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Saturday, January 4, 2020

Potential path to improved bone repair

Researchers are moving closer to a new approach for improving spinal fusion procedures and repairing broken or defective bones that avoids an over-production of bone that commonly occurs in current treatments.
In a preclinical study, researchers significantly reduced undesired bone growth outside of targeted repair areas in rat femurs by delivering a potent bone-forming protein called bone morphogenetic protein, or BMP, using a new biomaterial made from heparin.
A six-member research team – led by Marian H. Hettiaratchi, a bioengineer in the Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact at the University of Oregon – described the approach in a paper published Jan. 3 issue of the online journal Science Advances.
Hettiaratchi began exploring the use of heparin microparticles to deliver BMP as a possible way to stop abnormal bone growth more than five years ago while a doctoral student at the Georgia Institute of Technology under the mentorship of co-authors Robert Guldberg and Todd McDevitt.
The traditional approach of using high doses of BMP alone has led to numerous complications in humans, including soft tissue inflammation and abnormal ossification.
For the new study, Hettiaratchi and colleagues fed their earlier results from experiments done in both rats and test tubes into computer simulations to explore ways to adjust their heparin-based approach in animal testing with levels of BMP comparable to dosages required in human bone-repair procedures.
“We focused on using doses that were more clinically relevant. In humans, the typical treatment uses 0.1 to 0.2 milligrams of BMP per kilogram of body weight, so we used the same amount in the rats,” Hettiaratchi said. “Most research done in rats uses 10 times less BMP to repair bone, which isn’t comparable to what’s done in humans and doesn’t exhibit the side effects of a clinical BMP dose.”
Two different strengths of the combination were used, resulting in 40 to 50 percent reductions in abnormal ossification. The heparin microparticles contain heparin’s long-chained linear polysaccharides, with sulfated groups which drive stronger binding affinity to BMP.
The heparin and BMP, mixed in an alginate hydrogel, were injected into a nanofiber mesh tube – created in Guldberg’s lab to isolate a repair area and unveiled in Biosciences in 2011 – already inserted into femoral defects in the rats. Human medical practices have relied on high doses of BMP injected into a collagen sponge, which leads to abnormal ossification in surrounding soft tissue as BMP rapidly escapes the sponge.
The findings represent a proof-of-concept for fine-tuning the approach rather than a route into clinical testing in humans, Hettiaratchi said. The eventual goal, she said, is to create synthetic heparin-like microparticles that achieve the same results while avoiding potential side effects of heparin.
“The problem with healing large bone defects clinically is that the BMP delivered using collagen sponges results in abnormal bone formation because the drug doesn’t stay on the material,” Hettiaratchi said. “Our new material retains much more of the BMP, keeping it localized. You don’t get bone formation outside the targeted area.”
Hettiaratchi joined the UO after completing a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto. Guldberg joined the UO’s Knight Campus as executive director in August 2018. McDevitt is now in San Francisco, affiliated with the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease and the University of California.
At Toronto, Hettiaratchi began pursuing the development of a synthetic material to localize protein delivery that would avoid potential side effects from heparin, a widely used anticoagulant that prevents blood clots. None of heparin’s long list of known side effects has been seen in the rats, she noted. Another potential problem is that heparin’s numerous sulfate groups might bind to other proteins not related to bone repair.
Ideally, she said, a synthetic heparin-like drug could be engineered to only bind to BMP. Such work will be the initial focus in her UO lab, which will open in early 2020.
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Co-authors with Hettiaratchi, Guldberg and McDevitt on Science Advances paper were: Laxminarayanan Krishnan, Tel Rouse and Catherine Chou, all of Georgia Tech’s Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience.
The National Institutes of Health and Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine supported the project.

Black Diamond Therapeutics readies IPO

Black Diamond Therapeutics (BDTX) has filed a preliminary prospectus for a $100M IPO.
The Cambridge, MA-based biopharmaceutical firm develops small molecule tumor-agnostic cancer therapies based on its proprietary Mutation-Allostery-Pharmacology technology platform.
Lead candidate is BDTX-189, designed to inhibit mutant kinases that affect the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the tyrosine-protein kinase ErbB-2 (HER2) but with a more favorable safety profile than current ErbB kinase inhibitors. A Phase 1/2 clinical trial should launch in H1.
2019 Financials (9 mo.): Operating Expenses: $19.0M (+222%); Net Loss: ($25.4M) (-331%); Cash Burn: ($17.2M) (-182%).

Friday, January 3, 2020

Minn. opioid scripts plunge; providers may be penalized for overprescribing

Opioid prescriptions in Minnesota have dropped significantly over the last few years, but the state still intends to implement penalties against certain physicians that overprescribe painkillers, the Minnesota Department of Human Services announced Jan 3.
New opioid prescriptions for Minnesota residents benefiting from state programs have declined 33 percent since 2016. Opioid dosages above new state guidelines have also decreased, dropping by more than half.
Minnesota has typically reported lower opioid prescribing levels than other states amid the  epidemic, but state opioid-related overdose deaths still surged from 54 in 2000 to 422 in 2017, according to the Star Tribune.
In response, new state law has DHS send providers private reports each year regarding personal prescription rates. DHS also manages a quality improvement program for providers that continue to prescribe outside of community standards. Physicians with high prescribing rates run the risk of being removed from the Medical Assistance and MinnesotaCare programs.

