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Sunday, November 3, 2019

Black and elderly patients less likely to receive lung cancer treatments

Only about 6 in 10 lung cancer patients in the United States receive the minimal lung cancer treatments recommended by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines, according to new research published online in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society.
In “Disparities in Receiving Guideline-Concordant Treatment for Lung Cancer in the United States,” Erik F. Blom, MD, and colleagues report that the likelihood of receiving the minimal treatments is even lower for black patients and the elderly. The researchers based their findings on an analysis of 441,812 lung cancer cases diagnosed between 2010-2014 in the National Cancer Database.
“Comparability and generalizability of previous findings on this topic were limited,” said Dr. Blom, a researcher in the Department of Public Health at the Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam in the Netherlands, who had a guest affiliation with the University of Michigan for this project. “We felt that it is important to investigate whether these disparities persist, and whether they extend to all clinical subgroups of lung cancer patients.”
An alliance of leading cancer centers, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network has established clinical guidelines for treating both non-small cell lung cancer and small cell lung cancer. Together, the two types of lung cancer are the leading cause of cancer deaths in the U.S.
The guidelines account for the stage of the disease when diagnosed and recommend more aggressive treatment of lung cancer in its early stages. Treatment for lung cancer includes surgery, chemotherapy, conventional radiotherapy and stereotactic body radiation therapy, a specialized and precise type of radiotherapy that delivers high doses of radiation to small, well-defined tumors. Depending on the type of lung cancer and its stage, the guidelines may recommend combinations of these therapies.
The researchers found that, among the patients in the database, 62.1 percent received guideline-concordant treatment, 21.6 percent received no treatment and the remainder received treatment that was less intensive than recommended. Conventional radiotherapy only was among the most common less-intensive-than recommended therapy across all stages of both cancers.
Those with advanced non-small cell lung cancer were the least likely to receive guideline-concordant treatment. The researchers stress the importance of communicating to patients that the benefits of cancer treatment for advanced disease, such as chemotherapy, can extend beyond survival to quality of life and symptom control.
After adjusting for factors that might have biased results, black patients were only 78 percent as likely to receive the minimum treatment compared to those who were white. Those aged 80 and older were only 12 percent as likely to receive the minimum treatment compared to those under the age of 50.
Study limitations include the fact that the database included no information about patient preferences or whether they were too sick to receive more intensive cancer treatment.
“While these findings are very concerning, it has always been easier to identify disparities in care than it has been to understand why they persist,” said study co-author Douglas Arenberg, MD, professor of medicine and a pulmonologist at the University of Michigan. “There may be good reasons why less intensive treatment is in fact medically appropriate. The National Cancer Database does not include that level of detail.”
Still, Dr. Blom said, awareness of which patient groups are at risk of receiving less treatment than recommended could be a first step towards creating targeted interventions to improve cancer care.

A new spin on life’s origin?

A research team at The University of Tokyo has reproducibly synthesized staircase-like supramolecules of a single handedness, or chirality, using standard laboratory equipment. By gradually removing the solvent from a rotating solution containing non-chiral precursors, they were able to produce helixes that twist preferentially in a particular direction. This research may lead to new and cheaper drug production methods, as well as finally addressing one of the lingering quandaries about how life began.
One of the most striking features of the molecules most important to life–including DNA, proteins, and sugars–is that they have a “handedness,” referred to as chirality. That is, all living organisms chose to rely on one molecule, while the non-superimposable mirror image does nothing. This is a little like owning a dog that will only fetch your left-handed gloves, while completely ignoring the right-handed ones. It becomes even more puzzling when you consider that chiral pairs behave identically chemically. This makes it extremely difficult to produce just one kind of chiral molecule when starting with nonchiral precursors.
How and why early life chose one type of handedness over the other is a major question in biology, and is sometimes called “the question of homochirality.” One hypothesis is that some early imbalance broke the symmetry between left- and right-handed molecules, and this change was “locked in” over evolutionary time. Now, researchers at The University of Tokyo have demonstrated that, under the right conditions, macroscopic rotation can lead to the formation of supramolecules of a particular chirality.
This was accomplished using a rotary evaporator, a standard piece of equipment in chemistry labs used for concentrating solutions by gently removing the solvent. “It was previously believed that macroscopic rotation could not cause nanoscale molecular chirality, because of the difference in scale, but we have shown that the chirality of the molecules can indeed become fixed in the direction of rotation,” says first author Mizuki Kuroha.
According to her theory, some ancient biomolecules caught in a primordial vortex are responsible for the choice of handedness that we are left with today.
“Not only do these results provide insight to the origin of the homochirality of life, they also represent a pioneering look in the combination of nanoscale molecular chemistry and macroscopic fluid dynamics,” says senior author Kazuyuki Ishii. This research may also enable new synthesis pathways for chiral drugs that do not require chiral molecules as inputs.
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The work is published in Angewandte Chemie as “Chiral Supramolecular Nanoarchitectures from Macroscopic Mechanical Rotations: Effects on Enantioselective Aggregation Behavior of Phthalocyanines.” (DOI:10.1002/anie.201911366)

