Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Scientific Publishing’ Category

Top TEN Graduate School Search – Biological Sciences Programs

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

School Program Rank
Massachusetts Institute of Technology – Department of Biology

Cambridge, MA

#1Tie
Stanford University – Department of Biology

Stanford, CA

#1Tie
University of California–Berkeley – College of Letters and Science

Berkeley, CA

#1Tie
California Institute of Technology – Division of Biology

Pasadena, CA

#4Tie
Harvard University – Programs in Biological and Biomedical Sciences

Boston, MA

#4Tie
Johns Hopkins University – Biology Department

Baltimore, MD

#6Tie
Princeton University – Department of Molecular Biology

Princeton, NJ

#6Tie
University of California–San Francisco – Graduate Division

San Francisco, CA

#6Tie
Yale University – Combined Program in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences

New Haven, CT

#6Tie
Cornell University

Ithaca, NY

#10Tie

SOURCE

https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/search?program=top-biological-sciences-programs&name=&sort=program_rank&sortdir=asc

Read Full Post »

@PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com –  A Case Study on the LEADER in Curation of Scientific Findings

Author: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Multi-facets of the LPBI Group Intellectual Property (IP) ASSETS

 

 

 

  • Editorial & Publication of Articles in e-Books by Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence: Contributions of Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/10/16/editorial-publication-of-articles-in-e-books-by-leaders-in-pharmaceutical-business-intelligence-contributions-of-larry-h-bernstein-md-fcap/

  • Editorial & Publication of Articles in e-Books by Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence: Contributions of Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/10/16/editorial-publication-of-articles-in-e-books-by-leaders-in-pharmaceutical-business-intelligence-contributions-of-aviva-lev-ari-phd-rn/

 

Innovations in e-Scientific Publishing Methodology Development accomplished by LPBI Group:

A.  Methodology for Curation of Scientific Findings – implementations for

  • Multi-Auhtors Authoring Cloud-based Platform

 

  • Journal Statistics – Interdisciplinary Journal covers interfaces of six domains (Life sciences, Pharmaceuticals, Medicine, Healthcare Policy, Biotech Intelligence and Medical Devices)

Curations of Scientific Findings of peer reviewed articles in top three journals in each of the Six domain

Curations written on a multi-Authoring platform by MDs, MD/PhDs, PharmD and PhDs, all 15 years after graduation of the advanced degree program, and each has a publication list before joined my team – they write clinical and medical interpretations of the scientific frontier as evidenced in the Scientific Finding section of published articles in Cell, Nature, Science, NEJM, other top journals in these six domains.

  1. Volume: 1.3 Million eReaders, ~5,150 Scientific articles, +500 categories of Research defining the Journal Ontology, 9,500 tags, 7,300, scientific comment on the articles submitted and exchange recorded between the Scientific community and our Team members
  2. Top two articles >25,000 eReaders
  3. Clicks on two Top Authors: >551,000
  4. from NIH +3,700 hits
  5. 2250 Journal subscribers by e-mail
  6. +6,200 Biotech Executive following up on LinkedIn
  • BioMed e-Series of e-Books in Medicine – 16 Volumes in Five e-Series: Cardiovascular, Genomics, Cancer, Immunology, Patient-centered Medicine

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=dp_byline_sr_ebooks_9?ie=UTF8&text=Aviva+Lev-Ari&search-alias=digital-text&field-author=Aviva+Lev-Ari&sort=relevancerank

  • Team expertise
  1. e-Scientific Publishing: The Competitive Advantage of a Powerhouse for Curation of Scientific Findings and Methodology Development for e-Scientific Publishing – LPBI Group, A Case in Point
  2. FIVE years of e-Scientific Publishing @pharmaceuticalintellicence.com, Top Articles by Author and by e-Views >1,000, 4/27/2012 to 4/27/2017
  3. Innovations in electronic Scientific Publishing (eSP): Case Studies in Marketing eContent, Curation Methodology, Categories of Research Functions, Interdisciplinary conceptual innovations by Cross Section of Categories, Exposure to Frontiers of Science by Real Time Press coverage of Scientific Conferences

B.  Methodology for REAL TIME Coverage of Scientific Conferences using Social Media and Real Time e-Proceedings Generation: Conferences in Biotech, Life Sciences and Medicine

  • In House Developed Methodology for Real Time Press Coverage of Biotech Top International conferences – selective  topics covered at conferences lead to NEW Curations in the Journal

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/press-coverage/

 

9 results for Kindle Store : “Aviva Lev-Ari”

Sort by 
Relevance
Featured
Price: Low to High
Price: High to Low
Avg. Customer Review
Publication Date
Showing most relevant results. See all results for .
  • Product Details

    Cancer Therapies: Metabolic, Genomics, Interventional, Immunotherapy and Nanotechnology in Therapy Delivery (Series C Book 2)

    May 13, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Demet Sag
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Etiologies of Cardiovascular Diseases: Epigenetics, Genetics and Genomics

    Nov 28, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Justin D. Pearlman MD ME PhD MA FACC and Stephen J. Williams PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Perspectives on Nitric Oxide in Disease Mechanisms (Biomed e-Books Book 1)

    Jun 20, 2013 | Kindle eBook

    by Margaret Baker PhD and Tilda Barliya PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Genomics Orientations for Personalized Medicine (Frontiers in Genomics Research Book 1)

    Nov 22, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Sudipta Saha PhD and Marcus W Feldman PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Metabolic Genomics & Pharmaceutics (BioMedicine – Metabolomics, Immunology, Infectious Diseases Book 1)

    Jul 21, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FCAP and Prabodah Kandala PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Milestones in Physiology: Discoveries in Medicine, Genomics and Therapeutics (Series E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 3)

    Dec 26, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FACP and Aviva Lev-Ari PhD RN
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Cancer Biology and Genomics for Disease Diagnosis (Series C: e-Books on Cancer & Oncology Book 1)

    Aug 10, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H Bernstein MD FCAP and Prabodh Kumar Kandala PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Regenerative and Translational Medicine: The Therapeutic Promise for Cardiovascular Diseases

    Dec 26, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Justin D. Pearlman MD ME PhD MA FACC and Ritu Saxena PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly
  • Product Details

    Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Co-Curation: The Art of Scientific & Medical Curation

    Nov 29, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari PhD RN
    Subscribers read for free.
    Auto-delivered wirelessly

Read Full Post »

Three Genres in e-Scientific Publishing AND Three Scientists’ Dilemmas

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

That’s what I tell students. The way to succeed is to get born at the right time and in the right place. If you can do that then you are bound to succeed. You have to be receptive and have some talent as well.

Professor Sydney Brenner, a professor of Genetic medicine at the University of Cambridge and Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine in 2002

 

 

Cell/Nature/Science

[CNS]

 Subscription-based Access

Open Access

  1. Online journals, to which scientists pay an upfront free to cover editing costs, which then ensure the work is available free to access for anyone in perpetuity

 

Curation of Scientific Findings

i.e., Kindle Direct Publishing [KDP] – Royalty-based system

  1. Free content to e-Readers
  2. Expert, Authors, Writers -Volunteers
  3. Editor -Voluneers
Confirming or disproving past studies Confirming or disproving past studies
Decades-long pursuit of a risky “moonshot” Decades-long pursuit of a risky “moonshot”
Trendy topics with Editors Trendy topics with Editors

 

Genres in e-Scientific Publishing

(A) Cell/Nature/Science

 – June 27, 2017

Elizabeth Dzeng — Feb 24th, 2014

  • http://www.cell.com/
  • http://www.sciencemag.org/
  • https://www.nature.com/
  • In 1998, Elsevier rolled out its plan for the internet age, which would come to be called “The Big Deal”. It offered electronic access to bundles of hundreds of journals at a time: a university would pay a set fee each year – according to a report based on freedom of information requests, Cornell University’s 2009 tab was just short of $2m – and any student or professor could download any journal they wanted through Elsevier’s website. Universities signed up en masse. …. Elsevier owned 24% of the scientific journal market, while Maxwell’s old partners Springer, and his crosstown rivals Wiley-Blackwell, controlled about another 12% each. These three companies accounted for half the market. (An Elsevier representative familiar with the report told me that by their own estimate they publish only 16% of the scientific literature.)  – June 27, 2017.  Elsevier published 420,000 papers last year, after receiving 1.5m submissions  – June 28, 2017 [numbers correction to 6/27/2017.]

(B) Open Access Journals and the Phenomenon

  1. Biochemistry
  2. Biophysics and Structural Biology
  3. Cancer Biology
  4. Cell Biology
  5. Computational and Systems Biology
  6. Developmental Biology and Stem Cells
  7. Epidemiology and Global Health
  8. Genomics and Evolutionary Biology
  9. Microbiology and Infectious Disease
  10. Neuroscience

(C) Curation of Scientific Findings

Scientists’ Dilemmas

(1) Confirming or disproving past studies

(2) Decades-long pursuit of a risky “moonshot”

(3) Trendy Topics with Editors 

 

@ PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com –  A Case Study on the LEADER in Curation of Scientific Findings

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/06/29/pharmaceuticalintelligence-com-a-case-study-on-the-leader-in-curation-of-scientific-findings/

Product Details

Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Co-Curation: The Art of Scientific & Medical Curation

Nov 29, 2015 | Kindle eBook

by Larry H. Bernstein MD FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari PhD RN
Subscribers read for free.
Auto-delivered wirelessly
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

 

Read Full Post »

e-Scientific Publishing: The Competitive Advantage of a Powerhouse for Curation of Scientific Findings and Methodology Development for e-Scientific Publishing – LPBI Group, A Case in Point

Author and Editor-in-Chief: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN, 

Nominee for 2018 Yidan Foundation Prize for Medical Education Content Development

 

Aviva Lev-Ari on 9/2009

Recollections: My days at Berkeley, 9/1978 – 12/1983 – About my doctoral advisor, Allan Pred, other Professors and other Peers

Reflections on a Four-phase Career: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN, March 2018

 

Updated on 4/2/2018

Question: WHAT MAKES us so unique

Answers: 1,2,3,4

1. Sustainability

The books are online topics in medical science, diagnostics and therapy that are maintained by updating the chapter material in the Biomed e-series directly pertaining to the chapter content that is directly available from the e-series online. The Chapters are compiled from detailed review of the available literature, and the content of each book is related to current concepts researched and coordinated for the published work. One of the Research Categories: Interviews with Scientific Leaders includes in its growth plan the option of Podcasts which is an Audio Media component to supplement the video media component which is used extensively in the BioMed e-Series

How we accomplish the Sustainability goal:

  • Online continuing updates are made to articles in the Journal
  • Each e-Book has an abbreviated electronic Table of Contents which consists of LIVE LINKS for each article in an e-Book to the article in the Journal. eReaders of the e-Books clicks on the link and get the most updated State of Science for each topic in the e-books.
  • Journal Ontology is a relational and hierarchical knowledge base allowing for expansion of the content creation process on these two dimensions and is not limited to these two. For example: One of the Research Categories: Interviews with Scientific Leaders includes in its growth plan the option of Podcasts which is an Audio Media component to supplement the video media component which is used extensively in the BioMed e-Series.

2. A Future-Oriented Vision

Cutting edge research is the content of a research reservoir that allows for the creation of up-to-date content, and which supports new developments as they arise. The cutting edge concepts are reviewed in concordance with timely conferences on topical material. These conferences are also recorded and conveyed in the related documents. Since 2013, International leading Breakthroughs in BioTechnology Conferences are covered in Real Time by Dr. Aviva Lev-Ari on PRESS Pass.

