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Teva And Antares Announce FDA Approval Of Needle-Free Injector Product For Administration Of Tev-Tropin(R) (Human Growth Hormone)
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (Nasdaq: TEVA) and its partner, Antares Pharma, Inc. (NYSE Amex: AIS) announced the approval of a Supplemental New Drug Application (sNDA), which added "needle-free injection" to its Tev-Tropin® [somatropin (rDNA) for injection] brand human growth hormone (hGH) drug label. Teva will market the Antares needle-free device as the Tev-Tropin Tjet Injector system.
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Back To School Stories: Sleep To STDs, Phobias To Rx Meds
Starting or returning to school can stir up a bevy of emotions with a range of effects, from bothersome to debilitating. Knowing a little bit about a few of these problems helps parents and children manage and overcome them.
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International Panel Releases New Recommendations For Concussion Treatment
In an article published in the June issue of The Physician and Sportsmedicine entitled "Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport - The Third International Conference on Concussion in Sport Held in Zurich, November 2008," new information and guidelines on the definition and treatment of concussions in athletes are presented. This is a revised and updated statement of the recommendations developed following the 1st (Vienna) and 2nd (Prague) International Symposia on Concussion in Sport. By developing core questions on how to treat concussions and best "return-to-play" recommendations, the conference members worked to improve the current recommendations as well as aiming to make this information readily available to health care professionals.
Endocrinology

Cognitive Function Is Superior In Breast Cancer Patients Treated With Letrozole Versus Tamoxifen

New results show that postmenopausal women with breast cancer receiving adjuvant letrozole have better cognitive function than women being treated with tamoxifen. The data, from a recent meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), are drawn from a sub-study of the Breast International Group (BIG) 1-98 trial. The trial, which enrolled postmenopausal women surgically treated for early-stage, hormone-responsive breast cancer, found that letrozole was more effective at preventing recurrent disease (especially distant metastases) than tamoxifen. Karen E. Ribi, PhD, with the International Breast Cancer Study Group in Bern, Switzerland, and her colleagues had theorized that because of the estrogen deprivation associated with aromatase inhibitors, patients who have received letrozole will have worse cognitive function than tamoxifen-treated patients. "While cognitive function is recognized as a potential long-term side effect of adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer treatment, few studies have looked at the effect of adjuvant endocrine therapy on cognition," Dr. Ribi noted in her presentation. "What"s more, those studies that have examined the effect of adjuvant endocrine therapy on cognition have produced conflicting results." The primary endpoint of the sub-study was the composite score calculated from seven cognitive tasks. These included detection, identification, learning, memory, monitoring, shopping list, and shopping list delayed recall. The analysis included 120 women enrolled in an institution with at least ten patients recruited to the parent protocol. All women had been in the trial for fewer than five years and were still taking their assigned endocrine treatment. None had developed recurrent breast cancer or a second malignancy. Results showed that that while both groups had scores below age-standardized standardized norms of the CogState tasks, patients taking letrozole during the last three of five years of treatment had better cognitive function than those taking tamoxifen. Dr. Ribi cautioned that potential study limitations include the lack of a true baseline assessment prior to the start of endocrine therapy and the lack of a longitudinal design to evaluate changes during treatment. Also, the sub-study"s low accrual resulted in a revised analysis plan. Finally, she said that future trials will evaluate the change in cognitive function from five years on endocrine treatment to one year after the completion of treatment. Plans are also underway to examine the impact of endocrine treatment on cognitive function in premenopausal women from baseline to one year on treatment. Written by Jill Stein Jill Stein is a Paris-based freelance medical writer. jillstein03(at)gmail.com Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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