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Monday, October 25, 2021

Roche launches genomic profiling kit to expand personalised cancer research

 The AVENIO Tumor Tissue Comprehensive Genomic Profiling (CGP) Kit is the

      first jointly-developed product that brings together the expertise and 
      reach of Roche with Foundation Medicine's pioneering leadership in 
      genomic science. 
 
   -- This is the first time that research scientists can conduct oncology 
      research with Foundation Medicine's comprehensive genomic profiling in 
      their own laboratories to gain meaningful genomic insights and deepen 
      their understanding of cancer biology. 
 
   -- This kit is an important step forward in Roche and Foundation Medicine's 
      vision of enabling personalised healthcare for more patients living with 
      cancer by broadening access to CGP and making it essential in clinical 
      decision making in the future. 
https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ROCHE-HOLDING-AG-9364975/news/Press-Release-Roche-launches-comprehensive-genomic-profiling-kit-to-expand-access-to-personalised-36768638/

What would Medicare price talks bring U.S.? Look to Europe: Lilly CEO

 When posed with the decades-old question of how drug price reform would affect their operations in the United States, pharma execs have a ready-made response: Reducing drug prices would hinder innovation.

While Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks falls in line with the mantra, he bolsters his case with a cautionary example, pointing to Europe and the effect government pricing regulations have had there.

“In the 80s and 90s, this was a European industry,” Ricks said in an interview. “Eighty percent of global R&D was happening on the European continent and today it’s less than 20. Where’s that going? It’s gone to America.”

While many pharma giants are headquartered in Europe, there is “no biotech cluster and no venture capital,” Ricks said. During a European Union pharma conference in Brussels in June, the theme of the meeting was how to get the industry back, Ricks pointed out.

“They know they’ve lost the industry and it showed up in a big way in the pandemic,” said Ricks, who also serves as the chairman of the pharmaceutical industry lobbying group PhRMA. “Today there are six approved medicines in the United States for COVID and three approved vaccines. Five of the six medicines came from American laboratories and all three of the vaccines did.”

While New York drugmaker Pfizer is commonly credited with creating its namesake mRNA vaccine, German company BioNTech developed the shot before partnering with Pfizer.

Meanwhile, with debate underway in Washington on whether to allow Medicare to negotiate prices, industry leaders are sounding a familiar refrain, reminding of the consequences of lost revenue that would come with the new proposal.

Ricks has said that Lilly’s U.S. revenues would decline by 40%, forcing many employees out of jobs and deep cuts to R&D. But those pushing for drug price reform say the industry claims are overwrought.

“Their argument has always been that Western civilization is going to end,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) told reporters last week.

Changes are needed, Ricks said. He argued the real problem is patient out-of-pocket costs. The broken part of the U.S. system is the way that insurance is designed, the CEO added.

A redesign of Medicare Part D is a palatable alternative for the industry, Ricks said. Those measures include an out-of-pocket cap for beneficiaries, required discounts from drug manufacturers and incentives for Part D plans to promote the least expensive drugs.  

“We’re for progress here,” Ricks said. “What we can’t have is wholesale disruption. That’s why we’re so vocal right now.”

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/what-would-drug-price-reform-u-s-bring-lilly-ceo-ricks-says-look-at-europe

Novartis lung cancer drug fails phase III trial

  Novartis on Monday said its canakinumab drug had failed in its targets to improve overall survival rates for lung cancer patients and also prevent the progression-free survival of people with the condition.

The Swiss company said its Canopy-1 Phase III study did not meet its primary endpoints when treating patients with previously untreated locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer.

The trial data showed potentially clinically meaningful improvements in some subgroups of patients with inflammatory biomarkers. This data would support a further evaluation of canakunimab in lung cancer, the Novartis said.

https://kfgo.com/2021/10/25/novartis-lung-cancer-drug-fails-phase-iii-trial/

Sunday, October 24, 2021

Gottlieb: Latest variant not contagious enough to change virus 'trajectory' in US

 Former Food and Drug Administration (FDA) commissioner Scott Gottlieb said on Sunday that the latest delta variant is not contagious enough to change the COVID-19 pandemic’s “trajectory” in the United States.

“I don't think this is enough to really change the trajectory of the direction we're heading in. We're much closer to the end of this delta wave than we are to the beginning. The South looks very good right now. In the Midwest, where there's been a very dense epidemic, we see cases starting to decline,” Gottlieb said when asked on CBS’s “Face the Nation” if he is concerned about the new variant.

