VICTORIA: With Vericiguat, Less CV Death, Heart Failure Hospitalization Among High-Risk Patients
March 28th 2020The trial showed that patients taking this novel therapy, an oral soluble guanylate cyclase stimulator, were 10% less likely to experience the primary outcome—a composite of death from cardiovascular (CV) causes or first hospitalization for HF—than those taking placebo. The drug could address the sickest patients through a mechanism that would take on HF progression.
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Dr Javed Butler on Key Takeaways of Vericiguat Found in VICTORIA Trial Participants With HFrEF
March 28th 2020Results from VICTORIA show vericiguat produced a 10% relative risk reduction in the highest-risk patients with heart failure. Study patients had about 3 times the health risk seen in recent heart failure trials, which showed higher relative risk reductions. However, VICTORIA saw a 4% absolute risk reduction, which is the same as the others, said Javed Butler, MD, MPH, MBA, chairman for the Department of Medicine at the University of Mississippi.
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VOYAGER-PAD: Less Risk of Events With Rivaroxaban After Treatment for Blocked Arteries
March 28th 2020The study, Vascular Outcomes Study of ASA Along with Rivaroxaban in Endovascular or Surgical Limb Revascularization for PAD (VOYAGER-PAD), was designed to fill a knowledge gap: it asked whether a well-known therapy developed to prevent blood clots could be used to prevent events, including acute ischemia in the leg for patients after revascularization.
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Dr Richard Kovacs Discusses the Virtual Shift of ACC.20/WCC 2020 and Upcoming Scientific Highlights
March 25th 2020We have our featured research that we're going to bring—our keynotes, our Young Investigator Awards presentations, and we're going to have some special emphasis on global health, especially relevant in terms of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Richard Kovacs, MD, FACC, clinical cardiologist and president of the American College of Cardiology (ACC).
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Hypertension-Related Deaths Rise in US, Especially in Rural South, Data Show
March 21st 2020Research highlighting these trends, based on 10 million death records pulled from a CDC database, will be presented at the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session together with World Congress of Cardiology (ACC.20/WCC), which is taking place as a virtual meeting March 28-30.
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Do Patients Continue With Biologics for Asthma in Clinical Practice?
March 19th 2020To optimize use of biologics for asthma, greater attention should be paid to adherence, according to an abstract prepared and published for the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2020 Annual Meeting.
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Researchers Evaluate Infusion Parameters for IgPro20
March 19th 2020Two studies discussed the feasibility of different parameters for the infusion of a product for patients with primary immunodeficiency disorder in abstracts prepared for the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2020 Annual Meeting.
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Cost-Effectiveness, Impact of AIT on Costs Among Published AAAAI Research
March 18th 2020Is it cost-effective to prescribe epinephrine to every patient on allergen immunotherapy (AIT)? Does AIT have an impact on healthcare costs? These and other issues were included among the research prepared and published for the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2020 Annual Meeting.
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CVD Risk Faces Undue Influence From Social Determinants of Health
March 18th 2020Social determinants found within a person’s environment, mainly where they live and work, have been shown to influence outcomes related to health, functioning, and quality of life, especially where risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is concerned, according to study results that will be presented during ACC.20/WCC Virtual.
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IgPro20 Well Tolerated by Most Patients With PID, According to Phase 4 Study Data
March 18th 2020High infusion parameters for pump-assisted and manual push 20% subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIg), or IgPro20, were well tolerated by patients with primary immunodeficiency disorder (PID), according to a recent abstract prepared for the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2020 Annual Meeting.
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Research Examines Factors That Complicate Pediatric Asthma
March 18th 2020Included among the abstracts prepared and published for the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology 2020 Annual Meeting are several that looked at the clinical and psychosocial factors that complicate asthma in pediatric patients. A few are highlighted here.
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First Patients Receive Aimmune Therapeutics' Peanut Allergy Treatment Palforzia
March 16th 2020The first US patients with peanut allergy have been treated with Aimmune Therapeutic’s Palforzia oral immunotherapy (OIT), the company said. The treatment was approved by the FDA in January, and is the first approved treatment for patients with peanut allergy.
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VICTORIA Results to Headline ACC's First-Ever Virtual Meeting
March 15th 2020The big news at the American College of Cardiology meeting always comes early Saturday right after the opening showcase, and this year March 28 will bring the VICTORIA trial—or, a Vericiguat Global Study in Subjects With Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction (HFrEF).
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Q&A: Research Shows Struggles to Improve Indoor Air Quality in Childcare Centers
March 14th 2020The American Journal of Managed Care® discussed the prevalence of poor indoor air quality in childcare facilities with Joshua Steinberg, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin, and Erin Lee, a clinical research coordinator at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
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A Q&A on the Efficacy of Ragweed SLIT Tablets in Children
March 14th 2020The American Journal of Managed Care® (AJMC®) dicussed the efficacy of ragweed sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) tablets with Anne Ellis, MD, professor of medicine and chair of the Division of Allergy & Immunology at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
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A Q&A on How Genotypes, Secondhand Smoke Exposure Impact Asthma
March 14th 2020The American Journal of Managed Care® (AJMC®) interviewed Elisabet Johansson, PhD, a research fellow at the University of Cincinnati, about how the gene NFE2L2 interacts with secondhand smoke, and increases the risk of asthma.