How we accomplish the Future-Oriented Vision goal:

  • The Intellectual Property Vault (N= +5,200) has the potential of being used for creation of New Titles for New e-Books. It is a reservoir of Ideas in the form of Research Categories populated by Scientific Curations
  • Online reach is growing and is driven by cutting edge subject matters added on a continuous basis to the Intellectual Property Vault
  • Innovations in Drug Discovery and Drug Delivery are covered in Real Time, on average up to 12 per year
  • See Section
  • In 2018, the list of International leading Breakthroughs in BioTechnology Conferences that will be covered in Real Time by Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN includes the following, as confirmed on 1/2018, more will be confirmed in during 2018:

AI & Machine Learning in Clinical Trials, APRIL 12, 2018 PFIZER INNOVATION RESEARCH LAB – CAMBRIDGE, MA

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2018/04/02/ai-machine-learning-in-clinical-trials-april-12-2018-pfizer-innovation-research-lab-cambridge-ma/

2018 Annual World Medical Innovation Forum Artificial Intelligence April 23–25, 2018 Boston, Massachusetts, Westin Copley Place

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2018/01/18/2018-annual-world-medical-innovation-forum-artificial-intelligence-april-23-25-2018-boston-massachusetts-westin-copley-place/

12th Annual US-India BioPharma & Healthcare Summit, May 8, 2018, Marriott Cambridge

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2018/01/18/12th-annual-us-india-biopharma-healthcare-summit-may-8-2018-marriott-cambridge/

The 14th Annual Personalized Medicine Conference, November 13 – 15, 2018, Joseph B. Martin Conference Center, HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL, Boston

http://www.personalizedmedicinecoalition.org/Events

3. Transformation

  • We Focus on Transformative subject matters:
  • Examples: We published e-Books on
  1. Regenerative and Translation Medicine
  2. Next Generation Sequencing in Genomics (work-in-progress)
  3. Epigenetics, Genetics and Genomics
  4. Precision Medicine & Voices of Patients

These contents are timely and among other material are subject to periodic updating. The reports are subject to a rigorous process of investigation, up-to-date reporting, analysis, and interpretation. The curation is done by experts with a perspective on the field allowing for the creation of the scientific CONTEXT that unifies the concept evolution with the breakthrough presented at hand and the future implications to be anticipated.

How we accomplish the Transformation goal:

  • Methodology of Curation is Transformative as a Medium for written scientific communication: Synthesis, Analysis and Interpretation
  1. Experts, Authors, Writers add their depth in thinking on subjects to the breath of materials selected by their expertise to be forming new curations or updating existing ones
  2. It is transformative in its capacity to accelerated diffusion of scientific innovations process, the curation is done by experts with a perspective on the field allowing for the creation of the scientific CONTEXT that unifies the concept evolution with the breathrough presented at hand and the future implications to be anticipated. In an analogy, it is an expressive medium for creative exposition of multiple combinations of Past, Present, Future tenses in grammar, when the presentation is on the continuous process of discovery.

4. Innovation & Creativity

The content available provides commentaries on each Volume’s Contribution to Medical Education by L.H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN. In addition, it provides a knowledge architecture that features Innovative ideas that tackle pressing challenges in the field of Medical Education. Content includes methodology development for: Curation of Scientific Findings by Experts; Actual Curations, “Mapping” the Medicine Disciplines; Exposition of the Scientific Frontier in Five Specialties in Medicine, and then also pressing challenges in the field of Medical Education such as the Digital Information Explosion in the fields of Life Sciences and Medicine; and finally the Pursuit of Excellence in Content Creation by Curation Methodology for Medical subject matters in multiple areas of the Health Care field.

How we accomplish the Innovation & Creativity goal:

  • Seven factors are presented, below

F1        What was accomplished by Development of the Curation Methodology

F2        Method Selection of the Open Access Journal Publishing Medium

F3        Selection of electronic Books vs Hardcover or Softcover type of product

F4        Examples of Creative Article Titles

F5        Examples of Creative eTOCs

F6        Examples of Hierarchical Ontologies created by Experts/Authors/Writers for selected Categories of Research with +500 Articles

F7.       Articles of Note on selective Research Topic @PharmaceuticalIntelligence

The Body of Work

 

A. Publication of the BioMedical e-Books e-Series, 2013 – Present

This is the link to Amazon.com, Kindle Store’s Page for the 13 volumes published till 12/30/2017

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=Aviva+Lev-Ari&rh=n%3A133140011%2Ck%3AAviva+Lev-Ari

 

These are the links to Amazon.com, Kindle Store’s Page for each volume

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DINFFYC

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018Q5MCN8

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018PNHJ84

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018DHBUO6

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B013RVYR2K

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B012BB0ZF0

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019UM909A

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019VH97LU

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B071VQ6YYK

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075CXHY1B

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B076HGB6MZ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078313281

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078QVDV2W

 

B. BioMedical e-Books e-Series: Multiple Volumes in Five e-Series with Commentaries on each Volume’s Contribution to Medical Education by L.H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

  • Commentaries on each Volume’s Contribution to Medical Education by L.H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN – BioMedical e-Books e-Series: Multiple Volumes in Five e-Series

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/biomed-e-books/commentaries-on-each-volumes-contribution-to-medical-education-by-l-h-bernstein-md-fcap-and-aviva-lev-ari-phd-rn-biomedical-e-books-e-series-multiple-volumes-in-five-e-series/

 

C.      electronic Table of Contents (eTOCs) of each Volume in the SIXTEEN-Volume BioMed e-Series

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/12/12/biomed-e-series-16-volumes-electronic-table-of-contents-of-each-volume/

Analytics for the BioMed e-Series based on:

  1. Number of Articles per Volume
  2. E-Readers per Article
  3. Volume e-Impression since DATE of Publication [Summation of 2, above for all articles inside each Volume, before it was inside an e-Book and after the DATE of publication [Product details per Volume in attachment – Five e-Series – several Volumes per e-Series] PENDING

 

D.         Innovative ideas that tackle pressing challenges in the field of Medical Education: Knowledge Architecture

D1        Methodology Development for Content Creation targeted at Medical and Life Sciences Education (Curation of Scientific Findings by Experts)

D2        Methodology Development for Scientific Inquiry in Medicine: Case Studies in a Medical Specialty – Application of the Methodology of Curation to Case Studies – Published as a Book, 2015

D3        Methodology Development for Mapping the Medicine Discipline for Education

D4        Methodology Development for Exposition of the Scientific Frontier in Five Specialties in Medicine (D4.1, D4.2, D4.3, D4.4, D4.5).

 

E.         Innovative ideas that tackle pressing challenges in the field of Medical Education: Digital Information Explosion in the fields of Life Sciences and Medicine

E1        Open Access Scientific Journal Launch in Biomedicine and Site Statistics:

+1.3 Million eReaders and eSubscribers

E2        Journal Ontology for Knowledge Architecture – +600 Categories of Research

E3        Intellectual Property Vault: Knowledge Base of +5,200 Scientific articles applying the Curation of Scientific Findings Methodology

E4        Scientific Agora: Multi Scientific Comment exchanges between e-Readers Scientists and LPBI’s Scientists/Experts/Authors/Writers

E5        Real Time (RT) Press Coverage of Leading Conferences in BioMedicine: RT Methodology and the Archive

E6        Impact of E5 on E3

 

F. Innovation & Creativity Demonstrated in the Pursuit of Content Creation by Curation Methodology for Medical Education. For us perfection of the application process of curation methodologies in Medicine is a pursuit of excellence in the creation of content in Life Sciences and in Medicine.

F1        What was accomplished in five years by Development of the Curation Methodology

F2        Method Selection of the Open Access Journal Publishing Medium

F3        Selection of electronic Books vs Hardcover or Softcover type of product

F4        Examples of Creative Article Titles

F5        Examples of Creative eTOCs

F6        Examples of Hierarchical Ontologies created by Experts/Authors/Writers for selected Categories of Research with +500 Articles

F7        Articles of Note in selective Research Topic @PharmaceuticalIntelligence

 

G.         Editor-in-Chief’s Roles and Accomplishments

G1        Curation Methodology Development

G2        Content Creation and Key Opinion Leader (KOL) Recognition

Editorial & Publication of Articles in e-Books by Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence: Contributions of Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

G2.1         Volume of Articles in the Journal and in the 16 Volume-BioMed e-Series

G2.2         Digital Presence

G2.3         Digital KOL Parameters

G3        Team building: Editors and Expert, Authors, Writers

G4        Book Title Generation and Cover Page Design

G5        Style Setting: Instruction manual for Journal, Articles, Books

G6        Annual Workflow Management of Multiple eTOCs – Multi-year Book Publishing Scheduling Plan, 2013 – Present

 

In this article I cover the Business Synopsis and the following Four Parts of the Business:

Part 1: The Vision

Part 2: Scientific Journal – Site Statistics on 6/20/2017

Part 3: BioMed e-Series

Part 4:  Real Time (RT) Press Coverage  of 50 Biotech Top Conferences

 

Synopsis

Dr. Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN has launched in 4/2012 the PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com an Internet-based website as an educational Open Access Online Scientific Journal. On 10/2012 Dr. Lev-Ari, launched a BioMed e-Series of electronic Book in Medicine and Life Sciences which use the Kindle Direct Publishing platform for book publishing by Amazon.com.

The books having evolved for six years from specifically identified topics in Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, including molecular biology, genomics, pharmaceutics and pathophysiology. There have been a number of contributors with the necessary professional competences. The books have been organized into five series that include cardiovascular, genomics, proteomics, pharmacotherapy, cancer and carcinogenesis, infectious disease and immune mechanisms. In addition to these basic disciplines for study there are also important deliberations on the history of medicine and physiology and a focus on the impact of disease on human experience in three books of Series E: Patient-centered Medicine.

The work involved in the writing took many hundreds of hours of study and preparation. These sources have considerable electronic readership (+1.3Million) and have a potential for growing use in teaching of medical students, advanced undergraduate and graduate students in Medical Sciences. Currently, two e-Books are used in curriculum development in Medical Schools in the US. An outreach plan for Deans of Medical Schools and Oncologists and Cardiologists in the Community Hospitals and Clinics is in the making.

The XXXXXXX Prize is awarded for outstanding contributions to education. In this respect the contributions of PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com current and authentic documents is deserving of consideration. Nomination is submitted for recognition as a means in tackling challenges in the field of MEDICAL education, and especially the “Sixteen Volumes in Medicine and Life Sciences” which are LPBI Group’s BioMed e-Series, an initiative of innovative ideas and development of curation methodologies for scientific contents. The BioMedical e-Books e-Series, 2013 – present, includes Commentaries on each Volume’s Contribution to Medical Education by L.H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN. In addition, there is supporting material for an understanding of the role played by electronic Scientific Publishing in mastering the continued progress in Medical Sciences for the electronic exposition of the process used in new scientific content creations. These topics are fully covered in the BioMed e-series. Volume Two in Series A is dedicated to the Curation methodology of scientific findings.

Highlights

  • Interdisciplinary Journal covers interfaces of six domains

(Life sciences, Pharmaceuticals, Medicine, Healthcare Policy, Biotech Intelligence and Medical Devices)

  • Curations of Scientific Findings of peer reviewed articles in top three journals in each of the Six domain
  • Curations written on a multi-Authoring platform by MDs, MD/PhDs, PharmD and PhDs, all 15 years after graduation of the advanced degree program, and each has a publication list before joined my team – they write clinical and medical interpretations of the scientific frontier as evidenced in the Scientific Finding section of published articles in Cell, Nature, Science, NEJM, other top journals in these six domains.
  • Volume, ~5,150 Scientific articles, +500 categories of Research defining the Journal Ontology, 9,500 tags, 7,300, scientific comment on the articles submitted and exchange recorded between the Scientific community and our Team members
  • Top two articles >25,000 eReaders
  • Clicks on two Top Authors: >551,000
  • from NIH +3,700 hits
  • 2250 Journal subscribers by e-mail
  • +6,200 Biotech Executive following up on LinkedIn
  • BioMed e-Series: 16 volumes, 13 on Amazon.com

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=Aviva+Lev-Ari&rh=n%3A133140011%2Ck%3AAviva+Lev-Ari

  • In House Developed Methodology for Real Time Press Coverage of Biotech Top International conferences – selective  topics covered at conferences lead to NEW Curations in the Journal

 

Part 1: The Vision

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/vision/

Part 2: Scientific Journal – Site Statistics on 4/2/2018

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/

1,407,787 Million eReaders on WordPress.com in 4/2018

Best ever daily views

2,508 views

Our DOMAINS in Scientific Media

I.  Pharmaceutical: Biologics, Small Molecules, Diagnostics

II.  Life Sciences: Genomics and Cancer Biology

III.  Patient-centered Medicine: Focus on #1: Cardiovascular, #2: Cancer, #3: Physiology: Metabolomics, Immunology

IV. Biomedicine, BioTech, and MedTech (Medical Devices)

V.  HealthCare: Patient-centered Medicine and Personalized/Precision Medicine

 

All time

1,239,246 eReaders on 6/25/2017 

on 4/2/2018

  • 1,407,787 eReaders & 
  • 2,295 Subscribers by e-mail
  • 7,283 Scientific comments
  •  5,291 Scientific Articles
  • 634 Categories of Research – Journal Ontology
  • 9,782 Tags

