Archive for February, 2010

Glaxo looks to grab big profits from new MS drugs

Sunday, February 7th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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GlaxoSmithKline Plc will halt research into drugs for depression and pain and begin making treatments for rare diseases as the U.K. company tries to squeeze more products out of its laboratories.

Glaxo will also focus on discovering new medicines for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases and multiple sclerosis, the London-based company said today in a statement. Chief Executive Officer Andrew Witty said an expanded cost-savings program would bring job cuts affecting “hundreds rather than thousands” of positions in the U.K.

Britain’s biggest drugmaker is seeking new products to keep sales rising after revenue from swine flu vaccine falls and older medicines lose patent protection. Fourth-quarter sales surged 17 percent, helped by sales of H1N1 flu vaccine, Glaxo said today. Glaxo is trying to weed out compounds from its 3.95 billion pound ($6.25 billion) research budget that are expensive to develop and provide little return on investment, Witty said.

“This really all revolves around realities about doing research in this field,” Witty said of depression and pain projects on a conference call with reporters. Developing a drug that’s significantly better than existing medications is difficult and “they’re very expensive trials. That’s what drove the decision.”

Orphan Status

“If you want to save money in R&D, that’s a sensible area to go,” Jeffrey Holford, an analyst at Jefferies International Ltd., said in an interview. “Depression hasn’t delivered very many great medicines in the recent past for anyone full stop.” Orphan drugs “are a very profitable area.”

Paxil, a Glaxo antidepressant that’s already on the market, has proved costly. The drugmaker has paid almost $1 billion to resolve lawsuits for over the drug since it was introduced in 1993, including about $390 million for suicides or attempted suicides, according to court records and people familiar with the cases. The drug brought in 513 million pounds of sales last year.

Witty said fewer than 10 percent of rare diseases have treatments. Glaxo in October agreed to pay as much as 460 million euros ($637 million) to develop drugs from closely held Dutch biotechnology company Prosensa aiming to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Savings Plan

Profit excluding some items gained to 35.4 pence a share in the quarter, beating the 33.5 pence average estimate of 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Net income was 1.63 billion pounds, compared with 982 million pounds a year ago, Glaxo said in the statement. Sales rose to 8.09 billion pounds.

Glaxo plans to add 500 million pounds of savings by 2012. The previous plan was to save 1.7 billion pounds a year by 2011.

New products generated 1.3 billion pounds of sales in 2009, 15 percent more than the previous year. Generic copies of Glaxo medicines hurt U.S. sales by 1.4 billion pounds.

“The problem for this company in terms of R&D has been that the revenue line is so big that they need to have an equally big portfolio of drugs coming through the pipeline to fill the holes,” Holford said. “Now that their patent drag is starting to ease off and it’s a more steady state then the pipeline can start to become more meaningful.”

Shares Rise

Glaxo shares gained 9 pence, or 0.7 percent, to close at 1,226 pence in London. The stock has fallen 3.3 percent in the past year, compared with a 13 percent rise in the Bloomberg Europe Pharmaceutical Index.

Germany and France were among the European countries to slash orders for the drugmaker’s swine flu vaccine after the virus was milder than predicted. The shot brought in 835 million pounds for Glaxo in the fourth quarter, below the 1 billion pounds in sales expected by Credit Suisse analyst Luisa Hector before the cancellations.

Sales of the vaccine helped offset revenue lost to generic copies of antiviral drug Valtrex, which hit the market in November. Valtrex revenue dropped 8 percent to 1.3 billion pounds in 2009.

“We remain concerned about the 2010 order book” for the swine flu vaccine, Hector and colleagues wrote in a Jan. 27 note to clients. Earnings in 2010 will be “flat at best,” hurt by the loss of the flu windfall and by a faster-than-expected sales decline for Valtrex after the patent expiry, they wrote.

Emerging Economies

Since taking over the top job two years ago, Witty has stepped up expansion in consumer goods and emerging economies, making dozens of small acquisitions and licensing ventures in 2009.

He repeated his strategy to stick with smaller, “bolt-on” acquisitions “only if we can find deals with clear financial hurdles,” he said. “We’ll have to see.”

Glaxo’s earnings per share exclude restructuring charges related to what it calls “significant” acquisitions and costs from the savings program, which started in October 2007

The hunt for healthy answers

Friday, February 5th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Study to probe health benefits of vitamin D, fish oil

Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital are leading a five-year nationwide trial to find out whether the dietary supplements vitamin D and fish oil can boost the immune system and fight cancer, heart disease, and a host of other ills.

The “Vitamin D and Omega-3 Trial,” or VITAL, aims to sort out inconclusive and conflicting evidence from earlier research on the effects of the two compounds on human health.