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Q&A: Can a Plant Compound Impact Interaction Between Food Allergy, Microbiome?
March 13th 2020Researchers tested berberine containing natural medicine (BCNM) in mice with peanut allergy and found the treatment regimen induced long-term tolerance to peanut and a profound, sustained reduction of immunoglobulin E (IgE). In an interview with The American Journal of Managed Care®, Kamal Srivastava, PhD, director of Basic Science Research at General Nutraceutical Technology, explained the growing importance of gut and skin microbiota when it comes to treatment of food allergy.
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A Q&A on Quality of Life Among Adolescents With Peanut Allergy
March 13th 2020The American Journal of Managed Care® discussed the real-world burden of reduced quality of life among adolescents with peanut allergies with Anna Nowak-Węgrzyn, MD, PhD, professor of pediatrics at the New York University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Langone Health, New York.
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Dr Randall Oyer on Bridging the Gap Between Clinical Trial, Patient Needs in Community Oncology
March 10th 2020We think that the ACCC is uniquely positioned to bridge the gap between the needs in clinical trials and the patients who are in the community. Most clinical oncology is delivered in the community. That's where the patients are, that's where the need is, said Randall Oyer, MD, medical director of the Oncology Program at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health and president of ACCC.
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Rebecca Kirch Highlights Challenges, Solutions to Overcoming Obstacles in Cancer Care Delivery
March 9th 2020Ensuring that all frontline clinicians are equipped, confident, and engaged in executing skilled communication, which is at the core of palliative care, will make a significant difference for how value-based care unfolds, how payment reform happens, and how the lived experience plays out for patients and families to be a better one, said Rebecca Kirch, JD, executive vice president, Health Care, Quality and Value, National Patient Advocate Foundation.
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Patient Care Must Be an Ongoing Collaboration That Includes Multifaceted Concerns, Panel Says
March 8th 2020The theme of ACCC Immediate Past President Ali McBride, PharmD, MS, BPS, BCOP, for his 2019-2020 term was “Collaborate. Educate. Compensate: A Prescription for Sustainable Cancer Care Delivery.” Nowhere was that more evident than in the panel discussion he led on day 2 of this year’s annual conference.
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Bradley Prechtl on Factors Oncology Practices Must Consider When Considering an Affiliation Option
March 8th 2020I think a lot of it is, do you trust the people that you're going to be working with? What does it come down to economically? And then I would say on the third end is what can really be done to enhance patient care? As it relates to the decision that you make, said Bradley Prechtl, MBA, chief executive officer of the American Oncology Network.
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Clinical Decision Support Tools Transform Point Of Care Delivery
March 8th 2020Can we predict which patients are at high risk of hospitalization? How can we reduce this risk? Debra Patt, MD, MPH, MBA, executive vice president of policy and strategy at Texas Oncology, posed these questions during the ACCC 46th Annual Meeting and Cancer Center Business Summit.
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Dr Lee Schwartzberg Outlines Potential Steps to Expand Access of Novel Therapies in Immuno-Oncology
March 7th 2020As we move from the mono-therapy era into the combination era, we have to think of new arrangements, perhaps value-based arrangements that will work with the payers and the manufacturers so that patients will have access to these drugs and also have the best ability to get value from them, said Lee Schwartzberg, MD, FACP, chief medical officer and board member at OneOncology.
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Healthcare Needs Bipartisan Support to Benefit Patients, Stabenow Says
March 7th 2020Healthcare is not political, it’s personal, Senator Debbie Stabenow, D-Michigan, told an audience at the ACCC 46th Annual Meeting and Cancer Center Business Summit, imploring them to come together in a nonpartisan way to improve care access and quality and to reduce costs.
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Dr Ali McBride Details the Significance of His Presidential Theme in ACCC's 46th Annual Meeting
March 7th 2020My Presidential theme was to look at the interdisciplinary care team involved in the actual delivery of cancer therapies and cancer care, said Ali McBride, PharmD, MS, BCPS, BCOP, clinical coordinator of hematology/oncology in the Department of Pharmacy at The University of Arizona Cancer Center and outgoing president of ACCC.
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Thinking Outside the Box to Elevate, Increase Access to Cancer Care
March 6th 2020Evolution. Disruption. Innovation. Telemedicine. A virtual exchange of information. Healthcare has lagged behind in these aspects, but it’s necessary to transcend time and distance, according to Susan Dentzer, senior policy fellow at the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy.
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Susan Dentzer Discusses Available Innovations in Oncology to Promote Efficient Patient-Centered Care
March 6th 2020There are many applications that are available today that could be brought into the oncology landscape to create a much more patient-centered focus of experiences for those undergoing care, said Susan Dentzer, senior policy fellow at the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy.
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