Followers (includes Publicize)

788 Twitter

699 Facebook

67 Tumblr

All Time

Top Posts >3,000 Views for all days ending 2018-04-02 (Summarized)

Title Views
Home page / Archives More stats 535,337
Is the Warburg Effect the Cause or the Effect of Cancer: A 21st Century View? More stats 16,243
Do Novel Anticoagulants Affect the PT/INR? The Cases of XARELTO (rivaroxaban) and PRADAXA (dabigatran) More stats 11,938
Recent comprehensive review on the role of ultrasound in breast cancer management More stats 9,675
Paclitaxel vs Abraxane (albumin-bound paclitaxel) More stats 9,376
Clinical Indications for Use of Inhaled Nitric Oxide (iNO) in the Adult Patient Market: Clinical Outcomes after Use, Therapy Demand and Cost of Care More stats 6,141
Mesothelin: An early detection biomarker for cancer (By Jack Andraka) More stats 5,992
Our TEAM More stats 5,979
Apixaban (Eliquis): Mechanism of Action, Drug Comparison and Additional Indications More stats 4,833
Akt inhibition for cancer treatment, where do we stand today? More stats 4,447
Newer Treatments for Depression: Monoamine, Neurotrophic Factor & Pharmacokinetic Hypotheses More stats 3,995
Biochemistry of the Coagulation Cascade and Platelet Aggregation – Part I More stats 3,805
AstraZeneca’s WEE1 protein inhibitor AZD1775 Shows Success Against Tumors with a SETD2 mutation More stats 3,587
Confined Indolamine 2, 3 dioxygenase (IDO) Controls the Hemeostasis of Immune Responses for Good and Bad More stats 3,582
Cardiovascular Diseases, Volume One: Perspectives on Nitric Oxide in Disease Mechanisms More stats 3,534
AMPK Is a Negative Regulator of the Warburg Effect and Suppresses Tumor Growth In Vivo More stats 3,329
The Centrality of Ca(2+) Signaling and Cytoskeleton Involving Calmodulin Kinases and Ryanodine Receptors in Cardiac Failure, Arterial Smooth Muscle, Post-ischemic Arrhythmia, Similarities and Differences, and Pharmaceutical Targets More stats 3,252
Founder More stats 3,243
BioMed e-Series More stats 3,170
Introduction to Transdermal Drug Delivery (TDD) system and nanotechnology More stats 3,129
FDA Guidelines For Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology (DART) Studies for Small Molecules More stats 3,037

Top Posts >3,000 Views for all days ending 2017-06-20 (Summarized)

Clicks for all days ending 2018-04-02 (Summarized) – All Time

URL Clicks
WordPress.com Media 38,388
commons.wikipedia.org 6,447
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 4,036
en.wikipedia.org 3,292
http://www.nature.com 3,139
dx.doi.org 1,818
http://www.scoop.it 1,316
pharmaceuticalintelligence.wordpress.com 749
gravatar.com 703
http://www.sciencedirect.com 645
http://www.fda.gov 613
http://www.fiercepharma.com 552
apps.societyforscience.org/intelisef2012/project.cfm?PID=ME028&CFID=28485&CFTOKEN=10931553 550
http://www.cancer.gov 456
informahealthcare.com 413
ars.els-cdn.com 406
http://www.hindawi.com 367
http://www.youtube.com 361
http://www.medscape.com 353
http://www.nejm.org 310
http://www.linkedin.com 300

Referrers for all days ending 2018-04-02 (Summarized) – All Time

Referrer Views
Search Engines   742,459
linkedin.com 25,349
Facebook 7,662
lnkd.in 6,289
scholar.google.com 4,440
Twitter 3,363
android-app 1,847
investorshub.advfn.com 1,050
WordPress Dashboard 900
scoop.it 826
mail.yahoo.com 781
scholar.google.co.in 630
scholar.google.co.uk 584
WordPress.com Reader 555
avanza.se 401
correio.portugalmail.pt/imp/ 381
scholar.google.co.jp 349

 

Content

Top Authors for all days ending 2018-04-02 (Summarized) – All Time

Author Views
2012pharmaceutical   359,700
larryhbern 258,904
tildabarliya 53,989
sjwilliamspa 46,989
Dror Nir 28,039
Dr. Sudipta Saha 25,298
ritusaxena 16,060
Demet Sag, Ph.D., CRA, GCP 14,927
aviralvatsa 8,437
zraviv06 8,202
Gail S Thornton 5,904
zs22 3,996
danutdaagmailcom 3,594
anamikasarkar 3,380
Alan F. Kaul, PharmD., MS, MBA, FCCP 2,205
pkandala 2,179
Aashir Awan, Phd 2,006
Irina Robu 1,880
jdpmd 1,639
megbaker58 1,479
S. Chakrabarti, Ph.D. 745
Ed Kislauskis 651
David Orchard-Webb, PhD 579
howarddonohue 552
stuartlpbi 490
marzankhan 464
evelinacohn 392
apreconasia 365
anayou1 238
jukkakarjalainen 230
Dr.Sreedhar Tirunagari 162
lmulligan13gmailcom 147
gerag2015 125

Graphics for 4/2012 to 3/10/2015

Part 3: BioMed e-Series

  • The Methodology of Co-Curation


Image Source: Original Graphic Conceptualization of the Co-Curation Concept by Stephen J Williams, 3/10/2015

Titles in the BioMed e-Series: 16 e-Books in Medicine and Life Sciences

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=Aviva+Lev-Ari&rh=n%3A133140011%2Ck%3AAviva+Lev-Ari

In each e-Book: Curations and Scientific reports by Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/10/16/editorial-publication-of-articles-in-e-books-by-leaders-in-pharmaceutical-business-intelligence-contributions-of-aviva-lev-ari-phd-rn/

 

13 results for Kindle Store :

“Aviva Lev-Ari”

  • The VOICES of Patients, Hospitals CEOs, Health Care Providers, Caregivers and Families: Personal Experience with Critical Care and Invasive Medical Procedures ... E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 1)

    The VOICES of Patients, Hospitals CEOs, Health Care Providers, Caregivers and Families: Personal Experience with Critical Care and Invasive Medical Procedures … E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 1)

    Oct 16, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Aviva Lev-Ari
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Amazon’s Aviva Lev-Ari Page

    Discover books, read about the author, find related products, and more.More about Aviva Lev-Ari
  • The Immune System, Stress Signaling, Infectious Diseases and Therapeutic Implications: VOLUME 2: Infectious Diseases and Therapeutics and VOLUME 3: The ... (Series D: BioMedicine & Immunology)

    The Immune System, Stress Signaling, Infectious Diseases and Therapeutic Implications: VOLUME 2: Infectious Diseases and Therapeutics and VOLUME 3: The … (Series D: BioMedicine & Immunology)

    Sep 4, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Aviva Lev-Ari
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Cancer Therapies: Metabolic, Genomics, Interventional, Immunotherapy and Nanotechnology in Therapy Delivery (Series C Book 2)

    Cancer Therapies: Metabolic, Genomics, Interventional, Immunotherapy and Nanotechnology in Therapy Delivery (Series C Book 2)

    May 13, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Demet Sag
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Perspectives on Nitric Oxide in Disease Mechanisms (Biomed e-Books Book 1)

    Perspectives on Nitric Oxide in Disease Mechanisms (Biomed e-Books Book 1)

    Jun 20, 2013 | Kindle eBook

    by Margaret Baker PhD and Tilda Barliya PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Medical Scientific Discoveries for the 21st Century & Interviews with Scientific Leaders (Series E)

    Medical Scientific Discoveries for the 21st Century & Interviews with Scientific Leaders (Series E)

    Dec 9, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Aviva Lev-Ari
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Etiologies of Cardiovascular Diseases: Epigenetics, Genetics and Genomics

    Etiologies of Cardiovascular Diseases: Epigenetics, Genetics and Genomics

    Nov 28, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Justin D. Pearlman MD ME PhD MA FACC and Stephen J. Williams PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Metabolic Genomics & Pharmaceutics (BioMedicine – Metabolomics, Immunology, Infectious Diseases Book 1)

    Metabolic Genomics & Pharmaceutics (BioMedicine – Metabolomics, Immunology, Infectious Diseases Book 1)

    Jul 21, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FCAP and Prabodah Kandala PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Cancer Biology and Genomics for Disease Diagnosis (Series C: e-Books on Cancer & Oncology Book 1)

    Cancer Biology and Genomics for Disease Diagnosis (Series C: e-Books on Cancer & Oncology Book 1)

    Aug 10, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H Bernstein MD FCAP and Prabodh Kumar Kandala PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Milestones in Physiology: Discoveries in Medicine, Genomics and Therapeutics (Series E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 3)

    Milestones in Physiology: Discoveries in Medicine, Genomics and Therapeutics (Series E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 3)

    Dec 26, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FACP and Aviva Lev-Ari PhD RN
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Genomics Orientations for Personalized Medicine (Frontiers in Genomics Research Book 1)

    Genomics Orientations for Personalized Medicine (Frontiers in Genomics Research Book 1)

    Nov 22, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Sudipta Saha PhD and Ritu Saxena PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Medical 3D BioPrinting – The Revolution in Medicine Technologies for Patient-centered Medicine: From R&D in Biologics to New Medical Devices (Series E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 4)

    Medical 3D BioPrinting – The Revolution in Medicine Technologies for Patient-centered Medicine: From R&D in Biologics to New Medical Devices (Series E: Patient-Centered Medicine Book 4)

    Dec 30, 2017 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein and Irina Robu
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Co-Curation: The Art of Scientific & Medical Curation

    Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Co-Curation: The Art of Scientific & Medical Curation

    Nov 29, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Larry H. Bernstein MD FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari PhD RN
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
  • Regenerative and Translational Medicine: The Therapeutic Promise for Cardiovascular Diseases

    Regenerative and Translational Medicine: The Therapeutic Promise for Cardiovascular Diseases

    Dec 26, 2015 | Kindle eBook

    by Justin D. Pearlman MD ME PhD MA FACC and Ritu Saxena PhD
    Subscribers read for free.
    Get it TODAY, Apr 2
    Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Forthcoming e-Books in 2018 & 2019

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/biomed-e-books/

Series C, Volume Two was published in 2017 !!!

Work-in-Progress:

Series A, Volume 5 and Volume 6, and

Series B, Volume 2

 

 

 

Part 4: Real Time Coverage of 50 Biotech Top Conferences

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/press-coverage/

 

Other related articles to e-Scientific Publishing include the following: 

·       PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com –  A Case Study on the LEADER in Curation of Scientific Findings

Author: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/06/29/pharmaceuticalintelligence-com-a-case-study-on-the-leader-in-curation-of-scientific-findings/

·    Scientific Curation Fostering Expert Networks and Open Innovation: Lessons from Clive Thompson

Curator: Stephen J Williams, PhD

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/17/scientific-curation-fostering-expert-networks-and-open-innovation-lessons-from-clive-thompson-and-others/

·       Innovations in electronic Scientific Publishing (eSP): Case Studies in Marketing eContent, Curation Methodology, Categories of Research Functions, Interdisciplinary conceptual innovations by Cross Section of Categories, Exposure to Frontiers of Science by Real Time Press coverage of Scientific Conferences

Editor-in-Chief http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/05/06/case-studies-of-innovations-in-electronic-scientific-publishing-esp-marketing-econtent-curation-methodology-categories-of-research-functions-interdisciplinary-conceptual-innovations-by-cross-sec/

  • FIVE years of e-Scientific Publishing @pharmaceuticalintellicence.com, Top Articles by Author and by e-Views >1,000, 4/27/2012 to 1/29/2018

Editor-in-Chief: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/04/28/five-years-of-e-scientific-publishing-pharmaceuticalintellicence-com-top-articles-by-author-and-by-e-views-1000-4272012-to-4272017/

·       Inevitability of Curation: Scientific Publishing moves to embrace Open Data, Libraries and Researchers are trying to keep up

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2015/02/19/inevitability-of-curation-scientific-publishing-moves-to-embrace-open-data-libraries-and-researchers-are-trying-to-keep-up/

·       The e-Factor in Curation of Scientific Findings

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/e-factor-curation-scientific-findings-aviva-lev-ari-phd-rn/

·       Power of Analogy: Curation in Music, Music Critique as a Curation and Curation of Medical Research Findings – A Comparison

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/02/11/power-of-analogy-curation-in-music-music-critique-as-a-curation-and-curation-of-medical-research-findings-a-comparison/

  • Three Genres in e-Scientific Publishing AND Three Scientists’ Dilemmas

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/06/28/three-genres-in-e-scientific-publishing-and-three-scientists-dilemmas/

·       e-Scientific Publishing: The Competitive Advantage of a Powerhouse for Curation of Scientific Findings and Methodology Development for e-Scientific Publishing – LPBI Group, A Case in Point – Originally published on 2/6/2017

Author and Editor-in-Chief: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/06/20/e-scientific-publishing-the-competitive-advantage-of-a-powerhouse-for-curation-of-scientific-findings-and-methodology-development-for-e-scientific-publishing-lpbi-group-a-case-in-point/

 

Articles in each e-Book in the BioMed e-Series

 

 

Read Full Post »

Innovations in electronic Scientific Publishing (eSP): Case Studies in Marketing eContent, Curation Methodology, Categories of Research Functions, Interdisciplinary conceptual innovations by Cross Section of Categories, Exposure to Frontiers of Science by Real Time Press coverage of Scientific Conferences

Editor-in-Chief http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.comAviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

We have identified the following FIVE Innovations and provide Case Studies to demonstrate these statements.

