Thursday, March 8, 2012

Todays News Ticker: Pioglitazone/Genotype 4 - Also Conference Updates

HIV and Hepatitis has uploaded  multiple videos from the Conference on Retrovirus' and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Seattle. (March 6, 2012). This video below discusses - "The Importance of the New Hepatitis C Treatments in Clinical Practice" 



View all the videos here

Updates - Genotype 4

Pioglitazone Decreases Hepatitis C Viral Load in Overweight, Treatment Naïve, Genotype 4 Infected-Patients: A Pilot Study
Insulin resistance (IR) is induced by chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes 1 and 4 infections. It is not known whether drugs that affect IR such as Pioglitazone and Prednisone also affect serum HCV RNA titers independently of PEG-Interferon-α2/ribavirin treatment. The primary aim was to assess whether Pioglitazone by improving IR and/or inflammation decreases HCV viral load independently of standard of care HCV treatment. A secondary aim was to assess whether Prednisone, a drug that induces insulin resistance and stimulates HCV viral entry and replication in replicon culture systems, increases HCV viral load in this population......

April-March 2012 Annals Of Hepatology
Pegylated interferon-alpha2b plus ribavirin for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus genotype 4 infection in patients with normal serum ALT
Jaber Al-Ali, Iqbal Siddique, Rosh Varghese, Fuad Hasan

Updates at NATAP

CROI: GS-7977 + Ribavirin in HCV Genotype 1 Null Responders: Results from the ELECTRON Trial -

CROI: The Pharmacokinetic Interactions of HCV Protease Inhibitor TMC435 with Rilpivirine, Tenofovir, Efavirenz or Raltegravir in Healthy Volunteers

CROI: Evaluation of NS3 Amino Acid Variants in a Phase 1b Study of GT 1 Infection with the HCV Protease Inhibitor, MK-5172


In The News

New gadget for measuring white blood cells invented at Stanford
Stanford inventors have developed a new sensor that uses a clever combination of antibodies, magnets and laser light to count white blood cells in tiny samples of blood and other body fluids. The device is so small and inexpensive that it could be used nearly anywhere: at doctors’ offices, disaster relief sites, battlefields or patients’ homes.
Press Release 
The body has many types of white blood cells, each with different disease-fighting roles. White blood cell counts already help doctors diagnose some diseases and monitor treatment of others, including cancer and AIDS, but current cell-counting methods require fairly large blood samples and costly, slow equipment that can be operated only by trained laboratory technicians.
Read More Here


The REAL Drug to Beat in Treating Hepatitis C: Ribavirin 
by Chris Barnes
Source-GastroHepTV
By now, most of us are aware – some of us painfully so – that the Hepatitis C drug development market is red hot. Investors and developers alike need a scorecard to keep track of who is buying who and for what potential blockbuster drug in the race to make it big in treating Hepatitis C.  All of this hullabaloo is for good reason – the CDC estimates there are over 170 million people infected with Hepatitis C worldwide[1], a vast majority of them don’t know that they have it.  That is paradoxically both an enormous and lucrative problem. This means there are a lot of potential patients for pharmaceutical companies to treat with blockbuster anti-HCV drugs.

The names of the compounds in development are like alphabet soup – GS-7977, VX-222, BMS-790052, BI-201335, TMC 435, BL-8020… protease inhibitors, polymerase inhibitors, cyclophilin inhibitors… the list goes on and on. This is a good thing for both drug makers and patients. Drugs to treat Hepatitis C are becoming more potent and more tolerable.  And the race for the next blockbuster drug means there is no shortage of drugs and drug classes to choose from.  Drug developers may even realize the holy grail of Hepatitis C treatment – an all oral, interferon-free regimen consisting of 2-4 pills a day. That’s right, no shots, no interferon. This would potentially make treatment for Hepatitis C infinitely more tolerable for patients....
Continue Reading Here.....


The Age Of Personalized Medicine Has Arrived

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