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4 articles from the last 30 days matching "Drug"

ResearchRSS3 days ago

High pulmonary resistance indicates worse outcomes in new PH study

A study from Japan found that people with pulmonary hypertension (a condition where blood vessels in the lungs become stiff and narrow) who have higher pulmonary vascular resistance—a measure of how hard the heart has to work to pump blood through the lungs—tend to have worse health outcomes. The study also looked at whether a type of diabetes medication called SGLT2 inhibitors might help these patients.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you have pulmonary hypertension related to heart disease, knowing that high pulmonary vascular resistance predicts worse outcomes could help your doctor decide whether to start more aggressive treatment earlier or monitor you more closely.
💬 Ask your doctorpulmonary hypertension due to left heart diseaseRead →
ResearchRSS3 days ago

Antipsychotic drug may help treat SMA symptoms, research shows

Scientists found that haloperidol, a medication normally used to treat psychiatric conditions, may help treat spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) by increasing levels of a protein called SMN that is missing or low in SMA patients. In laboratory tests with mouse cells and human patient cells, haloperidol helped nerve cells survive longer, reduced harmful inflammation, and improved movement. This suggests haloperidol could potentially be used alongside or instead of current SMA treatments.

WHY IT MATTERSIf haloperidol proves effective in human trials, SMA patients could potentially benefit from a medication that already exists and is FDA-approved, potentially offering a faster path to treatment than developing entirely new drugs.
💬 Ask your doctorspinal muscular atrophyRead →
ResearchPUBMEDApr 5

Economic Evaluations of Orphan Drugs for Rare Kidney Diseases in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Bibliometric Systematic Review With Policy and Evidence Gaps Analysis.

Researchers looked at studies from 2014 to 2024 about the cost and value of special medicines for rare kidney diseases in poorer countries. They found that there isn't much research on whether these expensive medicines are worth the money in these areas. The study shows that doctors and governments need better information to decide if patients should have access to these treatments.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you have a rare kidney disease in a low- or middle-income country, this research highlights why your access to orphan drugs is limited — there's a major gap in evidence about whether these treatments are affordable and effective in your region.
Good to knowRead →
ResearchPUBMEDApr 1

Baseline tumor burden and outcomes in patients with rare cancers treated with immunotherapy (Southwest Oncology Group trial S1609).

Researchers studied whether the amount of cancer in a patient's body before treatment affects how well two immunotherapy drugs work together. They looked at 722 patients with rare cancers who received nivolumab and ipilimumab (two drugs that help the immune system fight cancer). The study wanted to understand if patients with smaller tumors do better than those with larger tumors when treated with these combination drugs.

WHY IT MATTERSIf baseline tumor size predicts treatment response in rare cancers, doctors could better counsel patients on expected outcomes and identify which patients might benefit most from this dual immunotherapy approach before starting treatment.
💬 Ask your doctorrare cancersultrarare malignanciesRead →

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