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Monday, January 3, 2022

Milwaukee schools going virtual due to staff COVID-19 cases

 Wisconsin’s largest school district, Milwaukee Public Schools, will transition to virtual instruction beginning Tuesday because of an increase in staff testing positive for COVID-19.

“MPS was scheduled to resume in-person learning on January 4, 2022, but due to an influx of reported positive COVID-19 cases among district staff, this emergency safety measure is being implemented,” the district said in a statement.

The district says its goal is to return to in-person learning on Monday, Jan. 10.

Students and staff who want to be tested for COVID-19 can do so on Monday, Jan. 3 at six MPS locations. The district says that when in-person learning resumes, testing will be available for students and staff at each MPS school location.

More than 75,000 students attend MPS schools.

The Madison school district also has announced a shift to virtual learning beginning Jan. 6.

U.S. Rep. Mike Gallagher, a Green Bay Republican, issued a statement Monday calling virtual classes “the biggest blunder” of the pandemic and urging Wisconsin districts to continue in-person classes.

“So please, at a time when this country seems divided on everything, can we at a minimum agree on the fact that schools must stay open,” he said. “We can’t live in fear, or allow this fear to mess up our kids. At this point in the pandemic, we should be trying as hard as we can to teach our kids courage, not fear."

https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-health-wisconsin-milwaukee-1a592223dc3e13c962e66e5d870b85eb

NovoCure upped to In Line from Underperform by Evercore

 Target $82

https://finviz.com/quote.ashx?t=nvcr&ty=c&ta=1&p=d

Amyris, ImmunityBio in JV for next gen Covid RNA vax

 Amyris, Inc. (Nasdaq: AMRS), a leading synthetic biotechnology company accelerating the world to sustainable consumption through its Lab-to-Market operating platform, and ImmunityBio (Nasdaq: IBRX), a clinical-stage immunotherapy company, today announced the completion of a previously announced joint venture agreement to accelerate the commercialization of a leading next-generation COVID-19 vaccine.

Amyris and ImmunityBio combine important vaccine technology and manufacturing capabilities in the joint venture. Upon completion of successful human trials and regulatory approval, the joint venture's goal is to start delivering the second generation vaccine in 2022 as soon as is practically possible with a goal of delivering immunity for COVID-19 and access to underserved parts of the world where current vaccine technology is challenged due to cost and supply chain limitations.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/amyris-immunitybio-complete-joint-venture-130000530.html

NYC vending machines will carry syringes, opioid overdose treatment

 

  • New York City is establishing a program that will install public health vending machines (PHVM) in 10 spots across the city to combat overdoses and the opioid epidemic.
  • The PHVMs will dispense sterile syringes, the drug naloxone — administered to combat overdoses — and additional health supplies.
  • In 2020, the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reported 2,062 people died from unintentional overdoses.

New York City is establishing a program that will install public health vending machines (PHVM) across the city to aid drug users "disproportionately burdened" by overdoses in a new step toward combating overdoses and the opioid epidemic.

In December, the nonprofit organization, Fund for Public Health in New York, issued a proposal request for installing 10 PHVMs throughout New York City, which will dispense sterile syringes, the drug naloxone — administered to combat overdoses — and additional health supplies. The proposals are to include proposed installation sites, budgets, maintenance plans, and proof of previous outreach experience in underserved and drug-plagued communities.

In 2020, the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reported 2,062 people died from unintentional overdoses, the highest reported overdose rate since the department began data collection in 2000. The data found that Black and Latino residents living in communities with the city’s highest poverty rates reported the most overdose deaths, as well.

"Racial equity does not mean simply treating everyone equally, but rather, allocating resources and services in such a way that explicitly addresses barriers imposed by structural racism (i.e. policies and institutional practices that perpetuate racial inequity) and White privilege," the Fund for Public Health in New York's proposal request states.