Innovation #1:

Methodology of Expert Curation of Scientific Findings is applied in all the articles that are included in LPBI Group’s 16 e-Books

Innovation #2:

The Journal Archive by Month is sorted by Categories of Research that can serve multiple Goals in eScientific Publishing

Innovation #3:

Marketing of electronic Scientific Contents – eReaders’ Views Analytics: Site Statistics, Top Article Views, Top Author’s Views

Innovation #4:

Cross section of several Categories of Research supports interdisciplinary conceptual innovations – it is evidence that knowledge is in SILOS to a great degree, still.

Innovation #5:

Real Time Press coverage of Scientific Conferences Builds exposure to FRONTIER of Science that guides CONTENT creation in the Journal and in the BioMed e-Series

 

Case Studies for Innovations #1, #2, #3, #4, #5

 

Innovation #1:

1.1  Methodology of Expert Curation of Scientific Findings is applied in all the articles that are included in LPBI Group’s 16 e-Books

Editorial & Publication of Articles in e-Books by  Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence:  Contributions of Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/10/16/editorial-publication-of-articles-in-e-books-by-leaders-in-pharmaceutical-business-intelligence-contributions-of-larry-h-bernstein-md-fcap/

Editorial & Publication of Articles in e-Books by Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence:  Contributions of Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/founder/editorial-publication-of-articles-in-e-books-by-leaders-in-pharmaceutical-business-intelligence/

1.2  The Methodology of Expert Curation of Scientific Findings deserves the status of an eScientific Publishing Class, in its own right – Our 5100 articles demonstrate that capability and virtue

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

  • Cardiovascular, Volume Two: Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Co-Curation, on Amazon since 11/30/2015

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018Q5MCN8

Innovation #2:

The Journal Archive by Month is sorted by Categories of Research that can serve multiple Goals in eScientific Publishing:

 

2.1  Repository for generation of electronic Table of Contents (eTOCs) used in creation of electronic Books (eBooks).

Examples include our BioMed e-Series:

Forthcoming SEVEN e-Books in 2017/18 AND Eight e-Books on Amazon.com

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2016/04/24/new-e-book-titles-forthcoming-on-amazon-com-in-2016-from-lpbi-groups-biomed-e-series-forthcoming-cover-pages/

BioMed e-Series

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/biomed-e-books/

BioMed e-Series

WE ARE ON AMAZON.COM

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_15?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=aviva+lev-ari+phd+rn&sprefix=%22Aviva+Lev-Ari%2C%2Caps%2C129&crid=3V1F20IV5LHE3

2.2  Categories of Research serves as Ontologies for Journals

Examples. include our Open Access Online Scientific Journal

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

Our DOMAINS in Scientific Media

I.  Pharmaceutical: Biologics, Small Molecules, Diagnostics

II.  Life Sciences: Genomics and Cancer Biology

III.  Patient-centered Medicine: Focus on #1: Cardiovascular, #2: Cancer, #3: Physiology: Metabolomics, Immunology

IV. Biomedicine, BioTech, and MedTech (Medical Devices)

V.  HealthCare: Patient-centered Medicine and Personalized/Precision Medicine

Innovation #3:

Marketing of electronic Scientific Contents – eReaders’ Views Analytics: Site Statistics, Top Article Views, Top Author’s Views

 

3.1 Site Statistics on 5/5/52017

1,208,981 Views – all articles [not only articles with e-Views >1,000 = 445,321]

7,267 Scientific Comments

5,096 articles

9,566 tags

578 Categories of Research

3.2 FIVE years of e-Scientific Publishing @pharmaceuticalintellicence.com, Top Articles by Author and by

e-Views >1,000, 4/27/2012 to 4/27/2017

Article Title

 

Views All Time

Author

Home page / Archives

445,321

e-Readers

Is the Warburg Effect the Cause or the Effect of Cancer: A 21st Century View?

15,461

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

Do Novel Anticoagulants Affect the PT/INR? The Cases of XARELTO (rivaroxaban) and PRADAXA (dabigatran)

10,005

 

Vivek Lal, MBBS, MD, FCIR, Justin D. Pearlman, MD, PhD, FACC and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/04/28/five-years-of-e-scientific-publishing-pharmaceuticalintellicence-com-top-articles-by-author-and-by-e-views-1000-4272012-to-4272017/

3.3  Top Authors, by 5 years of e-Views, 4/25/2017, on pharmaceuticalintelligence.com 

4/30/2012 – 4/25/2017 (All Times – Summarized)

Author

Views

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

315,262

 

Larry H Bernnstein, MD, FCAP

220,787

Tilda Barliya, PhD

47,008

 

Stephen J Williams, PhD

39,704

Dror Nir, PhD

24,484

Sudipta Saha, PhD

22,253

Ritu Saxena, PhD

15,302

Demet Sag, Ph.D., CRA, GCP

12,982

Aviral Vatsa, PhD

8,082

Ziv Raviv, PhD

7,525

Zohi Sternberg, PhD

3,839

Anamika Sarkar, PhD, MBA

3,269

Gail S Thornton, MA, PhD(c)

2,885

Danut Dragoi, PhD

2,607

Prabodh Kandala, PhD

2,115

Alan F. Kaul, PharmD., MS, MBA, FCCP

2,057

Aashir Awan, PhD

1,841

Meg Baker, PhD

1,439

Justin D Pearlman, MD, PhD

1,429

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/04/25/top-authors-by-5-years-of-e-views-4252017-on-pharmaceuticalintelligence-com/

Innovation #4:

Cross section of several Categories of Research supports interdisciplinary conceptual innovations – it is evidence that knowledge is in SILOS to a great degree, still.

 

Examples for interdisciplinary conceptual innovations include:

  • Dr. Aviva Lev-Ari‘s early curations represent an intersection of Vascular Biology and Molecular Cardiology – that has yielded a Novel Combination Drug Therapy Concept in cardiovascular diseases.

Cardiovascular Diseases and Pharmacological Therapy: Curations

 

  • Dr. Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP curations in Enzymology and Pathophysiology

ATP – the universal energy carrier in the living cell: Reflections on the discoveries and applications in Medicine

Curators: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Milestones in Physiology: Discoveries in Medicine, Genomics and Therapeutics

Editor: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019VH97LU

Cyclic Dinucleotides and Histone deacetylase inhibitors

Curators: Larry H. Bernsten, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

  • Dr. Stephen J. Williams curations in Pharmacology and Oncology

Why Does Cytotoxic Chemotherapy Still Remain a Mainstay in Many Chemotherapy Regimens

New Generation of Platinated Compounds to Circumvent Resistance

New Topoisomerase Inhibitors: Agents From Nature

Are Cyclin D Inhibitors a Good Target?

 

  • Dr. Dror Nir’s curations in Medical Imaging and Oncology

Imaging Technology in Cancer Surgery

Metastatic Diseases – Examples of Surgical Procedures in Treatment of Cancer

Ablation Techniques in Interventional Oncology

 

  • Dr. Tilda Barliya’s curations in Nanotechnology, Molecular Biology and Drug Delivery

Building a Drug-Delivery System (DDS): choice of polymers and drugs

Factors affecting the PK of the nanocarrier

Detection and Imaging

Single-Molecule Detection by Philip Tinnefeld

Mesothelin: An early detection biomarker for cancer (By Jack Andraka)

Nanotechnology and MRI imaging

Nanotechnology: Detecting and Treating metastatic cancer in the lymph node

Diagnosing lung cancer in exhaled breath using gold nanoparticles

Innovation #5:

Real Time Press coverage of Scientific Conferences Builds exposure to FRONTIER of Science that guides CONTENTS creation in the Journal and in the BioMed e-Series

 

5.1 Press Coverage of BioTech, Medicine and Life Sciences Conferences, 2013 – 2017

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/press-coverage/

List of Conferences in 2017

The 13th Annual Personalized Medicine Conference, NOVEMBER 14 – 16, 2017, Joseph B. Martin Conference Center, HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL, Boston

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/03/13/the-13th-annual-personalized-medicine-conference-from-concept-to-the-clinic-november-14-16-2017-joseph-b-martin-conference-center-harvard-medical-school-77-avenue-louis-pasteur-boston/

 

16th Annual Cancer Research Symposium, Koch Institute, Friday, June 16, 2017, 9AM – 5PM, Kresge Auditorium, MIT

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/03/13/16th-annual-cancer-research-symposium-koch-institute-friday-june-16-9am-5pm-kresge-auditorium-mit/

 

BioInformatics: Track 6: BioIT World Conference & Expo ’17, May 23-25, 2017, Seaport World Trade Center, Boston, MA

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/01/12/2017-agenda-bioinformatics-track-6-bioit-world-conference-expo-17-may-23-35-2017-seaport-world-trade-center-boston-ma/

 

2017 World Medical Innovation Forum: Cardiovascular, May 1-3, 2017, Partners HealthCare, Boston, at the Westin Hotel, Boston

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2016/12/14/2017-world-medical-innovation-forum-cardiovascular-may-1-3-2017-partners-healthcare-boston-at-the-westin-hotel-boston/

 

2017 MassBio Annual Meeting March 30, 2017 8:00 AM – March 31, 2017 4:00 PM, Royal Sonesta Boston, Cambridge MA

https://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2017/02/28/2017-massbio-annual-meeting-march-30-2017-800-am-march-31-2017-400-pm-royal-sonesta-boston-cambridge-ma/

 

5.2  eProceedings generated in Real Time, Social Media facilitate Global e-Readers Reach and instantaneous reach of conference attendees 

  • World Medical Innovation Forum – CARDIOVASCULAR • MAY 1-3, 2017, BOSTON, MA

(a) Real Time Highlights and Tweets: Day 1,2,3: World Medical Innovation Forum – CARDIOVASCULAR • MAY 1-3, 2017, BOSTON, MA

(b) e-Proceedings for Day 1,2,3: World Medical Innovation Forum – CARDIOVASCULAR • MAY 1-3, 2017, BOSTON, MA

(c)  Tweets by @pharma_BI and @AVIVA1950 at World Medical Innovation Forum – CARDIOVASCULAR • MAY 1-3, 2017, BOSTON, MA

 

5.3 Opportunities for Import of Innovations from Conferences to the Journal and to the BioMed e-Series

From World Medical Innovation Forum – CARDIOVASCULAR • MAY 1-3, 2017, BOSTON, MA

Disruptive Dozen: 12 Technologies that will reinvent Cardiovascular Care

 

12. Aging and Heart Disease: Can we reverse the process?

11.Nanotechnologies for Cardiac Diagnosis and Treatment

10. Breaking the Code: Diagnosis and Therapeutic Potential of RNA

9. Expanding the Pool of Organs for Transplant

8. Finding Cancer therapies without Cardiotoxicity

7. Less is more: Minimalist Mitral Valve Repair

6. Understanding Why exercise works for Just about every thing

5. Power Play: The Future of Implantable Cardiac Devices

4. Adopting the Orphan of Heart Disease

3. Targeting Inflammation in cardiovascular Disease

2. Harnessing Big Data and Deep Learning for Clinical Decision Support

  1. Quantitative Molecular Imaging for Cardiovascular Phynotypes

Read Full Post »

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

 

Babies born at or before 25 weeks have quite low survival outcomes, and in the US it is the leading cause of infant mortality and morbidity. Just a few weeks of extra ‘growing time’ can be the difference between severe health problems and a relatively healthy baby.

