Showing posts with label UPenn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UPenn. Show all posts

Saturday, September 20, 2008

MEDICAL NEWS: New Pathways Between Memory Loss, Alzheimer's

(previously published here at www.thebulletin.us)

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a stage between normal aging and Alzheimer's earliest stages. Understanding how it goes from mild thought problems to dementia could be key to figuring out how to prevent Alzheimer's. The following details of some of the latest research can give you an idea of the importance of aiming early.


Understanding Risk Factors

According to a Mayo Clinic report, the MCI rate increases with age and is higher in men, who are almost twice as likely to develop the condition than women. Although previous studies show women at higher risk of dementia and Alzheimer's, women generally outlive men, perhaps surviving long enough for their conditions to progress.

According to Dr. B. Brent Simmons, assistant professor and head of Temple University Hospital's Senior Care Specialists section of geriatrics, the higher rates of heart disease in men might also affect their chances of getting vascular dementia.

This study collected data from 1,786 people aged 70 to 89 and found that after a year, about 3.5 percent of 70- to 79-year-olds and 7.2 percent of 80- to 89-year-olds become afflicted with it. Overall, the growth rate of new MCI cases in the elderly population is at 5 percent per year - higher than anticipated.


Drug Development

In research by New York's Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, the brains of 124 diabetics taking medication (insulin and other glucose-lowering drugs) had up to 80 percent less beta-amyloid plaque compared to other diabetics and 124 non-diabetics. Beta-amyloid protein clumps in and around the brain, forming plaque that inhibits and destroys neurons necessary for daily functions and memory.

However, even if a combination of insulin and oral anti-diabetes medications may prevent Alzheimer's-related factors, they cannot be prescribed for non-diabetics. Hopefully, though, brain pathways such as insulin signaling could be used in developing new treatment methods.

Besides plaque, Alzheimer's indicators include unusual changes to a protein called tau. A yearlong trial at Duke University Medical Center tested a promising new drug - a nasal spray called AL-108 - on 144 patients with MCI, between ages 55 and 85, and saw a 62.4 percent improvement in memory ability.

Patients took several tests that measured memory ability before and after medication. The tests measured short-term visual, verbal and auditory working memory, functions that deteriorate throughout the progression of Alzheimer's.

Although this drug doesn't cure Alzheimer's, it showed that attacking the protein tangles does work, stabilizing some of the progress of dementia.


Getting It Before It Starts

Instead of just treating symptoms, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine are trying to stop it before it starts, by finding chemical and biological markers of these conditions.

Since Alzheimer's is a disease measured by analyzing symptoms, the goal of the first investigation was, according to its lead researcher, Dr. Leslie Shaw, "to determine if we could detect Alzheimer's disease pathology before a patient went on to have full blown dementia and memory disorders."

The research focused on measuring levels of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) and establishing benchmark concentration levels of biological indicators for normal, mildly cognitively impaired, and Alzheimer's individuals.

The differences between the baseline levels of three Alzheimer's-associated proteins were significant enough to speed up drug development efforts of biological compounds that can fix these differences.

The second Penn study uses MRI scans to detect abnormal structural changes linked to MCI in the brains of healthy elderly. Radiology professor Christos Davatzikos, Ph.D. and his colleagues monitored these slight physical changes to the brain successfully might provide a way to alert patients and doctors to brain deterioration and memory decline early enough to prepare or begin treatment.

With around 18 percent of 400 patients converting to Alzheimer's a year, this study is ongoing, and doctors are able to "study the progression as it's happening ... at a rate large enough to make our tests reliable or not with sufficiently large number of study subjects," said Dr. Shaw, who is also the director of Penn's ADNI Biomarker Core Lab.

Collaboration is key for all involved, and as Dr. Shaw noted, "the earlier we can detect the disease reliably with confidence, the earlier we can institute and monitor treatment such as diet, exercise, adjusted sleep patterns and having a social life, along with doctor visits, to delay and stop the disease."

The MRI-based study used images from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) and the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) and was funded by the National Institute on Aging and the Institute for the Study of Aging.

Dr. Shaw's research was funded by the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative via the National Institutes of Health.


Heather J. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us.

©The Evening Bulletin 2008

Thursday, September 18, 2008

LOCAL: University Of Pennsylvania Welcomes New Medical Students

(previously published here at www.thebulletin.us)

Philadelphia - At a ceremony full of family, friends, tradition and responsibility on Friday, each member of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine's entering class of 2008 had the opportunity to give personal speeches and thanks, to faculty, their family and friends.

Faculty members also welcomed the 154-strong class, imparting words of wisdom. Their counsel was rooted in the UPenn School of Medicine's austere and prestigious history to imbue the responsibility of becoming a medical professional.