“There was a pickup in cases in the Great Lakes region, in parts of New England, so that's concerning. This delta wave still has to course its way through parts of the country, but I think as we get to Thanksgiving, maybe shortly thereafter, we're going to be on the downswing” across the country, Gottlieb added.


A mutation of the delta variant, referred to as the delta plus strain, has started to emerge within the last few months in the United Kingdom. Most of the cases of the variant found in the U.S. have been reported in California and have largely been reported at lower rates than the original delta strain. 

The former FDA commissioner said on Sunday that he believes the COVID-19 vaccine should be protective against the new variant and it is unlikely that it would make inroads globally the same way the initial delta strain did.

“I think that this is something that's going to probably push us in a direction of eventually reformulating our vaccines,” Gottlieb noted.

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/578202-gottlieb-latest-variant-not-contagious-enough-to-change-virus

Protesters backing Kyrie Irving's vaccine refusal swarm Barclays Center

 Anti-vaccine protestors swarmed the Barclays Center in New York City in support of Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving’s refusal to be vaccinated, NBC affiliate WNBC reported. 

Videos surfaced on social media Sunday showing protesters chanting  "Stand With Kyrie” and “No vaccination.” 

Other videos showed dozens of protesters pushing past barricades around the arena, with the crowd making a push for the doors as security personnel tried to secure the area.

“Barclays Center briefly closed its doors today in order to clear protestors from the main doors on the plaza and ensure guests could safely enter the arena," a Barclays Center spokesperson told The Hill in a statement. "Only ticketed guests were able to enter the building and the game proceeded according to schedule.”

The New York Police Department said it had no updates on the incident. 

It comes as Irving has become the most prominent face of COVID-19 vaccine resistance in professional sports.

The Nets suspended Irving earlier this month until he’s fully vaccinated against the virus.  

Irving has said his refusal to get vaccinated is in solidarity with people who are losing their jobs due to vaccine mandates.

“I’m standing with all those that believe what is right. Everybody is entitled to do what they feel is what’s best for themselves. Seeing the way this is dividing our world up, it’s sad to see. People are losing jobs to mandates,” Irving said on Instagram Live. 

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/public-global-health/578228-protesters-supporting-kyrie-irvings-refusal-to-be


How Should Patients With Autoimmune Diseases Approach COVID Vaccination?

 Healthcare is a personal and individualized relationship between a provider and patient. Each patient is treated according to their particular symptoms and personal health characteristics. For this reason, the wide variability in patient responses to the same medical treatments must be acknowledged and accounted for in making public health decisions. Yet, there has been a lack of specific government guidance to help those with autoimmune diseases navigate COVID-19 vaccination.

Many of us either have an autoimmune disease or know someone living with one, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Crohn's disease, psoriasis, or others. While the pandemic is difficult for all of us, these patients have faced higher rates of severe COVID-19 and death.

The incomplete messaging on vaccination for this population is only making things more challenging. Patients with autoimmune diseases who are taking drugs that may suppress their immune response have been told the vaccines may not fully benefit them, if at all. In August, the CDC stated: "giving [immunocompromised patients] an additional shot is almost not considered a booster" because "it's considered part of what their original regimen should have been." Following this, the CDC issued a blanket recommendation that all patients on active treatment with "drugs that may suppress [their] immune response" receive an additional dose of a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine. More recently, FDA amended the emergency use authorizations (EUA) for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines to allow for use of a booster dose by people at high risk of severe COVID-19, and for all Johnson & Johnson recipients. CDC clarified who is considered high-risk by endorsing boosters for adults with underlying medical conditions, which includes people in an "immunocompromised state." Taken together, current guidance appears to cumulatively recommend autoimmune patients taking drugs that may suppress their immune system secure both an additional dose and a booster, but in fact the CDC and FDA have still not weighed in on this specific scenario.

It's true that some patients with autoimmune disease on therapies that affect their immune system experience a reduction in immune response, thereby impairing their ability to achieve the full benefits of COVID-19 vaccines. However, emerging evidence suggests this diminished immune response may not be the rule; some of these patients may achieve similar vaccination benefits from a standard COVID-19 vaccine regimen as the general population. Reconciling this distinction could have major implications in health policy and the ability to determine not merely the percentage of those vaccinated, but more importantly, a better understanding of overall public immunity to COVID-19 after vaccination.