 

Researchers from The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (USA) Research Institute have shown it’s possible to nurture and protect a mammal in late stages of gestation inside an artificial womb; technology which could become a lifesaver for many premature human babies in just a few years.

 

The researchers took eight lambs between 105 to 120 days gestation (the physiological equivalent of 23 to 24 weeks in humans) and placed them inside the artificial womb. The artificial womb is a sealed and sterile bag filled with an electrolyte solution which acts like amniotic fluid in the uterus. The lamb’s own heart pumps the blood through the umbilical cord into a gas exchange machine outside the bag.

 

The artificial womb worked in this study and after just four weeks the lambs’ brains and lungs had matured like normal. They had also grown wool and could wiggle, open their eyes, and swallow. Although this study is looking incredibly promising but getting the research up to scratch for human babies still requires a big leap.

 

Nevertheless, if all goes well, the researchers hope to test the device on premature humans within three to five years. Potential therapeutic applications of this invention may include treatment of fetal growth retardation related to placental insufficiency or the salvage of preterm infants threatening to deliver after fetal intervention or fetal surgery.

 

The technology may also provide the opportunity to deliver infants affected by congenital malformations of the heart, lung and diaphragm for early correction or therapy before the institution of gas ventilation. Numerous applications related to fetal pharmacologic, stem cell or gene therapy could be facilitated by removing the possibility for maternal exposure and enabling direct delivery of therapeutic agents to the isolated fetus.

 

References:

 

https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms15112

 

 

https://www.sciencealert.com/researchers-have-successfully-grown-premature-lambs-in-an-artificial-womb

 

http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/04/25/525044286/scientists-create-artificial-womb-that-could-help-prematurely-born-babies

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2017/04/25/artificial-womb-promises-boost-survival-premature-babies/

 

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/apr/25/artificial-womb-for-premature-babies-successful-in-animal-trials-biobag

 

http://www.theblaze.com/news/2017/04/25/new-artificial-womb-technology-could-keep-babies-born-prematurely-alive-and-healthy/

 

http://www.theverge.com/2017/4/25/15421734/artificial-womb-fetus-biobag-uterus-lamb-sheep-birth-premie-preterm-infant

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-04-26/artificial-womb-could-one-day-keep-premature-babies-alive/8472960

 

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2017/04/preemies-floating-in-fluid-filled-bags/524181/

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/artificial-womb-save-premature-babies-lives-scientists-create-childrens-hospital-philadelphia-nature-a7701546.html

 

https://www.cnet.com/news/artificial-womb-births-premature-lambs-human-infants/

 

https://science.slashdot.org/story/17/04/25/2035243/an-artificial-womb-successfully-grew-baby-sheep—-and-humans-could-be-next

 

http://newatlas.com/artificial-womb-premature-babies/49207/

 

https://www.geneticliteracyproject.org/2015/06/12/artificial-wombs-the-coming-era-of-motherless-births/

 

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/04/artificial-womb-lambs-premature-babies-health-science/

 

https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/artificial-womb-free-births-just-got-a-lot-more-real-cambridge-embryo-reproduction

 

http://www.disclose.tv/news/The_Artificial_Womb_Is_Born_Welcome_To_The_WORLD_Of_The_MATRIX/114199

 

 

Read Full Post »

UPDATED Previously undiscerned value of hs-troponin

Curators: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP and Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

UPDATED on 5/14/2021

Downstream Cascades of Care Following High-Sensitivity Troponin Test Implementation

Original Investigations

Ishani GanguliJinghan CuiNitya Thakore, John OravJames L. JanuzziChristopher W. BaughThomas D. Sequist, and 

Jason H. Wasfy

J Am Coll Cardiol. May 03, 2021. Epublished DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2021.04.049

Editorial Comment: Downstream consequences of implementing high-sensitivity cardiac troponin: why indication and education matter

DOWNLOAD CITATION SHARE

Abstract

Background

Chest pain patients are often evaluated for acute myocardial infarction through troponin testing, which may prompt downstream services (cascades) of uncertain value.

Objective

Determine the association of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin (hs-cTn) assay implementation with cascade events.

Methods

Using electronic health record and billing data, we examined patient-visits to five emergency departments, April 1, 2017 – April 1, 2019. Difference-in-differences analysis compared patient-visits for chest pain (n=7,564) to patient-visits for other symptoms (n=100,415) (irrespective of troponin testing) before and after hs-cTn assay implementation. Outcomes included presence of any cascade event potentially associated with an initial hs-cTn test (primary), individual cascade events, length of stay, and spending on cardiac services.

Results

Following hs-cTn implementation, patients with chest pain had a 2.8% (95%CI 0.72, 4.9) net increase in experiencing any cascade event. They were more likely to have multiple troponin tests (10.5%, 95%CI 9.0, 12.0) and electrocardiograms (7.1 per 100 patient-visits, 95%CI 1.8, 12.4). However, they received net fewer computed tomography scans (-1.5 per 100 patient-visits, 95%CI -1.8, -1.1), stress tests (-5.9 per 100 patient-visits, 95%CI -6.5, -5.3), and cardiac catheterizations (-0.65 per 100 patient-visits, 95%CI -1.01, -0.30) and were less likely to receive cardiac medications, undergo cardiology evaluation (-3.5%, 95%CI -4.5, 2.6), or be hospitalized (-5.8%, 95%CI -7.7, -3.8). Chest pain patients had lower net mean length of stay (-0.24 days, 95%CI -0.32, -0.16) but no net change in spending.

Conclusions

Hs-cTn assay implementation was associated with more net upfront tests yet fewer net stress tests, catheterizations, cardiology evaluations, and hospital admissions in chest pain patients relative to patients with other symptoms.

Keywords

SOURCE

https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jacc.2021.04.049

 

UPDATED on 3/18/2020

Interference in Troponin Assays: What’s Going On?

— Heterophile antibodies, biotin, and more with Robert Christenson, PhD

https://www.medpagetoday.com/blogs/ap-cardiology/85409

 

 

UPDATED on 5/1/2019

High-Sensitivity Troponin I and Incident Coronary Events, Stroke, Heart Failure Hospitalization, and Mortality in the ARIC Study

Originally publishedhttps://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.118.038772Circulation. ;0

Background: We assessed whether plasma troponin I measured by a high-sensitivity assay (hs-TnI) is associated with incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality in a community-based sample without prior CVD.

Methods: ARIC study (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) participants aged 54 to 74 years without baseline CVD were included in this study (n=8121). Cox proportional hazards models were constructed to determine associations between hs-TnI and incident coronary heart disease (CHD; myocardial infarction and fatal CHD), ischemic stroke, atherosclerotic CVD (CHD and stroke), heart failure hospitalization, global CVD (atherosclerotic CVD and heart failure), and all-cause mortality. The comparative association of hs-TnI and high-sensitivity troponin T with incident CVD events was also evaluated. Risk prediction models were constructed to assess prediction improvement when hs-TnI was added to traditional risk factors used in the Pooled Cohort Equation.

Results: The median follow-up period was ≈15 years. Detectable hs-TnI levels were observed in 85% of the study population. In adjusted models, in comparison to low hs-TnI (lowest quintile, hs-TnI ≤1.3 ng/L), elevated hs-TnI (highest quintile, hs-TnI ≥3.8 ng/L) was associated with greater incident CHD (hazard ratio [HR], 2.20; 95% CI, 1.64-2.95), ischemic stroke (HR, 2.99; 95% CI, 2.01-4.46), atherosclerotic CVD (HR, 2.36; 95% CI, 1.86-3.00), heart failure hospitalization (HR, 4.20; 95% CI, 3.28-5.37), global CVD (HR, 3.01; 95% CI, 2.50-3.63), and all-cause mortality (HR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.56-2.14). hs-TnI was observed to have a stronger association with incident global CVD events in white than in black individuals and a stronger association with incident CHD in women than in men. hs-TnI and high-sensitivity troponin T were only modestly correlated (r=0.47) and were complementary in prediction of incident CVD events, with elevation of both troponins conferring the highest risk in comparison with elevation in either one alone. The addition of hsTnI to the Pooled Cohort Equation model improved risk prediction for atherosclerotic CVD, heart failure, and global CVD.

Conclusions: Elevated hs-TnI is strongly associated with increased global CVD incidence in the general population independent of traditional risk factors. hs-TnI and high-sensitivity troponin T provide complementary rather than redundant information.

Footnotes

* Corresponding Author; email: 
 
SOURCE

 

UPDATED on 8/14/2018

Siemens Launches High-sensitivity Troponin Test for Faster Diagnosis of Heart Attacks

The new troponin I assays can detect lower levels of troponin compared to conventional testing

July 25, 2018 — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared Siemens Healthineers high-sensitivity troponin I assays (TnIH) for the Atellica IM and ADVIA Centaur XP/XPT in vitro diagnostic analyzers from Siemens Healthineers to aid in the early diagnosis of myocardial infarctions.

The new tests can shorten the time doctors need to diagnose a life-threatening heart attacks. The time to first results is 10 minutes. When a patient experiencing chest pain enters the emergency department, a physician orders a blood test to determine whether troponin is present. As blood flow to the heart is blocked, the heart muscle begins to die in as few as 30 to 60 minutes and releases troponin into the bloodstream.

The company said its high-sensitivity performance of the two new Siemens TnIH assays offers the ability to detect lower levels of troponin at significantly improved precision at the 99th percentile, and detect smaller changes in a patient’s troponin level as repeat testing occurs. This design affords clinicians greater confidence in the results with precision that provides the ability to measure slight, yet critical, changes to begin treatment.[1,2]

Chest pain is the cause of more than 8 million visits annually nationwide to emergency departments, but only 5.5 percent of those visits lead to serious diagnoses such as heart attacks.[3] Armed with data to properly triage patients sooner or to exclude myocardial infarctions, the Siemens Healthineers TnIH assays can help support testing initiatives tied to improving patient experience.

“Our emergency department is overcrowded with patients. If we can do a more efficient job at triaging patients to receive the proper level of care and to discharge the patients who do not need to stay in the emergency department, this will have a tremendous economic advantage for our healthcare system,” said Alan Wu, M.D., chief of clinical chemistry and toxicology at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center.

Siemens is launching the product at the 70th AACC Annual Scientific Meeting and Clinical Lab Expo taking place July 31 to Aug. 2 in Chicago.

For more information: http://www.siemens-healthineers.com

Watch the related VIDEO: Use of High Sensitivity Troponin Testing in the Emergency Department — Interview with James Januzzi, M.D., Massachusetts General Hospital

SOURCE

https://www.dicardiology.com/product/siemens-launches-high-sensitivity-troponin-test-faster-diagnosis-heart-attacks?eid=333021707&bid=2192216

References:

1. Eggers K, Jernberg T, Ljung L, Lindahl B. High-Sensitivity Cardiac Troponin-Based Strategies for the Assessment of Chest Pain Patients—A Review of Validation and Clinical Implementation Studies. Clin Chem. 2018;64(7). DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2018.287342

2. Collinson P. High-sensitivity troponin measurements: challenges and opportunities for the laboratory and the clinician. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry. 2016;53(2) 191–195. DOI: 10.1177/0004563215619946

3. Hsia RY, Hale Z, Tabas JA. A National Study of the Prevalence of Life-Threatening Diagnoses in Patients With Chest Pain. JAMA Intern Med. 2016;176(7):1029–1032. DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.2498

 

 

Troponin Rise Predicts CHD, HF, Mortality in Healthy People: ARIC Analysis

Veronica Hackethal, MD

Increases in levels of cardiac troponin T by high-sensitivity assay (hs-cTnT) over time are associated with later risk of death, coronary heart disease (CHD), and especially heart failure in apparently healthy middle-aged people, according to a report published June 8, 2016 in JAMA Cardiology[1].

The novel findings, based on a cohort of >8000 participants from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study followed up to 16 years, are the first to show “an association between temporal hs-cTnT change and incident CHD events” in asymptomatic middle-aged adults,” write the authors, led by Dr John W McEvoy (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD).

Individuals with the greatest troponin increases over time had the highest risk for poor cardiac outcomes. The strongest association was for risk of heart failure, which reached almost 800% for those with the sharpest hs-cTnT rises.

Intriguingly, those in whom troponin levels fell at least 50% had a reduced mortality risk and may have had a slightly decreased risk of later HF or CHD.