The nonprofit organization outlined possible areas to install the vending machines in its proposal request, including the Fordham-Bronx Park, East Harlem, Union Square, Rockaway and Brooklyn's East New York, among others.

The initiative is projected to cost taxpayers $730,000, and the deadline for submitting PHVM proposals is Jan. 20, with additional funding set to be announced on Jan. 31.

In November, New York became the first U.S. city to green light supervised consumption sites for illegal drug use, in another effort to combat the opioid epidemic and increase in overdoses.

https://thehill.com/changing-america/resilience/smart-cities/587992-nyc-vending-machines-will-give-people-syringes-and

Creative Medical Technology (CELZ): Why Price Surge

The stock price of Creative Medical Technology Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: CELZ) increased by over 50% pre-market today. There are no company-specific reports or filings driving up the stock price today so it appears there are external factors at play.

Discussions about Creative Medical Technology having a low float — which is an opportunity for day traders to drive momentum — ramped up on social media platforms like Discord, Twitter, StockTwits, and Facebook over the past week. The investors on these platforms also pointed out that the company stock price surged around this same time last year as well.

Another reason why Creative Medical Technology saw an uptick today is due to a news report. Creative Medical Technology was featured on a list of low float penny stocks to buy for under $5 on PennyStocks.com a few days ago.

https://pulse2.com/creative-medical-technology-stock-nasdaq-celz-why-the-price-surged-today/

Therapeutic Solutions: Positive Clinical Data on Lower SARS-CoV-2 Spike Protein Induced Inflammation

 Therapeutic Solutions International (TSOI) announced today positive results of a pilot clinical trial in 20 subjects.

In the study, ten subjects received placebo and ten received twice daily doses of QuadraMune for seven days. Blood monocytes were extracted and treated with SARS-CoV-2 spike protein in vitro for three time points. A significantly decreased production of the inflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 was reported at all three timepoints.

“QuadraMune is a unique nutraceutical supplement that suppresses inflammatory pathways associated with COVID-19 mortality, while at the same time inhibits immune suppressive enzymes such as indolamine 2,3 dioxygenase,” said Dr. Thomas Ichim, co-inventor of QuadraMune and Board Member of the Company. “As new variants of concern keep emerging, we believe it is necessary to continue exploring various immune modulatory strategies that potentially synergize with existing vaccination efforts.”

Last week Therapeutic Solutions International received a notice of allowance granting a patent on the immune modulatory and COVID-19 inhibiting properties of QuadraMune1.

“In addition to studies performed by us and our collaborators, independent groups have published in the peer-reviewed literature that ingredients of QuadraMune possess activity against SARS-CoV-2 which are discussed in this press release2,” said Dr. James Veltmeyer, Chief Medical Officer of the Company. “We are currently working with numerous colleagues to collect clinical and laboratory data to optimize dosing and ideal combination therapies.”

“As a Company we pride ourselves in continually seeking to understand the mechanisms of action of our products,” said Timothy Dixon, President and CEO of TSOI and co-inventor of QuadraMune. “To our knowledge this is the only nutraceutical that actually alters immune cells of patients in order to decrease response to the spike protein.”

https://www.biospace.com/article/releases/therapeutic-solutions-international-reports-positive-clinical-data-on-quadramune-reduction-of-sars-cov-2-spike-protein-induced-inflammation/

Alzheimer's Drugs Race to FDA

 On June 7, 2021, the FDA approved aducanumab (Aduhelm), an Alzheimer's disease treatment targeting amyloid beta, using the accelerated approval pathway. As part of our review of 2021's top stories, we look ahead at what the Alzheimer's drug landscape looks like in the wake of the landmark FDA decision.

No small part of the controversy surrounding the FDA's decision to approve Biogen's aducanumab (Aduhelm) for Alzheimer's disease was the agency's use of its accelerated approval pathway, a way to approve drugs that fill an unmet medical need based on a surrogate endpoint. The pathway assumes the drug is reasonably likely to produce a clinical benefit.