In his keynote speech, Henry W. Foster, Jr., M.D., professor emeritus and former dean of the school, told students that the white coat symbolizes professionalism to remember that "healthcare is the most fundamental [life challenge]."

He said, "Factors invoking change in the medical system seem to be deprofessionalizing medicine ... [and] the American healthcare system is in the midst of reformation ... [But] change is not the enemy - it's a fact. ... I'm depending on you to [impart] change."

In their personal remarks, students revealed the diversity and breadth of their collective education and backgrounds, peppering the solemn occasion with thanks - and apologies - to parents, family and friends, and jokes about what they have accomplished and what lies ahead.

The new class hails from 30 states and 61 colleges, and bring experience in everything from biology and anthropology to East Asian languages and computer science. One student, Kathryn Cunningham Hall, even started a nonprofit called Power Up Gambia! to fundraise and install solar panels to provide clean water and electricity to a Gambian hospital in West Africa.

The ceremony in which students don white coats varies from school to school, but all emphasize the responsibility and respectful care that the credibility granted by the coat requires.

After donning their white coats, students were welcomed by UPenn alum, Louis Matis, M.D., president and CEO of the Immune Tolerance Institute, who gave 154 stethoscopes to the incoming class. Then the students, as well as any family who were also doctors, recite the Hippocratic Oath, which provides standards and a core set of professional values to be followed by all physicians.

On the White Coat Ceremony, first-year student Kannie Chim, of Upper Darby, noted that she didn't know what the ceremony would entail, and "liked how it was personal, with everyone speaking for themselves ... It'll be intense, but I hear Penn students have fun, too."

Shanna Sprinkle, 22, from Oklahoma by way of Baltimore was also inspired by the ceremony.

"Going in wearing different things and coming out [looking] the same, it was symbolic and equalizing," she said.

Parents and family members were equally excited and impressed, especially after the school provided a special orientation day for families, where faculty introduced them to the curriculum and other anticipations that the students will go through over the next four years.

For John McLaughlin, whose eldest son Eamon is starting at Penn this year, the entire ceremony made him "extremely proud [since he] knows how hard he worked to get here."

When asked what appealed to them about UPenn and PennMed, first-year students were of the same mind in emphasizing the power of the people. As Eamon McLaughlin, 22, a first-year from Wilmington, Del., declared, "everyone is laid-back, not cutthroat... that was really the selling point for me."

"I've never been in a group of people so outgoing, bubbly and full of life in my life," said David Guttmann, a first-year from Abingdon who is considering pursuing oncology. "[This] bodes well for the future of medicine that people can communicate [and bond] with patients. Penn did a good job [of picking us]."

As Jon B. Morris, M.D., a professor of surgery, said, "[the ceremony is us] welcoming the students into the family. ... All the family came - involving them is an integral part of this process."

At the UPenn School of Medicine, students learn within the themes of Science of Medicine, the Art and Practice of Medicine, and Professionalism and Humanism, while also engaging in a four-year patient-centered "Doctoring" course where pairs of students follow a chronically ill patient to understand the effect of care on patients and family. First year classes begin today.

The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine is the nation's first teaching medical school and one of the top research-based medical schools. Along with the UPenn Health System, the school is part of Penn Medicine, an enterprise dedicated to the inter-related missions of patient care, education and research. Its "White Coat Ceremony" was established in 1996 to build on a tradition symbolizing the clinical beginning of every student's medical education.


Heather J. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us

©The Evening Bulletin 2008

Friday, September 12, 2008

MEDICINE: Aetna-Wharton To Test Paying Patients To Take Their Heart Meds

(previously published here at www.thebulletin.us)

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School are studying whether daily lottery cash incentives of $10 and $100 will help improve the likelihood of patients' taking their prescribed medication.

The research will begin this fall and take place over a six-month period, with results being available in March of next year.

The Aetna Foundation, the non-profit arm of the national health insurer, is sponsoring the study with a $400,000 grant. Philadelphia is a designated community under the foundation's Healthy Community Grants Program and Healthy Community Outreach Program.

Dr. Kevin G. Volpp, director of the Center on Health Incentives at Wharton's Leonard Davis Institute for Health Economics, explained that since people often stop taking medication within a few days, potential health benefits cannot be realized.

"People find it difficult to do things long term [like taking medication] in the short term [on a daily basis]," Dr. Volpp said. "A lot of behavioral economic research shows that people tend to weigh the present more heavily as opposed to [a] future decision."

So he and colleagues designed a two-arm randomized trial based on a system of feedback and incentives and proposed it to Aetna. The trial would enroll 100 participants to test a daily lottery as incentive for taking Warfarin, a blood thinner prescribed to prevent swelling and blood clots.

An electronic monitor would connect to pill boxes, tracking whether each participant takes his or her medicine. Participants would receive daily text messages saying whether he or she has won the lottery, or, if the dose was missed, whether they would have won.