First case of blood clot in space treated from Earth

Physicians detected the first case of a blood clot in space and treated it from Earth, according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Serena Auñón-Chancellor, MD, clinical associate professor of medicine at LSU Health New Orleans School of Medicine’s in Baton Rouge, La., was the lead author of the study involving 11 astronauts stationed on the International Space Station. The study intended to help close gaps in knowledge about circulatory physiology.
The astronauts underwent ultrasounds of their internal jugular veins, performed at scheduled times in different positions during the mission. About two months into the mission, the ultrasounds revealed a blood clot in one astronaut.
This was the first time NASA had encountered this condition in space. The space station pharmacy had injectable enoxaparin, a blood thinner, but no blood thinner reversal medications.
The physician team told the astronaut to begin treatment with the injectable enoxaparin. The astronaut initially took a higher dose, which was reduced after 33 days so that it would last until apixaban, an oral blood thinner, and blood thinner reversal drugs could be brought in via a supply spacecraft. The astronaut took the apixaban until four days before returning to Earth.
Once on Earth, the astronaut had more ultrasound examins, which showed no need for taking more blood thinners. The clot was gone in 10 days. Even after six months, the astronaut showed no concerning symptoms from the blood clot.
The astronaut had no personal or family history of blood clots.
“These new findings demonstrate that the human body still surprises us in space,” said Dr. Auñón-Chancellor, who is also a member of NASA’s astronaut corps.

Oscar Health cuts Walgreens, Duane Reade locations from its network

Oscar Health stopped covering Walgreens, plus some Duane Reade and Rite Aid locations, as part of its New York pharmacy network Jan. 1.
Instead it is directing New York members to CVS as its preferred retail pharmacy and startup pharmacy Capsule, which it formed a partnership with last month. Its network also includes independent pharmacies.
Oscar customers cannot access in-network negotiated rates for prescriptions at the out-of-network pharmacies, and purchases there don’t count toward members’ deductibles or the annual limit on their out-of-pocket medical costs.
For Oscar members in plans with low monthly premiums, those deductibles can go up to about $8,000 before the insurer begins to pay for certain medical services. In plans with higher premiums, consumers can have no deductible at all.
By cutting out some pharmacies, Oscar is betting that members won’t mind the inconvenience seeking out a CVS, Capsule or local drugstore over their neighborhood Duane Reade or Walgreens.
Oscar has expanded quickly since it debuted on New York’s Affordable Care Act marketplace in 2013, and it is selling plans in 15 states this year. It now has about 250,000 individual and small-business customers, according to its website. The company was founded by Mario Schlosser, Joshua Kushner and Kevin Nazemi. Kushner, a venture capitalist, is the brother of Jared Kushner, adviser to President Donald Trump.
The company has attracted customers by offering free telemedicine calls and a dedicated customer service team that helps resolve member issues. After incurring significant losses in its early years, Oscar reined in its network, partnering with only a few major health systems and independent hospitals to negotiate competitive prices. In New York its partners are Mount Sinai Health System, Montefiore Medical Center and Catholic Health Services of Long Island.
The insurer now appears to be replicating that model in the pharmacy space.

