Study: Lab test can prevent severe blood clots in testosterone patients
September 30, 2011
A recent study finds that a blood test can prevent disastrous blood clots in men receiving testosterone therapy.
Actos has little to worry about Avandia lawsuits
May 10, 2011
Glaxo May Settle 1,000 More Lawsuits Over Avandia, Patients’ Lawyer Says | www.bloomberg.com
The FDA has practically eliminated Avandia based on either an analysis considered by everybody faulty or on data that were never released to the public. Actos has a different cardiovascular safety profile and Takeda should not and probably will not settle any lawsuits concerning risk of heart attack.
Aspirin cuts heart attack but not strokes, but not in everybody
April 24, 2011
Aspirin cuts heart attacks, but not deaths or strokes: study | www.reuters.com
Aspirin is a great drug to take for prevention of heart attacks but is not for everybody: - In women aspirin prevents strokes but not heart attacks - In patients with diabetes and no heart disease it does not seem to work - In patients with poor circulation to the legs it is not strong enoughThe lack of prevention of death might be due to the fact that the patient studied had less heart attacks but did not oblige the investigators by dying for them. Given the right patient aspirin remains a great drug.
Analysis of most prescribed drugs is no surprise
April 24, 2011
What Drug Did Doctors Prescribe Most Last Year? | blogs.wsj.com
In times of cost constrains this is no concern. There are additional factors to explain the numbers, some of them related to FDA wisdom:- Multiple new drug applications in metabolic area have been turned down- Propoxiphene was withdrawn increasing dramatically the use of hydrocodone- Atorvastatin is already generic in other countries Others are related to strategy of the Pharmaceuticals:- Lipitor keeps the market share against simvastatin by issuing $4.00 coupons- Advair and Plavix are heavily advertized directly to the consumer As fewer drugs are approved and many drugs are getting old the overall picture is a logical consequence.
September 30, 2009
Controls to blood sugar 'cuts stroke risk' | www.barchester.com
There have been many epidemiologic studies showing a very tight correlation between baseline A1c and cardiovascular mortalityDespite this, five major randomized prospective studies have failed to show any macrovascular benefit for tighter glucose controlThe logical conclusion is that glucose is, therefore, a marker for increased mortality but not a modifiable risk factor thereofThis is why FDA has mandated cardiovascular safety for new antidiabetic agentsData dredging persists, however
Outsourcing of compassionate use of drugs?
January 18, 2008
No right to experimental drugs for dying patients: Supreme Court | news.yahoo.com
The Supreme Court has rejected the use of experimental drugs by the dying patients on the grounds that "The framers (of the US constitution) understood that the pursuit of life is an inalienable right that should not be abridged without due process of law." Over the years our patients with terminal illness have traveled outside the US to purchase hope when our management was offering none. Although in the majority of cases the hope was unjustified, the current decision will encourage healthcare providers residing outside the US to advertise for their services through the internet. The issue should be addressed by the legislators sooner rather than later. Drugs who improve quality of life, awaiting approval for survival indication or drugs looking promising in early clinical trials could be made available to dying patients with informed consent addressing our limitations.
November 23, 2007
Study Shows Weight-Loss Drug Rimonabant is Associated with Severe Adverse Psychiatric Events | pharmalive.com
The pooled analysis of Rimonabant trials point to a significant increase in psychiatric disorders. These studies also point to significant improvements in markers of cardiovascular risk. Risks versus benefits must be considered before the final decision is made on this class of medications.
Another piece of good news for a very good drug
November 8, 2007
Ranexa(R) Significantly Reduces Incidence Of CV Death, MI Or Recurrent Ischemia In MERLIN TIMI-36 Patients With Elevated BNP | www.medicalnewstoday.com
By restoring function in the late Na channel and hence improving diastolic function (amongst other things), Ranexa has worked terrifically in my patients with any evidence for diastolic dysfunction. This typically manifests with shortness of breath and can be associated with an elevated level of BNP. This has not been as successful in patients without myocardial ischemia, but in those with ischemia the shortness of breath and associated chest discomfort has been helped in many. Including the most recent patient with a severe ischemic cardiomyopathy who has responded very very well with a significant increase in his functional capacity. Hopefully this news along with the safety from MERLIN and the A1C data and reduction in arrhythmias in that study will awaken docs to the benefits of Ranexa.
November 8, 2007
Ranexa(R) Significantly Reduces Incidence Of CV Death, MI Or Recurrent Ischemia In MERLIN TIMI-36 Patients With Elevated BNP | www.medicalnewstoday.com
The good news gets better as there is now data from MERLIN that corroborates the news from CARISA showing a reduction in HbGA1C that was significant.
Good device but not much improvement.
August 31, 2007
St. Jude Medical Announces Japanese Approval Of The Angio-Seal STS Plus Vascular Closure Device | www.medicalnewstoday.com
The repositioning of the hole, also present with the VIP version is a mild improvement to decrease sheath manipulation. Otherwise the device has not changed much in the past few years. While a very good device in general, its primary limitaions listed below still remain. 1. not allowing re-access at the previous access site within 90 days of the index procedure 2. inability to promote means for primary healing of the arteriotomy site (primary healing results in much less scar formation and secondary healing that angioseal provides) and 3. relying on an intravascular component for deployment that stays within the vessel for weeks prior to its resolution Newer devices such as the STARCLOSE that also are easy to deploy, rely on no intravascular components and potentially provide much better healing process may be the way of future.
February 7, 2012
What do the cloud, collaboration and virtualization have in common?
January 27, 2012
Clinical diagnostic acquisitions dominate 2011 top ten list
January 12, 2012
Gene therapy success threatens drugs for hemophilia and rare diseases
December 13, 2011
Medtech M&A activity accelerates in 2011
November 30, 2011