Take MS for example. A new peer reviewed study published in the Journal of Neuroimmunology examines the immune response to mRNA vaccines for COVID-19 in patients with MS who simultaneously are being treated with immunomodulating therapies. The study determined that certain medications for MS did not blunt the vaccine response in these patients, finding overall that "[v]accination and [these therapies] can be timed to maintain disease control and also allow effective vaccination against SARS-CoV-2." Public health officials should be disseminating this information to the MS community to potentially increase understanding of their protection from COVID-19 and enable more informed healthcare decisions.

This study provides important information for patients suffering from MS; it indicates these patients might not have to compromise between treating their disease and eliciting a standard immune response to the COVID-19 vaccine. But the study also raises the bigger public health question of vaccine effectiveness in the autoimmune disease space. Public health leaders should focus on researching how different therapies for the whole spectrum of autoimmune diseases affect COVID-19 vaccine response. While it is encouraging that NIH is investigating the antibody response from an additional dose in autoimmune disease patients who had a suboptimal response to an initial COVID-19 vaccine regimen, it is just as important to research which autoimmune therapies do allow for a vaccine response similar to that of the general population.

The CDC encourages patients taking drugs that may suppress their immune response -- such as many patients with an autoimmune disease -- to act like they are unvaccinated regardless of their vaccination status. They are advised to wear a mask, maintain social distance, and avoid crowds and poorly ventilated indoor spaces. When public health officials again relax recommended precautionary measures for the general population, a more nuanced understanding of which patients in the immunocompromised community should continue to follow restrictive measures is vital. Without such information, members of this heterogenous population may be unnecessarily curtailing activities of daily living.

COVID-19 is not going away any time soon. Public health officials must focus more on the unique needs of patients with autoimmune disease or they will miss achieving long-term public health and vaccination goals. The administration, FDA, and CDC must provide tailored guidance on which autoimmune disease therapies do and do not have an impact on vaccine effectiveness. This information will empower physicians to treat these patients with more precise approaches and public health officials to make evidence-based health policy. Most importantly, it can give patients with autoimmune disease a chance to reclaim their lives.

Kirk Taylor, MD, serves as senior vice president of North America Medical Affairs for EMD Serono, the biopharmaceutical business of Merck KGaA.

Disclosures

EMD Serono is involved in research and development of medications and therapies for a range of autoimmune diseases.


https://www.medpagetoday.com/opinion/second-opinions/95207

More Chicago Officers 'Summoned' As City Council Mulls Vax Mandate Reversal

 Chicago's main police union is continuing to tell officers to hold the line as police HQ continues summoning officers to disclose their Covid vaccination status, and placing those who don't comply on "no-pay status" while sending them home.

Just ahead of a crucial city council meeting set for Monday, Fraternal Order of Police First Vice President Michael Mette likened the continued standoff to "The Hunger Games". Mette referenced the popular dystopian novel series and movies in a social media video posted prior to the weekend, saying "Welcome to day three of 'The Hunger Games,' where we find out who the city is going to offer up as tribute."

As of the weekend it's as yet unknown precisely how many dozens or possibly many more officers have been temporarily relieved of duty, but it's been clear that city authorities have been deeply hesitant to pull the trigger on threats of mass firings, given the already understaffed police and first responder units face weekend after weekend of high crime and violent incidents, including dozens of shootings a week.

The police union is hoping that a proposal for reversing the vax status mandate order passes in a much anticipated city council vote to take place Monday:

Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara is hoping a crowd shows up to City Hall to support an ordinance that will be introduced Monday that would defy the Mayor’s city employee COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

"Let’s hope enough Aldermen do the right thing and push to have that ordinance enacted so this vaccine policy gets reset and negotiated like it should have been," Catanzara said.

In his most recent video, Catanzara said he hopes an ordinance that will be proposed Monday overturning Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s vaccine mandate will pass.

The latest local reports say that at this point up to 70% of the some 12,000 member police force have revealed the vaccination status so far.

If Monday's ordinance passes, the reversal of Lightfoot's original mandate would mean any employee already placed on leave would receive back any missed paychecks retroactively, and the vax order would be declared "null and void". 

In fresh statements, union leader Catanzara estimated that this his knowledge thus far, "Over two dozen officers held the line and disobeyed the order and went into a no-pay status."

The union is attempting to cover missed pay for resisters, also in order to encourage more: "We set up a heroes fund on the FOP website, that money will be distributed to the officers in no-pay status. We are going to figure out a calculation on how to help them out on this financial crunch they voluntarily took on our behalves,” Catanzara said.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/welcome-hunger-games-more-chicago-officers-summoned-city-council-mulls-vax-mandate-reversal