Previous studies have turned up tantalizing clues that the two nutrients can have considerable protective effects. But JoAnn Manson, the VITAL study’s principal investigator, said those trials — and others showing no protective effect — either involved specialized populations, such as those suffering heart disease, or used low dosages, which may have prevented finding a conclusive answer.

The VITAL study is a large-scale, randomized trial involving 20,000 people across the country with no previous history of cancer, heart disease, or stroke, and is designed to test whether vitamin D and the omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil can help to prevent cancer and heart disease. Though cancer and heart disease are the study’s primary therapeutic targets, Manson said the study will also provide information on other ailments, such as diabetes, cognitive decline, depression, and respiratory diseases.

Scientists already know quite a bit about how these nutrients work in the body. Both have powerful anti-inflammatory effects. Vitamin D appears to benefit blood pressure and glucose tolerance, while working to prevent blood vessel growth that allows tumors to enlarge and spread. Omega-3 fatty acids have anti-clotting effects and have been shown to protect against irregular heart rhythms.

Manson, the Elizabeth Fay Brigham Professor of Women’s Health at Harvard Medical School and chief of Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Division of Preventive Medicine, said the trial will enroll men age 60 or older and women age 65 and up. The older study population was selected because people of those ages are more commonly afflicted with the ailments the study seeks to test.

Researchers began seeking participants in January and will eventually send mailings to more than 1.2 million Americans, including health professionals and members of AARP. Potential participants will undergo a three-month screening before enrolling in the full trial. Participants will be divided into four groups and receive blister packs of daily supplements, along with questionnaires to complete and mail back to researchers. Though some participants may opt to visit nearby clinical centers for more-detailed assessments and to provide blood samples, most can participate entirely by mail.

The groups will receive supplements containing vitamin D, omega-3s, both, or placebos, allowing researchers to examine the effects of vitamin D and omega-3s independently as well as together.

The study’s vitamin D supplements will contain 2,000 international units (IUs) per day, five times the 400 IUs that the U.S. government currently recommends. Manson said most Americans get only about 300 IUs of vitamin D per day through their diet, and even with supplements few get more than 500 or 600 IUs. The human body can manufacture vitamin D when exposed to sunlight — more than 2,000 IUs for someone working lightly clothed in the sun all day — but the increase in people wearing sunblock to ward off skin cancer and the decreased prevalence of children playing outdoors have reduced the amount of vitamin D that many people get from sunlight.

Several other factors are working to further reduce the amount of vitamin D that people get. The increase in children drinking sugar-sweetened beverages instead of milk cuts vitamin D intake. Also, because vitamin D is fat soluble, the obesity epidemic is increasing the amount that is stored in fats in our bodies instead of being freely available.

The supplements will contain about one gram of omega-3s, Manson said, or about twice the amount people would get if they followed the government’s recommendation of two fish meals a week, and about five to 10 times what the typical American usually eats. It’s also about equal to the level in a typical diet in Japan, where heart disease rates are lower.

Manson said it would be unwise for the public to start taking megadoses of the two compounds before the study’s results come out, citing the examples of earlier large-scale trials of vitamins E and C and beta-carotene that showed little benefit of those vitamins in large doses and even suggested some risks. Should the trial turn up protective benefits to vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids, it would open the door to greater therapeutic use of the compounds, which are easily accessible, unlike a new exotic drug that would require extensive testing.

Manson also plans to explore the role of vitamin D in reducing racial health disparities. The study will seek to enroll enough African Americans to make up a quarter of the study population in an effort to see whether low levels of vitamin D in African Americans are linked to higher incidence of diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic diseases and whether treatment with vitamin D can reduce these risks.

“It’s exciting to get started with this trial,” Manson said. “We’re really hoping it will provide important answers.”

Israeli study: Pregnant women, infants and young athletes most at risk for Vitamin D deficiency

Thursday, February 4th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
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An increasing deficiency of Vitamin D detected in babies could put their lives in danger, two recent Israeli studies show. Vitamin D deficiency has also been detected in young athletes and pregnant women.

The studies’ findings could lead the Health Ministry to change its policy and hold regular examinations measuring Vitamin D levels, especially in specific population groups.

A study presented yesterday at the annual gathering of the Israel Society for Clinical Pediatrics details the story of a baby born about a year ago at the hospital, weighing 3.98 kilograms, who developed convulsions seven days later.

He was diagnosed with a Vitamin D level of 9.4 nanograms per milliliter, about one third of the recommended level. During the pregnancy, the mother had complained of bone pains. Extremely low levels of Vitamin D were found in her blood after the birth.

Another baby also born around that time in Hadassah, weighing 2.92 kilograms, started convulsing at five days old. His level of Vitamin D was measured at 5.64 nanograms per milliliter; his mother was also found to have deficient levels.