Simple blood test for early detection of breast cancer

Breast cancer could be detected up to five years before there are any clinical signs of it, using a blood test that identifies the body’s immune response to substances produced by tumour cells, according to new research presented at the 2019 NCRI Cancer Conference today (Sunday).
Cancer cells produce proteins called antigens that trigger the body to make antibodies against them – autoantibodies. Researchers at the University of Nottingham (UK) have found that these tumour-associated antigens (TAAs) are good indicators of cancer, and now they have developed panels of TAAs that are known already to be associated with breast cancer to detect whether or not there are autoantibodies against them in blood samples taken from patients.
In a pilot study the researchers, who are part of the Centre of Excellence for Autoimmunity in Cancer (CEAC) group at the School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, took blood samples from 90 breast cancer patients at the time they were diagnosed with breast cancer and matched them with samples taken from 90 patients without breast cancer (the control group).
They used screening technology (protein microarray) that allowed them to screen the blood samples rapidly for the presence of autoantibodies against 40 TAAs associated with breast cancer, and also 27 TAAs that were not known to be linked with the disease.
Presenting the research at the NCRI Conference, Ms Daniyah Alfattani, a PhD student in the group, said: “The results of our study showed that breast cancer does induce autoantibodies against panels of specific tumour-associated antigens. We were able to detect cancer with reasonable accuracy by identifying these autoantibodies in the blood.”
The researchers identified three panels of TAAs against which to test for autoantibodies. The accuracy of the test improved in the panels that contained more TAAs. The panel of five TAAs correctly detected breast cancer in 29% of the samples from the cancer patients and correctly identified 84% of the control samples as being cancer-free. The panel of seven TAAs correctly identified cancer in 35% of cancer samples and no cancer in 79% of control samples. The panel of nine antigens correctly identified cancer in 37% of cancer samples and no cancer in 79% of the controls.
“We need to develop and further validate this test,” said Ms Alfattani. “However, these results are encouraging and indicate that it’s possible to detect a signal for early breast cancer. Once we have improved the accuracy of the test, then it opens the possibility of using a simple blood test to improve early detection of the disease.”
The researchers are now testing samples from 800 patients against a panel of nine TAAs, and they expect the accuracy of the test to improve with these larger numbers.
“A blood test for early breast cancer detection would be cost effective, which would be of particular value in low and middle income countries. It would also be an easier screening method to implement compared to current methods, such as mammography,” said Ms Alfattani.
The researchers estimate that, with a fully-funded development programme, the test might become available in the clinic in about four to five years.
A similar test for lung cancer is currently being tested in a randomised controlled trial in Scotland, involving 12,000 people at high risk of developing lung cancer because they smoke. They have been randomised to have (or not) an autoantibody blood test called ELISA (Early CDT-Lung). Participants who test positive for the autoantibodies are then followed up with a CT scan every two years in order to detect lung cancer in its early stages when it is easier to treat.
The CEAC group is also working on similar tests for pancreatic, colorectal and liver cancers. Solid tumours like these, as well as lung and breast cancer, represent around 70% of all cancers.
“A blood test capable of detecting any of these cancers at an early stage is the over-riding objective of our work,” concluded Ms Alfattani.
Dr Iain Frame, CEO of NCRI said: “Early diagnosis using simple, non-invasive ways of detecting the first signs of cancer is a key strategic priority for NCRI and something we’d all like to see working in practice. The results from this pilot study for a blood test to detect early breast cancer are promising and build on this research group’s expertise in other cancers, such as lung cancer. It’s obviously early days but we look forward to seeing the results from the larger group of patients that are now being investigated.”
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Abstract no: Poster 2966, poster board number 37, area 2. “Clinical utility of autoantibodies in early detection of breast cancer,” by Daniyah Alfattani et al. 19.20 hrs GMT. Silent theatre 2, Exhibition Hall, Sunday 3 November.