An incentive group of 50 people would have a 1-in-10 chance of winning $10 for every day they take their medication and a 1-in-100 chance of winning $100. A control group of 50 people would use the same electronic monitor but not be entered into the lottery.

According to Dr. Troyen A. Brennan, Aetna's Chief Medical Officer, they chose to sponsor the trial because adherence is key to quality of care and statistics show that a year after beginning medication, only about 50 percent of patients are taking medications as directed. "If it looks like it works, we'll try to incorporate it in things we do," he said.

For Dr. Volpp, the trial's co-founder, this is just one of many possibilities in using behavioral economic tools towards strengthening health applications.

"There is a synergy between health professionals who want people to adopt healthy behaviors and commercial interests who want to find ways to effectively make sure that people ... behave in healthy ways in higher rates," Dr. Volpp said. "I think there are big opportunities to try to think creatively about how to use incentive systems to try to help people adopt healthy behaviors at higher rates."


Heather J. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us.

©The Evening Bulletin 2008

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Alumnus Donates $1.5M In Grants To Two Penn Schools

(previously published here at www.thebulletin.us)

University of Pennsylvania alumnus Arthur Bilger and his wife, Dahlia, made two monetary gifts this week to his alma mater to be used to support research into interactive media business models and therapeutic drugs to treat Alzheimer's disease.

The Wharton School received a $1 million gift to create and support the Wharton Interactive Media Initiative (WIMI), a research program focusing on interactive media, its effect on global business and its influence on traditional media business models. This data-driven research will hopefully be applied to helping media companies do profitable business.

Of his family's donation to Wharton, Mr. Bilger said "Through the WIMI, Wharton will continue its tradition of cutting-edge scholarship with practical applications... to the world of business."

The Bilger Foundation's $500,000 donation to the School of Medicine will establish the Nathan Bilger Alzheimer Drug Discovery Initiative in memory and honor of Mr. Bilger's father. The monetary gift will be used by the Center for Neurodegenerative Disease Research (CNDR) to identify new methods and drug targets for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease that can hopefully be translated by their Marian S. Ware Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Center into new therapeutic drugs.

"The Bilger family gift will enable us to determine if an off-label drug used to treat organ rejection in transplant patients can be used to treat Alzheimer's disease," Dr. Virginia M.Y. Lee, CNDR director, said to the Almanac, a Penn-run publication.

Dr. John Q. Trojanowski, director of PennMed's Institute on Aging, explained that this is significant because early studies that are promising need a lot of money to evaluate them further as potential Alzheimer's therapies, and, "if successful, could put more drugs in the pipeline aimed at helping... patients by blocking... the disease process."

Mr. Bilger manages a private investment firm in California, is a member of Wharton's Board of Overseers, and along with his wife has supported the School of Arts and Sciences, Penn Medicine, and a scholarship for undergraduates.

Heather J. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us

©The Evening Bulletin 2008

Saturday, June 28, 2008

UPenn Med School Partners With Pfizer For Clinical R&D

(previously published at thebulletin.us)


Philadelphia - The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine has entered into a three-year partnership with pharmaceutical research giant, Pfizer Inc., to collaborate in the areas of scientific research, clinical development and clinical care and policy.

Pfizer will pay Penn $15 million over the course of the three years, during which time project proposals will be solicited and reviewed by a committee with members representing both the industry and academia.

Projects chosen will address several therapeutic areas of basic and translational research, initially focusing on the neurosciences and oncology before possibly expanding to other areas of specialization.

According to the National Institutes of Health's Roadmap of Re-engineering the Clinical Research Enterprise, basic research is the phase where scientists study disease at a molecular and cellular level. Translational research is when these basic tools are applied towards patient treatment, allowing doctors to make observations about disease progression that can be used for further clinical research.

Another aim of the partnership is to develop an initiative to improve the management of cardiovascular risk and patient adherence to treatment, with the goal of using those results to create similar programs at other academic centers.

Patients for the pilot program will be those currently served by the University of Pennsylvania's Health System.

In the realm of clinical policy, the partnership will also enable the University and Pfizer to go over how health-care policy is currently applied in patient treatment and care.

"We are excited to work wit Pfizer in a manner that spans the health care continuum, from pre-clinical research through patient care, in a way that can serve as a model for optimal interactions between industry and academia," said Arthur H. Rubenstein, MBBCh, Executive Vice President of the University of Pennsylvania for the Health System, and Dean of the School of Medicine, in a Pfizer press release.

Since 1985, Pfizer and the UPenn's School of Medicine have had an ongoing relationship in the area of clinical studies, with Pfizer sponsoring 130 studies at Penn across 10 therapeutic areas, including oncology, psychiatry and infectious disease.

Heather J. Chin can be reached at hchin@thebulletin.us

©The Evening Bulletin 2008