“Serial testing over time with high-sensitivity cardiac troponins provided additional prognostic information over and above the usual clinical risk factors, [natriuretic peptide] levels, and a single troponin measurement. Two measurements appear better than one when it comes to informing risk for future coronary heart disease, heart failure, and death,” McEvoy told heartwire from Medscape.

He cautioned, though, that the conclusion is based on observational data and would need to be confirmed in clinical trials. Moreover, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays are widely used in Europe but are not approved in the US.

An important next step after this study, according to an accompanying editorial from Dr James Januzzi (Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA), would be to evaluate whether the combination of hs-troponin and natriuretic peptides improves predictive value in this population[2].

“To the extent prevention is ultimately the holy grail for defeating the global pandemic of CHD, stroke, and HF, the main reason to do a biomarker study such as this would be to set the stage for a biomarker-guided strategy to improve the medical care for those patients at highest risk, as has been recently done with [natriuretic peptides],” he wrote.

The ARIC prospective cohort study entered and followed 8838 participants (mean age 56, 59% female, 21.4% black) in North Carolina, Mississippi, Minneapolis, and Maryland from January 1990 to December 2011. At baseline, participants had no clinical signs of CHD or heart failure.

Levels of hs-cTnT, obtained 6 years apart, were categorized as undetectable (<0.005 ng/mL), detectable (≥0.005 ng/mL to <0.014 ng/mL), and elevated (>0.014 ng/mL).

Troponin increases from <0.005 ng/mL to 0.005 ng/mL or higher independently predicted development of CHD (HR 1.41; 95% CI 1.16–1.63), HF (HR 1.96; 95% CI 1.62–2.37), and death (HR 1.50; 95% CI 1.31–1.72), compared with undetectable levels at both measurements.

Hazard ratios were adjusted for age, sex, race, body-mass index, C-reactive protein, smoking status, alcohol-intake history, systolic blood pressure, current antihypertensive therapy, diabetes, serum lipid and cholesterol levels, lipid-modifying therapy, estimated glomerular filtration rate, and left ventricular hypertrophy.

Subjects with >50% increase in hs-cTnT had a significantly increased risk of CHD (HR 1.28; 95% CI 1.09–1.52), HF (HR 1.60; 95% CI 1.35–1.91), and death (HR 1.39; 95% CI 1.22–1.59).

 

Risks for those end points fell somewhat for those with a >50% decrease in hs-cTnT (CHD: HR 0.47; 95% CI 0.22–1.03; HF: HR 0.49 95% CI 0.23–1.01; death: HR 0.57 95% CI 0.33–0.99).

Among participants with an adjudicated HF hospitalization, the group writes, associations of hs-cTnT changes with outcomes were of similar magnitude for those with HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).

Few biomarkers have been linked to increased risk for HFpEF, and few effective therapies exist for it. That may be due to problems identifying and enrolling patients with HFpEF in clinical trials, Dr McEvoy pointed out.

 

“We think the increased troponin over time reflects progressive myocardial injury or progressive myocardial damage,” Dr McEvoy said. “This is a window into future risk, particularly with respect to heart failure but other outcomes as well. It may suggest high-sensitivity troponins as a marker of myocardial health and help guide interventions targeting the myocardium.”

Moreover, he said, “We think that high-sensitivity troponin may also be a useful biomarker along with [natriuretic peptides] for emerging trials of HFpEF therapy.”

But whether hs-troponin has the potential for use as a screening tool is a question for future studies, according to McEvoy.

 

In his editorial, Januzzi pointed out several implications of the study, including the possibility for lowering cardiac risk in those with measurable hs-troponin, and that HF may be the most obvious outcome to target. Also, optimizing treatment and using cardioprotective therapies may reduce risk linked to increases in hs-troponin. Finally, long-term, large clinical trials on this issue will require a multidisciplinary team effort from various sectors.

“What is needed now are efforts toward developing strategies to upwardly bend the survival curves of those with a biomarker signature of risk, leveraging the knowledge gained from studies such as the report by McEvoy et al to improve public health,” he concluded.

 

Read Full Post »

Toxicities Associated with Immuno-oncology Treatment

Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

Curator: LPBI

 

ICLIO: Be Aware of Novel Toxicities With New Ca Drugs  

Advent of new immunotherapies warrants education for non-oncologists

by Eric T. Rosenthal
Special Correspondent, MedPage Today
http://www.medpagetoday.com/HematologyOncology/Chemotherapy/58582

CHICAGO — A new class of cancer immunotherapies, led by pembrolizumab (Keytruda), has taken the oncology world by storm. But with this novel type of treatment comes a new challenge.

The Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) wants to ensure that non-oncologist physicians know how to take care of their patients receiving these agents since doctors in other specialties may not be aware of the side effects related to the immunotherapies.

The initiative is one of the steps taken by the association’s Institute of Clinical Immuno-Oncology’s (ICLIO) in making immunotherapy available in the community.

ICLIO was launched 1 year ago to help prepare community cancer teams and centers to deal with the clinical, coverage, and reimbursement issues related to immunotherapy.

During the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting here MedPage Todayspoke with ACCC President Jennie R. Crews, MD, and ICLIO Chair Lee S. Schwartzberg, MD, about the institute’s growth and future plans.

Schwartzberg, chief of the division of hematology and oncology at the University of Tennessee, as well as executive director of the West Cancer Center in Memphis, said that the field of immunotherapy “is moving so fast that we can’t have enough education.”

“Needs change over time and last year many cancer practices became familiar with immuno-oncology and now we have to go deeper and broader.”

The broadening, he explained, involves educating other medical subspecialists about immune-related toxicities from the new agents.

“The problem is that we see related toxicities that are not managed well, and we’re having trouble with this.”

He cited as two primary examples toxic side effects such as colitis and pneumonitis and the necessity of educating gastroenterologists and pulmonologists about their relationship to immunotherapy.

Many times these subspecialists, as well as dermatologists, endocrinologists, emergency physicians, and internists see autoimmune-related toxicities and first think they are from chemotherapy or infection, according to Schwartzberg.

“But they are going to be going down a very bad path with these patients if they think this way,” noting that a colleague from a leading cancer center had recently mentioned that the institution’s emergency room staff didn’t always understand about immunotherapy reactions.

He said that, although ICLIO does not have direct access to reaching many other subspecialists, it was beginning to develop educational materials that oncologists could share with other medical colleagues, as well as to work with some of the subspecialty societies.

“Education, however, has to be across the board, and has to include patients as well,” he said, adding that many cancer immunotherapy patients were being provided with cards that explained their immunotherapy and could be handed to nurses and physicians at the outset of their medical intervention, saving time and the risk of undergoing the wrong treatment.

In a separate interview, Crews, medical director for Cancer Services PeaceHealth at St. Joseph Medical Center in Bellingham, Wash., said that ACCC members include both academic centers and community practices including both hospital-based and private. (An ACCC public relations representative monitored the interview.)

“We are not focused on what the science is, but rather on how do we take this technology out to the community to bring cancer to where patients are,” she said, adding that she and others are very passionate in the belief that cancer care should be delivered wherever cancer patients live.

She said since ICLIO started in June 2015, much of its infrastructure and programs have been established, including a webinar series, eNewsletters, eLearning Modules, tumor subcommittee working groups, an on-site preceptorship program, an ICLIO stakeholder summit, and an upcoming second national conference this fall in Philadelphia.

That conference will be preceded by a stakeholder summit bringing together providers, patient advocates, payers, pharmaceutical producers, and others, which the ACCC hopes will produce a white paper.

The last year has seen the growth of the initiative’s Scholars Program to about 50 oncologists who have received training through ICLIO’s learning modules.

These scholars will in turn eventually be able to serve as mentors to the 2,000 cancer programs with some 20,000 individual members that make up ACCC’s membership.

Crews said that to date about 700 cancer programs involving some 1,900 individuals have participated in the webinars, and about 100 people attended ICLIO’s first annual conference last October.

She said that in addition to the charitable contribution initially made by Bristol-Myers Squibb last year to help launch ICLIO, Merck has also provided an educational grant, but she would not disclose the amount of the funding.

Read Full Post »

Another Promise for Immune Oncology

Curator: Larry H. Berstein, MD, FCAP

 

 

Preclinical Data Presented at ASCO 2016 Annual Meeting Demonstrate that Single-Agent NKTR-214 Produces a Large Increase in Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes to Provide Durable Anti-Tumor Activity

http://ir.nektar.com/releasedetail.cfm

SAN FRANCISCO, June 6, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — Nektar Therapeutics (NASDAQ: NKTR) today announced new preclinical data for NKTR-214, an immuno-stimulatory CD-122 biased cytokine currently being evaluated in cancer patients with solid tumors in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial being conducted at MD Anderson Cancer Center and Yale Cancer Center. The new preclinical data presented demonstrate that treatment with single-agent NKTR-214 mobilizes tumor-killing T cells into colon cancer tumors.  In addition, mouse pharmacodynamics data demonstrated that a single dose of NKTR-214 can increase and sustain STAT5 phosphorylation (a marker of IL-2 pathway activation) through one week post-dose. These data were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting in Chicago, IL from June 3-7, 2016.

“These latest data build upon our growing body of preclinical evidence demonstrating the unique mechanism of NKTR-214,” added Jonathan Zalevsky, PhD, Vice President, Biology and Preclinical Development at Nektar Therapeutics. “The studies presented at ASCO show that NKTR-214 promotes tumor-killing immune cell accumulation directly in the tumor, providing a mechanistic basis for its significant anti-tumor activity in multiple preclinical tumor models.  The ability to grow TILs1 in vivo and replenish the immune system is exceptionally important. We’ve now learned that many human tumors lack sufficient TIL populations and the addition of the NKTR-214 TIL-enhancing MOA could improve the success of many checkpoint inhibitors and other agents, and allow more patients to benefit from immuno-therapy.”

In studies previously published for NKTR-214, when mice bearing established breast cancer tumors are treated with NKTR-214 and anti-CTLA4 (a checkpoint inhibitor therapy known as ipilimumab for human treatment), a large proportion of mice become tumor-free. Anti-tumor immune memory was demonstrated when tumor-free mice were re-challenged by implant with a new breast cancer tumor and then found to clear the new tumor, without further therapy.  The new data presented at ASCO demonstrate that upon re-challenge, there is a rapid expansion of newly proliferative CD8 T cells and particularly CD8 effector memory T cells. Both cell populations were readily detectable in multiple tissues (blood, spleen, and lymph nodes) and likely contribute to the anti-tumor effect observed in these animals. Adoptive transfer studies confirmed the immune-memory effect as transplant of splenocytes from tumor-free mice into naïve recipients provided the ability to resist tumor growth.

“NKTR-214 provides a highly unique immune activation profile that allows it to access the IL-2 pathway without pushing the immune system into pathological overdrive,” said Dr. Steve Doberstein, Senior Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer. “NKTR-214’s unique immune-stimulatory profile and antibody-like dosing schedule positions it as a potentially important medicine within the immuno-oncology landscape.”

The data presentation at ASCO entitled, “Immune memory in nonclinical models after treatment with NKTR-214, an engineered cytokine biased towards expansion of CD8+ T cells in tumor,” can be accessed at http://www.nektar.com/2016_NKTR-214_ASCO_poster.pdf

NKTR-214 is a CD122-biased agonist designed to stimulate the patient’s own immune system to kill tumor cells by preferentially activating production of specific immune cells which promote tumor killing, including CD8-positive T cells and Natural Killer (NK) cells, within the tumor micro-environment.  CD122, which is also known as the Interleukin-2 receptor beta subunit, is a key signaling receptor that is known to increase proliferation of these types of T cells.2

In preclinical studies, NKTR-214 demonstrated a highly favorable mean ratio of 450:1 within the tumor micro-environment of CD8-positive effector T cells relative to regulatory T cells.3 Furthermore, the pro-drug design of NKTR-214 enables an antibody-like dosing regimen for an immuno-stimulatory cytokine.4

About the NKTR-214 Phase 1/2 Clinical Study
A Phase 1/2 clinical study is underway to evaluate NKTR-214 in patients with advanced solid tumors, including melanoma, renal cell carcinoma and non-small cell lung cancer. The first stage of this study, which is expected to be complete in the second half of 2016, is evaluating escalating doses of single-agent NKTR-214 treatment in approximately 20 patients with solid tumors. The primary objective of the first stage of the study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of NKTR-214 and to identify a recommended Phase 2 dose. In addition, the study will also assess the immunologic effect of NKTR-214 on TILs and other immune cells in both blood and tumor tissue, and it will also include TCR repertoire profiling. Dose expansion cohorts are planned to evaluate NKTR-214 in specific tumor types, including melanoma, renal cell carcinoma and non-small cell lung cancer.