Vitamin D is an essential vitamin naturally present in very few foods and obtained mainly from sun exposure. The two babies’ convulsions stopped and they recovered after receiving a Vitamin D additive of 2,000 international units a day, as well as calcium.

“Israel is a sunny country with a good health care system for pregnant women and babies, but Vitamin D is not usually offered during pregnancy,” the study says, warning that the findings are merely the tip of the iceberg. The study calls on the Health Ministry to observe the Vitamin D recommendations for pregnant women.

Another study headed by Dr. Gal Dubnov-Raz from Safra Children’s Hospital at the Sheba Medical Center, analyzed Vitamin D tests administered to 92 teenage athletes and dancers treated at Hadassah’s sports center.

The examinations revealed that the Vitamin D deficiency suffered by the athletes exposed them to bone and muscle development disorders, heart diseases and even cancer.

Three quarters of the teenagers were diagnosed as having a Vitamin D deficiency of 15-30 units, and 6.5 percent were diagnosed with less than 15 units. Some 80 percent of the teenagers training regularly indoors were found to have deficient levels, but that same was true for 43 percent of those training outdoors.

“Iron deficiency together with Vitamin D deficiency damages teenagers’ mental and physical function,” says Dubnov-Raz. “Before young athletes go for muscle-building protein and creatine powders, they should improve their nutrition and levels of iron and Vitamin D.”

Medical literature has reported a worldwide Vitamin D deficiency in recent years, even in sunny countries like Israel.

Studies conducted at the Rambam Medical Center found a Vitamin D deficiency among the ultra-Orthodox, who wear long heavy clothing, along with high-tech workers who spend most of the day indoors.

The Health Ministry is considering holding routine Vitamin D examinations, especially for specific groups, such as pregnant women, a ministry spokesman said. So far there is no such sweeping recommendation anywhere in the world today, he said.

At present, the ministry recommends merely “appropriate nutrition for pregnant women, who should consult a doctor and a dietician about food additives.”

The ministry already recommends giving babies Vitamin D and giving food additives to nursing home patients, and it is also updating regulations for food additives, the spokesman said.

In addition, a compulsory standard for Vitamin D enrichment will soon be introduced, which will apply to all milk beverages, no only low fat milk, as practiced today, he said.

story by Dan Evan

Multiple sclerosis risk changes with the season

Thursday, February 4th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Previous studies have shown multiple sclerosis (MS) patients are more often born in spring than in any other season, indicating that there is an environmental risk factor for the disease. A paper in the journal Neurology, reviewed for f1000 Medicine by Emmanuelle Waubant and Ellen Mowry, now suggests that this seasonal effect is mediated by the gene HLA-DRB1.

In many European populations, the HLA-DRB1*15 allele of this gene is associated with an increased risk of MS, and the large-scale study of MS patients from Canada, Sweden and Norway now shows that this allele is more common among patients born in the spring.

Waubant and Mowry said the study was “unique in its attempt to understand how genes and environment interact in MS”. However, even though there is a correlation between birth month, genetics and risk of MS, it is not yet clear how this is regulated.

One likely contender is vitamin D, which influences expression of the HLA-DRB1*15 allele. Since vitamin D production fluctuates with the seasons, a vitamin D deficit in pregnant mothers could be related to the increased risk of MS among spring births, but this requires further investigation.

Waubant and Mowry said the study may influence preventative and therapeutic treatments through the understanding of environmental risks and their interaction with relevant genotypes.

Previous studies by the Neurology paper’s authors showed that in people who carry the gene variant, a lack of vitamin D during early life might impair the ability of the thymus to delete rogue T cells, which then go on to attack the body, leading to a loss of myelin on the nerve fibres.

Study author Dr Sreeram Ramagopalan said that taking vitamin D supplements during pregnancy may reduce the risk of a child developing MS in later life. The Scottish Government recently committed to producing a new education program for pregnant mothers and also issued a recommendation that all children under five take a daily vitamin D supplements in a written response to evidence given to the Scottish parliament petitions committe by 14 year old Ryan Mclaughlin from Glasgow and Dr Sreeram Ramagopalan.

Ryan Mclaughlin has been campaigning for every child in Scotland to get vitamin D as a preventative measure against MS.

Ryan Mclaughlin is due back at the Scottish parliament next week to hear the latest responses to his petition.

Ryan Mclaughlin will take the plunge for Glasgow MS Charity

Monday, February 1st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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big zip

14 year old Ryan McLaughlin will do a Zip slide from Forth Road bridge to raise money for Glasgow MS Charity!

Ryan McLaughlin from the Shine on Scotland campaign has offered his support and help to the Glasgow based charity Revive MS Support. Ryan McLaughlin will be taking part in ‘Revive MS support’s ” zip line event and he is gathering people from all over Scotland to help him.

