-old boy received a heart transplant after waking from a six-week coma caused by a rare LMNA gene-related muscular dystrophy affecting only approximately 13 people worldwide.
fromNature
1 month ago

Genetically modified pig liver keeps man alive until human organ transplant

The pig organ filtered the man's blood for a few days while he waited for a human liver transplant. The man has since received a human liver and is recovering well, says Lin Wang, one of the surgeons who led the procedure in January at Xijing Hospital of the Air Force Medical University in Xi'an, China.
Medicine
Cancer
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Douglas Hanahan, biologist: We don't necessarily need a cure, what we really need is cancer without disease'

Cancer cells acquire hallmarks: uncontrolled proliferation, evasion of growth barriers, resistance to programmed death, and relative immortality, driving tumor diversity and treatment variability.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

A new one-a-day-pill holds promise for HIV's 'forgotten population'

Many HIV patients with drug-resistant strains cannot use single-pill treatments and must take multiple medications daily, creating a forgotten population left behind by modern HIV advances.
Cancer
fromNews Center
2 months ago

Combination Treatment May Slow Disease Progression in Advanced Sarcoma - News Center

Cabozantinib plus temozolomide, given orally, showed potential to slow progression of advanced leiomyosarcoma and merits further clinical evaluation.
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

I Was 21 When My Doctors Told Me I Had A Year To Live. What Happened Next Left Them Stunned.

The surgery was long and grueling - almost 12 hours - and my recovery was tough. I couldn't lift my baby for weeks. My husband served as a caregiver for both me and our son, while my mom and sisters rotated shifts to help. I hated feeling like a visitor in my own life, but slowly my strength began to return. It took me about a year to fully recover and start to feel like myself again.
Cancer
#hiv-cure-research
fromLGBTQ Nation
2 months ago

The amazing cases of 9 people "cured" of HIV each contain clues about a possible cure - LGBTQ Nation

For more than a decade, doctors and researchers have announced that a handful of people around the world have been cured of HIV. Each of these patients has experienced long-term viral control - in some cases for over a decade - without antiretroviral therapy (ART), as AIDSMap notes, though some doctors describe them as being in "remission." While the patients have shown no signs of HIV since stopping ART, at least some uncertainty remains as to whether the virus could eventually rebound in them.
Medicine
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

The very long road from a cancer cure' in mice to one in humans

Promising mouse cancer cures often fail to become safe, effective human drugs; premature media claims can create false patient expectations and hinder responsible research progress.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Four heart transplants in three days: A race against time at Madrid's 12 de Octubre Hospital

Male, 56 years old, resident of CastillaLa Mancha He had already undergone a heart transplant at the 12 de Octubre Hospital in August 2017. After an initially good evolution during the first years, his new heart began to deteriorate progressively and did not respond to any of the therapeutic measures used. He was placed on the waiting list for a retransplant in August 2024.
Medicine
fromNews Center
2 months ago

Experimental Drug Shows Promise for Rare Genetic Disorder - News Center

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPS II), or Hunter syndrome, is a rare genetic disorder primarily affecting boys, caused by a deficiency in the enzyme needed to break down sugar molecules. This harmful buildup in cells and tissues impacts multiple body systems, causing frequent infections, organ enlargement and developmental disabilities. Management involves supportive care and enzyme replacement therapy, as there is currently no cure,
Medicine
Medicine
fromEuro Weekly News
2 months ago

Barcelona hospital performs face transplant

Vall d'Hebron University Hospital performed the world's first face transplant sourced from an assisted-dying donor, replacing central facial structures and restoring breathing, chewing, and speech.
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

A vaccine to prevent colon cancer shows promising results

Eduardo Vilar-Sanchez has spent more than 10 years pursuing a goal that seemed very distant, but which he now sees as a little closer: to develop a preventive vaccine against cancer. The physician and researcher is leading a study that presented the first promising results of a colon cancer vaccine in a small group of patients suffering from a rare disease that makes them 17 times more likely to develop colon cancer than the general population.
Medicine
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

CAR-T therapy provides relief for children with autoimmune diseases

Personalized cell therapy reset the immune system and reduced severe symptoms and organ damage in eight treatment-resistant children and adolescents with autoimmune disorders.
fromArs Technica
2 months ago

mRNA cancer vaccine shows protection at 5-year follow-up, Moderna and Merck say

As for side effects, the companies reported that little had changed from previous analyses; adverse events were similar between the two groups. The top side effects linked to the vaccine were fatigue, injection site pain, and chills. The results "highlight the potential of a prolonged benefit" of the vaccine combined with Keytruda in patients with high-risk melanoma," Kyle Holen, a senior vice president at Moderna, said. They also "illustrate mRNA's potential in cancer care," he said, noting that the company has eight more Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials going for mRNA vaccines against a variety of other cancers, including lung, bladder, and kidney cancers.
Medicine
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