The NKTR-214 clinical study is being conducted initially at two primary investigator sites: MD Anderson Cancer Center under Drs. Patrick Hwu and Adi Diab; and Yale Cancer Center, under Drs. Mario Sznol and Michael Hurwitz.  Patients and physicians interested in the ongoing NKTR-214 study can visit the “Clinical Trials” section of www.mdanderson.org using identifier 2015-0573 or visit https://medicine.yale.edu/cancer/research/trials/active/858.trial.

About Nektar
Nektar Therapeutics has a robust R&D pipeline and portfolio of approved partnered medicines in oncology, pain, immunology and other therapeutic areas. In the area of oncology, Nektar is developing NKTR-214, an immuno-stimulatory CD122-biased agonist, that is in Phase 1/2 clinical development for patients with solid tumors. ONZEALD™ (etirinotecan pegol), a long-acting topoisomerase I inhibitor, is being developed for patients with advanced breast cancer and brain metastases and is partnered with Daiichi Sankyo in Europe.  In the area of pain, Nektar has an exclusive worldwide license agreement with AstraZeneca for MOVANTIK™ (naloxegol), the first FDA-approved once-daily oral peripherally-acting mu-opioid receptor antagonist (PAMORA) medication for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation (OIC), in adult patients with chronic, non-cancer pain. The product is also approved in the European Union as MOVENTIG® (naloxegol) and is indicated for adult patients with OIC who have had an inadequate response to laxatives. The AstraZeneca agreement also includes NKTR-119, an earlier stage development program that is a co-formulation of MOVANTIK and an opioid. NKTR-181, a wholly owned mu-opioid analgesic molecule for chronic pain conditions, is in Phase 3 development. In hemophilia, Nektar has a collaboration agreement with Baxalta for ADYNOVATE™ [Antihemophilic Factor (Recombinant)], a longer-acting PEGylated Factor VIII therapeutic approved in the U.S. and Japan for patients over 12 with hemophilia A. In anti-infectives, the company has two collaborations with Bayer Healthcare, Cipro Inhale in Phase 3 for non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis and Amikacin Inhale in Phase 3 for patients with Gram-negative pneumonia.

Immune memory in nonclinical models after treatment with NKTR-214, an engineered cytokine biased towards expansion of CD8+ T cells in tumor

Deborah H. Charych, Vidula Dixit, Peiwen Kuo, Werner Rubas, Janet Cetz, Rhoneil Pena, John L. Langowski, Ute Hoch, Murali Addepalli, Stephen K. Doberstein, Jonathan Zalevsky | Nektar Therapeutics, San Francisco, CA

INTRODUCTION

• Recombinant human IL-2 (aldesleukin) is an effective immunotherapy for metastatic melanoma and renal cell carcinoma with durable responses in ~ 10% of patients, but side effects limit its use

• IL-2 has pleiotropic immune modulatory effects[1] which may limit its anti-tumor activity

• Binding to the heterodimeric receptor IL-2Rβγ leads to expansion of tumor-killing CD8+ memory effector T cells and NK cells

• Binding to the heterotrimeric IL-2Rαβγ leads to expansion of suppressive Treg which antagonizes anti-tumor immunity

• NKTR-214 delivers a controlled, sustained and biased signal through the IL-2 receptor pathway.

• The prodrug design of NKTR-214 comprises recombinant human IL-2 chemically conjugated with multiple releasable chains of polyethylene glycol (PEG)

• Slow release of PEG chains over time generates active PEG-conjugated IL-2 metabolites of increasing bioactivity, improving pharmacokinetics and tolerability compared to aldesleukin

• Active NKTR-214 metabolites bias IL-2R activation towards CD8 T cells over Treg[2]

 

NKTR-214 was engineered to release PEG at physiological pH with predictable kinetics.

The kinetics of PEG release was evaluated in vitro by quantifying free PEG over time using HPLC.

The release of PEG from IL-2 followed predictable kinetics. Symbols = measured data; Line = curve fit based on first order kinetic model. R2 =0.997

 

In mice, a single dose of NKTR-214 gradually builds and sustains pSTAT5 levels through seven days post-dose. In contrast, IL-2 produces a rapid burst of pSTAT5 that declines four hours post-dose

C57BL/6 mice were treated with either one dose of NKTR-214 (blue) or aldesleukin (red); blood samples were collected at various time points post-dose. pSTAT5 in peripheral blood CD3+ T cells was assessed using flow cytometry. Top graph is an inset showing the 0-4 hour time period. Bottom graph shows the full 10 day time course of the experiment. Histograms on right depict pSTAT5 MFI for IL-2 (red) and NKTR-214 (blue)

 

Mobilization of lymphocytes from the periphery into the tumor is an inherent property of NKTR-214

A. C57BL/6 mice bearing established subcutaneous B16F10 melanoma tumors were dosed with either NKTR-214 (2 mg/kg, i.v., q9d x2) or aldesleukin (3 mg/kg, i.p. bid x5, two cycles)

B. Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes were analyzed by flow cytometry from treated tumors (*, p<0.05 relative to vehicle; ‡, p<0.05 relative to aldesleukin)

C. Tumor growth inhibition from NKTR-214 was compromised when NKTR-214 was co-administered with Fingolimod, an agent that blocks lymphocyte trafficking.[3], (C57BL/6 mice, B16F10 subcutaneous mouse melanoma). Fingolimod was dosed qd p.o. 5 ug/animal. Lymphocyte count in blood was significantly reduced as expected, for study duration. Tumor growth inhibition (TGI) shown at study endpoint. (One-way ANOVA, Dunnets multiple comparison test ***=p<0.001, ****=p<0.0001 vs. vehicle; #=p<0.05 vs. NKTR-214)

D. Balb/c mice bearing established subcutaneous CT26 colon tumors were dosed with NKTR-214, 0.8 mg/kg i.v. q9dx3 or checkpoint inhibitors, 200 ug/mouse 2x/week. (*, p<0.05 relative to vehicle) E. T cell infiltration into mouse CT26 colon tumors was determined by TIL DNA fraction 7 days post-dose, Adaptive Biotechnologies, n=4 per group

 

The combination of NKTR-214 and anti-CTLA4 delivers durable anti-tumor activity and vigorous immune memory recall Durable treatment-induced immune memory demonstrated by:

A. Rejection of new tumors implanted into tumor-free mice without further therapy,

Durable anti-tumor immune memory demonstrated by rechallenging treated tumor-free mice with new tumors. New tumors can be eliminated without further treatment.

Balb/c mice initially were implanted with EMT6 murine breast tumors and treated with NKTR-214 0.8mg/kg q9dx3 and anti-CTLA4 200ug/mouse 2x/week. Several weeks later, tumor-free mice were rechallenged with tumor cells EMT6 (blue), CT26 (red) or vehicle (black). Tumor outgrowth occurred when non-related CT26 tumors were implanted. In contrast, tumors were rejected by up to 100% of mice when the same EMT6 tumors were implanted (2×106 EMT6 or CT26 cells)

B. Production of proliferating CD8 effector memory T cells in 3 tissues after tumor rechallenge and

Durable anti-tumor immune memory demonstrated by vigorous proliferative (Ki67+) CD8 T cell responses. The increased activity of these cells is greatest for mice previously treated with NKTR-214 and anti-CTLA4, rechallenged with the same tumor type (blue) compared to a different tumor (red) or mice who were never treated (brown, gray). Treated mice received therapy ~6 months prior. Top row shows total CD8+ cells, bottom row shows effector memory CD8+ in 3 tissues. The role of CD8 and NK cells in mediating the anti-tumor response was previously shown using depletion antibodies.[2]

Mice that became tumor-free from NKTR-214+anti-CTLA4 therapy and treatment naïve controls were rechallenged ~6 months later with either EMT6, CT26 or Sham buffer. No further treatment was given. Immune cells in spleen, lymph and blood were enumerated by flow cytometry, n=4/group. Graphs indicate proliferating Ki67+ total CD8 T cells (top) and effector memory CD8+ CD44hi CD67L-lo (bottom).

C. Transference of immune memory from tumor-free mice to recipient mice.

Durable anti-tumor immune memory demonstrated by adoptive spleen transfer from tumor-free mice to recipient mice. The recipients resist tumor growth without further treatment.

Mouse EMT6 breast tumors were implanted in recipient mice 1 day after receiving spleens from tumor-free mice or naïve mice; (****=p<0.0001 vs. normal control , two way ANOVA Tukey’s multiple comparison test, ns = non-significant)

 

CONCLUSIONS

• NKTR-214 mechanism of action delivers a controlled, sustained and biased signal to the IL-2 pathway, potentially mitigating systemic toxicities observed from bolus activation by IL-2 (aldesleukin)

• NKTR-214 provides marked efficacy in multiple tumor models, alone or in combination, using lower doses of reduced administration frequency

• Mobilization of T cells from the periphery into the tumor is an inherent property of NKTR-214

• NKTR-214 mechanism enables durable complete anti-tumor response with immune memory recall when combined with anti-CTLA4

• Treatment provides tumor-free mice that consistently eliminate new tumors even in the absence of further therapy • Mice becoming tumor-free from prior treatment reject new tumors by mounting a vigorous CD8+ effector memory response up to 6 months post-therapy

• Adoptive spleen transfer from tumor-free mice confers an anti-tumor response in recipient mice in the absence of further therapy

• NKTR-214 is being evaluated in an ongoing outpatient Phase 1/2 clinical trial for the treatment of solid tumors

 

REFERENCES

[1] Boyman et al, Nature Reviews, 2012

[2] Charych et al, Clinical Cancer Research, 2016

[3] Spranger et al, J. Immunoth.. Cancer, 2014

 

SOURCE

Click to access 2016_NKTR-214_ASCO_poster.pdf

 

 

Read Full Post »

Familial transthyretin amyloid polyneuropathy

Curator: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

 

UPDATED on 5/30/2026

Dr. Ahmad Masri and Dr. C Michael Gibson discuss outpatient worsening heart failure in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy in the Attribute-CM trial, May 29, 2026

https://clinicaltrialresults.org/dr-ahmad-masri-and-dr-c-michael-gibson-discuss-outpatient-worsening-heart-failure-in-transthyretin-amyloid-cardiomyopathy-in-the-attribute-cm-trial/

 

UPDATED on 6/3/2020

Treatment of Cardiac Transthyretin Amyloidosis

Authors:
Emdin M, Aimo A, Rapezzi C, et al.
Citation:
Treatment of Cardiac Transthyretin Amyloidosis: An Update. Eur Heart J 2019;40:3699-3706.

The following are key points to remember from this update on the treatment of cardiac transthyretin amyloidosis:

  1. Transthyretin (TTR) is a highly conserved protein involved in transportation of thyroxine (T4) and retinol-binding protein. TTR is synthesized mostly by the liver and is rich in beta strands with an intrinsic propensity to aggregate into insoluble amyloid fibers, which deposit within tissue leading to the development of TTR-related amyloidosis (ATTR). ATTR can follow the deposition of either variant TTR (ATTRv, previously known as mutant ATTR) or wild type TTR (ATTRwt).
  2. Cardiac ATTR has a favorable survival rate compared to light chain (AL) amyloidosis, with a median survival of 75 versus 11 months. However, ATTR cardiomyopathy is a progressive disorder but newer therapeutic options include tafamidis (positive phase 3 clinical trial), and possibly patisiran and inotersen.

Inhibition of the Synthesis of Mutated Transthyretin

  1. Liver transplantation removes the source of mutated TTR molecules and prolongs survival, with a 20-year survival of 55.3%. However, tissue accumulation of TTR can continue after liver transplantation because TTR amyloid fibers promote subsequent deposition of ATTRwt. Combined liver–heart transplantation is feasible in younger patients with ATTRv cardiomyopathy and a small series suggests better prognosis than cardiac transplantation.
  2. Inhibition of TTR gene expression: Patisiran is a small interfering RNA blocking the expression of both variant and wt TTR. On the basis of the APOLLO trial, it was approved for therapy of adults with ATTRv-related polyneuropathy both in the United States and European Union. In this trial, patisiran promoted favorable myocardial remodeling based on echocardiographic and N-terminal B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-BNP) changes (this effect was not demonstrated for inotersen) and is still under investigation for tafamidis.
  3. Antisense oligonucleotides inotersen inhibits the production of both variant and wt TTR. Based on the findings of the NEURO-TTR trial, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved this agent for patients with ATTRv-related polyneuropathy. In the NEURO-TTR trial, cardiomyopathy was present in 63%, but the study was not powered to measure effects of inotersen on heart disease. Inotersen can cause thrombocytopenia and must be used cautiously with bleeding risk.