Ryan said – I’ve been working very hard on the campaign for the prevention of MS with vitamin D that I just haven’t had any free time to do anything lately for Revive MS support, but when my mum had  a big relapse a couple of weeks ago Revive MS support was right there for us offering support and treatments.

I know its very important that I don’t forget this amazing charity that looks after my mum and i am honored to help, they have been there for our family right from the day she was diagnosed and I can not and will not let them down.

I have asked all the people on my Facebook  group to help me and I’m proud to say that I’ve now got 14 people that offered to come along do the zip slide and raise at least £100 each which will go towards my target of raising £1500.

A lovely couple who have followed my campaign and have became online friends with my mum have even offered to come all the way from the Isle of Man and take part because they have been so inspired by what the ‘Shine on Scotland’ campaign has achieved in raising awareness of MS.

http://www.revivescotland.org.uk/get-involved/26-adrenaline-events/276-davidrevivemssupportorguk.html

Should we all be taking vitamin D?

Monday, February 1st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Dr Mark Porter: Should we all be taking vitamin D?

From The Times
February 1, 2010

New research showing that vitamin D may protect against cancer of the colon is the latest in a long line of studies suggesting that there is far more to this vitamin than its traditional role in helping to maintain healthy bones. And although this new study involved more than 500,000 people from ten different European countries, it is pertinent to the UK because so many of us have low levels of vitamin D — especially at this time of year.

So should more of us be considering supplements?

Vitamin D is required to help the body make proper use of calcium — the basic building block of bones — which is why interest in it has traditionally centred on rickets, a condition that results from severe deficiency. But we now understand that it does far more than maintain the skeleton, and that milder degrees of deficiency may predispose to a range of other illnesses including diabetes, lung disease, osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis (MS), rheumatoid arthritis, various cancers, and even Alzheimer’s disease.

The vitamin is manufactured in the skin when we’re exposed to sunlight but our northern latitude and short summers mean that for six months of the year UV levels are so low that most of us don’t make enough of the vitamin to meet basic requirements.

The problem is compounded by the use of sunscreens, which further reduce natural UV exposure during the summer months when vitamin D stores are replenished, and the popularity of supplements containing vitamin A (it is thought that as many as 1 in 5 of the population take one), which antagonise some of the D’s actions.

As well as manufacturing the vitamin in our skin, we also take it in from our diet. It occurs naturally in oily fish, such as tuna and herring, and liver, milk and eggs. In most industrialised countries it is added to margarine, some powdered milks, bread and breakfast cereals.

The scale of the potential problem is nicely outlined by researchers from the University of Sheffield, who looked at vitamin D levels in the cord blood of babies born at the hospital at the end of spring — the time when their mothers’ vitamin D stores were likely to be at their lowest. Seven out of ten of the babies had lower than ideal levels of vitamin D, 90 per cent of whom were white, dispelling the myth that deficiency is principally a problem in ethnic minorities with darker skin (the extra pigment reduces UV penetration even further).

Meanwhile in Finland researchers tracking a group of people born in the Sixties turned up evidence suggesting a link between low levels of vitamin D and Type 1 diabetes later in life. Children brought up in the gloomy winters of Finland are more than a hundred times more likely to develop the condition than their peers in sunny Venezuela. Since then UK research has shown that children given vitamin D supplements are around a third less likely to develop diabetes.

Vitamin D is a steroid and there are receptors on almost every cell in the body. Its link with diabetes could be explained by an action on receptors in the pancreas and on the various cells in the immune system, but there are similar vitamin D specific targets in almost every other organ, including the brain, heart, muscles, kidneys and, of course, the skeleton. Little wonder then that there is growing interest in the role of the vitamin in diseases, ranging from MS to Alzheimer’s.

Should we all be taking a supplement? It’s too early to tell whether mass supplementation is the way forward, but it is now widely agreed that the following key groups are those most likely to benefit:

Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding
Children under 5 (particularly breastfed infants)
The over-fifties
Vegetarians who don’t eat oily fish
Anyone who is housebound or who covers up when outside
Those who are dark-skinned — particularly Asians.

The standard dose for an adult is 10mcg day and trials looking at the safety of long-term supplementation have reported no adverse effects at intakes of more than double that. Much higher doses (50mcg a day or more) can weaken bones and increase the risk of calcium deposits (such as kidney stones) forming elsewhere.

During the summer most people will manufacture enough vitamin D by exposing their face and arms to the sun for an hour across the week. You don’t have to sunbathe, just accumulate around ten minutes of exposure while going about your normal business — assuming you are not wearing a sunscreen, or a moisturiser that contains one.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/expert_advice/article7008426.ece