‘Shock Jock’ Don Imus: Prostate cancer tack worth emulating

Legendary radio talk show host Don Imus, 79, who died in a hospital in College Station, Texas, over the Christmas weekend, made his name with misogynistic, racist, homophobic, off-color, and antagonistic on-air comments. He was a pioneer “shock jock.”
I didn’t listen to his show, “Imus in the Morning.” But to me, as a man on active surveillance (AS) for low-risk cancer, Imus also made a mark as a pioneer celebrity on AS, a subject most showbiz types shun.
Imus was diagnosed in 2009 with a cancer confined to the prostate gland. It was called stage II cancer. There was no mention then of his Gleason score. Entertainment reporters and showbiz publicists aren’t well-informed or especially interested in such details.
Imus’ family said he was admitted to Baylor Scott and White Medical Center with a lung ailment. He had been treated for emphysema in the past.
At least one news outlet suggested — apparently incorrectly — that Imus’s death stemmed from his prostate cancer. The accompanying story said the exact cause of death was unknown.
When he was diagnosed with stage II cancer with a digital rectal exam, Imus made the rounds of urologists at high-profile institutions trying to discuss his options.
Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, a long-time leader in AS and chairman of urology at the University of California San Francisco, had fond memories of Imus as a patient. “When he and I met, I found him to be seriously interested in understanding all treatment options in great detail,” Carroll told me.
The private Imus projected a different image than the public shock jock.
Carroll said Imus “was intelligent, respectful, and warm. I enjoyed working with him at the time. He had a great sense of humor, but crossed no lines when I was with him. I think his wit and sense of humor were likely an asset when dealing with his cancer.”
Imus said in a broadcast that some famed urologists urged him to undergo radiation. Imus declined. He likely figured that all things considered, active surveillance was a good choice because it had a favorable survival rate and avoided some nasty side effects, such as incontinence and impotence. The 10-year survival rate for his stage II cancer was 98% with AS as well as for radiation and surgery.
Aaron Katz, MD, a self-described “holistic urologist,” invited Imus to be treated at Columbia University’s Center for Holistic Urology.
Katz, who now is urology chairman at New York University’s Winthrop University Hospital, could not be reached for comment. Imus used to give him a health spot on his radio show.
Katz said on the program that the other doctors had told Imus “immediate treatment or else what? That something bad would happen.” Nothing happened.
Katz put Imus on a plant-based diet, prescribed him 80 vitamins, and ordered a rigorous exercise plan. Imus groused that he spent hours and hours on a treadmill. In September 2011, Imus said he has been on the treadmill 1,297 days in a row.
Imus was especially impressed with active hexose correlated compound (AHCC), a Japanese medicinal mushroom product, aimed at enhancing the immune system. AHCC apparently had some extra benefits.
“You know, I haven’t had a cold in three years?” Imus told Katz on a broadcast in 2011 promoting the urologist’s book, The Definitive Guide to Prostate Cancer: Everything You Need to Know about Conventional and Integrative Therapies.
Katz described his holistic protocol for the broadcaster on “Imus in the Morning”: “The risk of doing just an active, holistic surveillance is that maybe the cancer could get worse…. [We are] monitoring it. We’re managing it. We’re getting a PSA every three months. We do an MRI every so often. But the upside is you feel healthy. You look great. You have great energy. Your sexual function, urinary function, none of that is impaired.”
Then shock jock Imus emerged, noting that he had a digital rectal exam every three months and asking Katz: “You’re going to check me today.”
Imus asked Katz if he had brought his gloves along for a DRE. Katz admitted he didn’t have the gloves, but he said, playing along, “I brought the lubrication.” Rimshot. Badum-ching.
Imus pressed his doctor about whether he was honest in his book about impotence. The shock jock called it “the wiener warranty,” meaning the odds Viagra could help men after a radical prostatectomy. They agreed about half of men could be helped with the Little Blue Pill, Viagra.
Katz said: “In medicine, you have to weigh the risk-and-the-benefit ratio.” Imus responded simply: “You just have to be honest.”
I know several other men on versions of holistic active surveillance. They drink alkalized water, shun meat, eat plant-based foods, and take loads of vitamins and exotic herbal remedies. They seem to be doing fine.
They tend to be evangelistic, strong believers in what they are doing.
I am following a different path with AS. I am still experimenting with diet, having tried low-fat, keto, and Paleo diets. I take a few vitamins based on counseling at the University of California San Francisco. My PSA scans, DREs, MRIs, and biopsies have been okay, whatever I have done.
My own urologist, Brian Helfand, MD, PhD, of NorthShore University Health System in suburban Chicago, told me he is skeptical about holistic urology.
He said, “There are many things that you can label anything. Certainly, the concept of holistic urology is not considered standard of care. As is true of many parts of holistic medicine, we do not have evidence from randomized trials demonstrating superiority of a holistic approach to prostate cancer compared to traditional medical approaches. Further studies have to be performed before we offer these type of interventions as ‘standard of care.'”
Still, he said he encourages his patients on AS or those undergoing definitive treatment to meet with a dietitian and to exercise. “I believe that tight sugar control, exercise, and a cardiac-healthy diet have been proven to be good for overall health. There is emerging evidence that this may also be true for men with advanced prostate cancer. Finally, the reason why this supplement to standard therapies (such as active surveillance, surgery, radiation, etc.) is good is that it gives the patients some feeling of control of their overall health.”
Imus appeared to do well in the intervening years. He retired in 2018 after 50 years on air. He died in his 10th year after being diagnosed.
The thing that impressed me about Imus was that he opted publicly for active surveillance — unlike other celebs who, for various reasons, opt for a “definitive cure.”
Kudos to Imus for being public and talking about his cancer and his decision to live with it on holistic active surveillance. He ought to be a role model for other celebs who could guide fans to consideration of non-invasive choices.

Incyte’s pain is Equillium’s gain, up 12%

Thinly traded nano cap Equillium (EQ +11.5%) is up on average volume, a modest 44K shares, diverging from Incyte’s (INCY -10.1%) selloff after itacitinib failed a late-stage study in acute graft versus host disease (GvHD).
Equillium is developing lead candidate EQ001 (itolizumab) for the same indication. A Phase 1/2 clinical trial, EQUATE, is in process with an estimated primary completion date in May 2021.
Itolizumab is a monoclonal antibody that binds to (inhibits) an immune checkpoint receptor called CD6 that plays a key role in a range of immuno-inflammatory diseases.