The surrogate endpoint in this case was aducanumab's ability to reduce amyloid plaques. In past trials, many drugs demonstrated they could reduce brain amyloid, but showed no clinical benefit on cognition.

Some Alzheimer's experts argued that evidence supporting amyloid as a valid surrogate was weak; others disagreed. The endpoint is "reasonable, although it opens the door for companies with competing monoclonal antibodies -- and there are several -- to make a similar claim even without compelling clinical data," Pierre Tariot, MD, of the Banner Alzheimer's Institute in Phoenix, told MedPage Today.

Following Aducanumab's Path

With the door thrown open to the accelerated approval pathway, two other anti-amyloid treatments for Alzheimer's -- donanemab and lecanemab -- quickly pivoted to follow the same route to market.

Early in 2021, drugmaker Eli Lilly announced that its phase II TRAILBLAZER-ALZ trial of donanemab, an investigational antibody targeting a modified form of beta amyloid called N3pG, showed promising results in early symptomatic Alzheimer's disease. In March, researchers reported in the New England Journal of Medicine that donanemab reduced brain amyloid by nearly 80% and led to a better score on a composite measure of cognition and daily function, slowing decline relative to placebo.

"The antibody dropped the amyloid levels rather dramatically, rather quickly," noted Ronald Petersen, MD, PhD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who wasn't involved with the study. "Then they stopped treating, and the effect persisted."

In April, an Eli Lilly executive told investors that early FDA approval with mid-stage data seemed unlikely. But by October, Eli Lilly announced that it had initiated a rolling submission for accelerated approval of donanemab based on the phase II findings. Other donanemab trials are underway, including the phase III TRAILBLAZER-2 study in early Alzheimer's and a head-to-head study of donanemab versus aducanumab.

Soon after the June aducanumab decision, Biogen and Eisai announced plans for another anti-amyloid drug and by September, started a rolling submission for lecanemab under the accelerated approval pathway based on phase IIb trial data.

The phase IIb study showed that lecanemab (BAN2401) lowered amyloid plaques and suggested it slowed cognitive decline. "I don't think this trial was powered to see that effect in cognition, so more work as far as we're concerned," said Maria Carrillo, PhD, chief science officer of the Alzheimer's Association, when the findings were presented at a meeting in 2018.

Lecanemab's phase III trial in early Alzheimer's, Clarity AD, is ongoing. On December 24, the FDA granted lecanemab fast track designation.

Donanemab and lecanemab -- and a third anti-amyloid antibody, Roche's gantenerumab -- all received FDA breakthrough therapy designations in 2021. Unlike the other drugs which require infusion, gantenerumab is administered subcutaneously. Pivotal trials investigating gantenerumab's effect on amyloid and downstream markers of disease progression are expected to be completed in the second half of 2022.

A Rocky Regulatory Road

The FDA approved aducanumab even though its advisory committee voted overwhelmingly against the data presented about the drug. One concern committee members voiced was that brain edema or bleeding, effects of anti-amyloid treatment that have the potential to be serious, occurred in about 40% of trial participants taking aducanumab.

On December 17, the European Medicines Agency rejected aducanumab over efficacy and safety concerns. Whether Biogen will submit a separate application for approval to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency in the U.K. is unknown.

The hopes of dementia sufferers and people who care for them for a treatment that can slow the progression of dementia should always be served by the best science," noted Robert Howard, MD, MRCPsych, of University College London.

"Regrettably, the FDA has ignored high-quality scientific evidence of non-efficacy provided by the large and carefully conducted phase III studies," he told MedPage Today. "They've effectively approved an expensive placebo with unpleasant side effects on the basis of action against brain amyloid levels, an action that has already been shown to have little or no effect on cognitive and functional decline with this and earlier agents."

"Happily, science generally finds a way of correcting itself when it goes astray," Howard added. "It's too early to know how this will happen with aducanumab."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/neurology/alzheimersdisease/96462