CMS finalizes rules to spur greater use of innovative kidney drugs, home infusion

The Trump administration finalized a new home infusion therapy benefit as part of a final home payment rule.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Home Health Prospective Payment System rule was finalized late Thursday. In addition to the new benefit, the rule also increases payments to home health agencies by an estimated $250 million for the calendar year 2020.
The home infusion therapy benefit—which will be implemented in 2021—will cover the administration of certain medication through a durable medical equipment pump in a patient’s home. It will also cover professional services such as nursing, patient education and training and patient monitoring.
“The new permanent home infusion therapy benefit increases the availability of home-based care by giving patients the choice and convenience to receive critical treatments, such as anti-infectives and chemotherapy, safety at home instead of a hospital or doctor’s office,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma in a statement Thursday.

The home health payment rule also implements a new case mix payment method for home health services that relies on a patient’s characteristics rather than the volume of care provided.
“Today’s final rule also rewards value over volume by focusing on patient information such as their diagnosis and other health conditions, to more accurately pay for home health services,” Verma said.
CMS will also start phasing out next year pre-payments for home health services and eliminate those payments completely by 2021.
“CMS has seen a marked increase in Request for Anticipated Payment (RAP) fraud schemes perpetuated by existing HHAs that receive significant upfront payments, then never submit final claims and close for business, making Medicare recoupment efforts impossible,” the agency said in a release Thursday. “CMS believes that eliminating RAP payments over the next two years would serve to mitigate potential fraud schemes.”

The agency also finalized changes to the Medicare rules to durable medical equipment prosthetics, orthotics and supplies and the End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System. The rule aims to better target payment for innovative new renal dialysis drugs.
“These changes support the development and use of innovative technologies, provide greater access to new treatments in kidney care and modernize our program integrity methods to better combat waste, fraud and abuse in the Medicare program,” the agency said in a release.

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Concord Health Partners’ CHP Merger Corp. files for a $250 million IPO

CHP Merger Corp., a blank check company led by a team from Concord Health Partners targeting the healthcare industry, filed on Thursday with the SEC to raise up to $250 million in an initial public offering.
The Summit, NJ-based company plans to raise $250 million by offering 25 million units at $10 to command a market value of $313 million. Each unit consists of one share of common stock and one-half of one warrant exercisable at $11.50.
The Summit, NJ-based company was founded in 2019 and plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol CHPMU. CHP Merger Corp. filed confidentially on August 19, 2019. J.P. Morgan, Credit Suisse, and Morgan Stanley are the joint bookrunners on the deal.

Chinese health and wellness retailer ECMOHO sets terms for $48M US IPO

ECMOHO, an online retailer selling health and wellness products in China, announced terms for its IPO on Friday.
The Shanghai, China-based company plans to raise $48 million by offering 4.4 million ADS’s at a price range of $10 to $12. At the midpoint of the proposed range, ECMOHO would command a market value of $376 million and an enterprise value of $369 million.
ECMOHO was founded in 2011 and booked $279 million in sales for the 12 months ended June 30, 2019. It plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol MOHO. It had been on our Private Company Watchlist since August 2019. UBS Investment Bank, CICC and AMTD Global Markets are the joint bookrunners on the deal.

Mixed Results from Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Taxes

The Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Taxes on Purchases: Evidence from Four City-Level Taxes in the U.S.

John CawleyDavid FrisvoldDavid Jones

NBER Working Paper No. 26393
Issued in October 2019
NBER Program(s):The Health Economics ProgramThe Public Economics Program
Since 2017, many U.S. cities have implemented taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) to decrease consumption of sugary beverages and raise revenue. In this paper, we analyze household receipt data to examine the impact of SSB taxes on households’ purchases of taxed and untaxed beverages in the four largest U.S. cities with such taxes: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; San Francisco, California; Seattle, Washington; and Oakland, California. We estimate the impact of these taxes by comparing changes in monthly household purchases in the treatment cities to changes in one of two comparison groups: 1) areas adjacent to the treatment cities; or 2) a matched set of households nationally. We find that an increase in the beverage tax rate of 1 cent per ounce decreases household purchases of taxed beverages by 53.0 ounces per month or 12.2 percent. This impact is small in magnitude and consistent with a reduction in individual consumption of 5 calories per day per household member and eventual reduction in weight of 0.5 pounds. When we examine results separately by city, we find that the decline was concentrated in Philadelphia, where the tax decreased purchases by 27.7 percent. We do not find impacts of the taxes in the other three cities combined.
You may purchase this paper on-line in .pdf format from SSRN.com ($5) for electronic delivery.

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