Tetramer Stabilization

  1. Selective stabilizers include tafamidis and AG10. Tafamidis is a benzoxazole and a small molecule that inhibits the dissociation of TTR tetramers by binding the T4-binding sites. The phase ATTR-ACT study showed that when comparing the pooled tafamidis arms (80 and 20 mg) with the placebo arm, tafamidis was associated with lower all-cause mortality than placebo (78 of 264 [29.5%] vs. 76 of 177 [42.9%]; hazard ratio, 0.70; 95% confidence interval, 0.51-0.96) and a lower rate of cardiovascular hospitalizations. Based on the results of the ATTR-ACT trial, it has received Breakthrough Therapy designation from the FDA for treatment of ATTR cardiomyopathy.
  2. Nonselective agents: Diflunisal, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, is reported to stabilize TTR tetramers. More studies are needed to confirm its clinical efficacy.

Inhibition of Oligomer Aggregation and Oligomer Disruption

  1. Epigallocatechin gallate is the most abundant catechin in green tea. One single-center open-label 12-month study did not show survival benefits or any change in echocardiographic parameters or NT-BNP compared to baseline.

Degradation and Reabsorption of Amyloid Fibers

  1. Doxycycline-taurosodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) has been evaluated in two small studies and the results appear to be modest. More data are needed to confirm its efficacy.
  2. Antibodies targeting serum amyloid P protein or amyloid fibrils: Patient enrollment for miridesap followed by anti-SAP antibodies was suspended, and this approach is not being evaluated currently. However, a monoclonal antibody designed to specifically target TTR amyloid deposits (PRX004) has entered clinical evaluation, with an ongoing phase 1 study on ATTRv.

Supportive Treatment of Cardiac Involvement

  1. Drug therapies: Although angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors/angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) and beta-blockers may have been poorly tolerated in the ATTR-ACT trial, 30% of the patients were on ACE inhibitors/ARBs. There are no data with digoxin in TTR amyloid, and non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers are contraindicated due to negative inotropy.
  2. Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs): In one study, which included 53 patients with amyloid, ICD shocks occurred exclusively in the AL amyloid group and none in the TTR amyloid patients. Higher defibrillation thresholds and complication rates are of concern.
  3. Cardiac pacing: In a large series of ATTRv-related polyneuropathy (n = 262), a pacemaker was implanted in 110 patients with His ventricular interval >700 ms. The authors recommend that any conduction disturbance on 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) warrants further investigation with Holter monitoring to determine candidacy for a pacemaker.
  4. Left ventricular assist device (LVAD): Although an LVAD is technically feasible, it is associated with high short-term mortality and worse outcomes than in dilated cardiomyopathy.
  5. Cardiac transplantation: This is a valuable option for patients with end-stage heart failure when significant extracardiac disease is excluded. In one study with 10 patients, only episodes of amyloid recurrence occurred.

This is an outstanding overview of this topic and recommended reading for anyone who cares for patients with cardiac transthyretin amyloid.

 

First-Ever Evidence that Patisiran Reduces Pathogenic, Misfolded TTR Monomers and Oligomers in FAP Patients

We reported data from our ongoing Phase 2 open-label extension (OLE) study of patisiran, an investigational RNAi therapeutic targeting transthyretin (TTR) for the treatment of TTR-mediated amyloidosis (ATTR amyloidosis) patients with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP). Alnylam scientists and collaborators from The Scripps Research Institute and Misfolding Diagnostics, Inc. were able to measure the effects of patisiran on pathogenic, misfolded TTR monomers and oligomers in FAP patients. Results showed a rapid and sustained reduction in serum non-native conformations of TTR (NNTTR) of approximately 90%. Since NNTTR is pathogenic in ATTR amyloidosis and the level of NNTTR reduction correlated with total TTR knockdown, these results provide direct mechanistic evidence supporting the therapeutic hypothesis that TTR knockdown has the potential to result in clinical benefit. Furthermore, complete 12-month data from all 27 patients that enrolled in the patisiran Phase 2 OLE study showed sustained mean maximum reductions in total serum TTR of 91% for over 18 months and a mean 3.1-point decrease in mNIS+7 at 12 months, which compares favorably to an estimated increase in mNIS+7 of 13 to 18 points at 12 months based upon analysis of historical data sets in untreated FAP patients with similar baseline characteristics. Importantly, patisiran administration continues to be generally well tolerated out to 21 months of treatment.

Read our press release

View the non-native TTR poster (480 KB PDF)

View the complete 12-month patisiran Phase 2 OLE data presentation (620 KB PDF)

We are encouraged by these new data that provide continued support for our hypothesis that patisiran has the potential to halt neuropathy progression in patients with FAP. If these results are replicated in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, we believe that patisiran could emerge as an important treatment option for patients suffering from this debilitating, progressive and life-threatening disease.

 

Hereditary ATTR Amyloidosis with Polyneuropathy (hATTR-PN)

ATTR amyloidosis is a progressive, life-threatening disease caused by misfolded transthyretin (TTR) proteins that accumulate as amyloid fibrils in multiple organs, but primarily in the peripheral nerves and heart. ATTR amyloidosis can lead to significant morbidity, disability, and mortality. The TTR protein is produced primarily in the liver and is normally a carrier for retinol binding protein – one of the vehicles used to transport vitamin A around the body.  Mutations in the TTR gene cause misfolding of the protein and the formation of amyloid fibrils that typically contain both mutant and wild-type TTR that deposit in tissues such as the peripheral nerves and heart, resulting in intractable peripheral sensory neuropathy, autonomic neuropathy, and/or cardiomyopathy.

Click to Enlarge

 

ATTR represents a major unmet medical need with significant morbidity and mortality. There are over 100 reported TTR mutations; the particular TTR mutation and the site of amyloid deposition determine the clinical manifestations of the disease whether it is predominantly symptoms of neuropathy or cardiomyopathy.

Specifically, hereditary ATTR amyloidosis with polyneuropathy (hATTR-PN), also known as familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP), is an inherited, progressive disease leading to death within 5 to 15 years. It is due to a mutation in the transthyretin (TTR) gene, which causes misfolded TTR proteins to accumulate as amyloid fibrils predominantly in peripheral nerves and other organs. hATTR-PN can cause sensory, motor, and autonomic dysfunction, resulting in significant disability and death.

It is estimated that hATTR-PN, also known as FAP, affects approximately 10,000 people worldwide.  Patients have a life expectancy of 5 to 15 years from symptom onset, and the only treatment options for early stage disease are liver transplantation and TTR stabilizers such as tafamidis (approved in Europe) and diflunisal.  Unfortunately liver transplantation has limitations, including limited organ availability as well as substantial morbidity and mortality. Furthermore, transplantation eliminates the production of mutant TTR but does not affect wild-type TTR, which can further deposit after transplantation, leading to cardiomyopathy and worsening of neuropathy. There is a significant need for novel therapeutics to treat patients who have inherited mutations in the TTR gene.

Our ATTR program is the lead effort in our Genetic Medicine Strategic Therapeutic Area (STAr) product development and commercialization strategy, which is focused on advancing innovative RNAi therapeutics toward genetically defined targets for the treatment of rare diseases with high unmet medical need.  We are developing patisiran (ALN-TTR02), an intravenously administered RNAi therapeutic, to treat the hATTR-PN form of the disease.

Patisiran for the Treatment hATTR-PN

APOLLO Phase 3 Trial

In 2012, Alnylam entered into an exclusive alliance with Genzyme, a Sanofi company, to develop and commercialize RNAi therapeutics, including patisiran and revusiran, for the treatment of ATTR amyloidosis in Japan and the broader Asian-Pacific region. In early 2014, this relationship was extended as a significantly broader alliance to advance RNAi therapeutics as genetic medicines. Under this new agreement, Alnylam will lead development and commercialization of patisiran in North America and Europe while Genzyme will develop and commercialize the product in the rest of world.

 

Hereditary ATTR Amyloidosis with Cardiomyopathy (hATTR-CM)

ATTR amyloidosis is a progressive, life-threatening disease caused by misfolded transthyretin (TTR) proteins that accumulate as amyloid fibrils in multiple organs, but primarily in the peripheral nerves and heart. ATTR amyloidosis can lead to significant morbidity, disability, and mortality. The TTR protein is produced primarily in the liver and is normally a carrier for retinol binding protein – one of the vehicles used to transport vitamin A around the body.  Mutations in the TTR gene cause misfolding of the protein and the formation of amyloid fibrils that typically contain both mutant and wild-type TTR that deposit in tissues such as the peripheral nerves and heart, resulting in intractable peripheral sensory neuropathy, autonomic neuropathy, and/or cardiomyopathy.

Click to Enlarge                            http://www.alnylam.com/web/assets/tetramer.jpg

ATTR represents a major unmet medical need with significant morbidity and mortality. There are over 100 reported TTR mutations; the particular TTR mutation and the site of amyloid deposition determine the clinical manifestations of the disease, whether it is predominantly symptoms of neuropathy or cardiomyopathy.

Specifically, hereditary ATTR amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy (hATTR-CM), also known as familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy (FAC), is an inherited, progressive disease leading to death within 2 to 5 years. It is due to a mutation in the transthyretin (TTR) gene, which causes misfolded TTR proteins to accumulate as amyloid fibrils primarily in the heart. Hereditary ATTR amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy can result in heart failure and death.

While the exact numbers are not known, it is estimated hATTR-CM, also known as FAC affects at least 40,000 people worldwide.  hATTR-CM is fatal within 2 to 5 years of diagnosis and treatment is currently limited to supportive care.  Wild-type ATTR amyloidosis (wtATTR amyloidosis), also known as senile systemic amyloidosis, is a nonhereditary, progressive disease leading to death within 2 to 5 years. It is caused by misfolded transthyretin (TTR) proteins that accumulate as amyloid fibrils in the heart. Wild-type ATTR amyloidosis can cause cardiomyopathy and result in heart failure and death. There are no approved therapies for the treatment of hATTR-CM or SSA; hence there is a significant unmet need for novel therapeutics to treat these patients.

Our ATTR program is the lead effort in our Genetic Medicine Strategic Therapeutic Area (STAr) product development and commercialization strategy, which is focused on advancing innovative RNAi therapeutics toward genetically defined targets for the treatment of rare diseases with high unmet medical need.  We are developing revusiran (ALN-TTRsc), a subcutaneously administered RNAi therapeutic for the treatment of hATTR-CM.

Revusiran for the Treatment of hATTR-CM

ENDEAVOUR Phase 3 Trial

In 2012, Alnylam entered into an exclusive alliance with Genzyme, a Sanofi company, to develop and commercialize RNAi therapeutics, including patisiran and revusiran, for the treatment of ATTR amyloidosis in Japan and the broader Asian-Pacific region. In early 2014, this relationship was extended as a broader alliance to advance RNAi therapeutics as genetic medicines. Under this new agreement, Alnylam and Genzyme have agreed to co-develop and co-commercialize revusiran in North America and Europe, with Genzyme developing and commercializing the product in the rest of world. This broadened relationship on revusiran is aimed at expanding and accelerating the product’s global value.

Pre-Clinical Data and Advancement of ALN-TTRsc02 for Transthyretin-Mediated Amyloidosis

We presented pre-clinical data with ALN-TTRsc02, an investigational RNAi therapeutic targeting transthyretin (TTR) for the treatment of TTR-mediated amyloidosis (ATTR amyloidosis).  In pre-clinical studies, including those in non-human primates (NHPs), ALN-TTRsc02 achieved potent and highly durable knockdown of serum TTR of up to 99% with multi-month durability achieved after just a single dose, supportive of a potentially once quarterly dose regimen. Results from studies comparing TTR knockdown activity of ALN-TTRsc02 to that of revusiran showed that ALN-TTRsc02 has a markedly superior TTR knockdown profile.  Further, in initial rat toxicology studies, ALN-TTRsc02 was found to be generally well tolerated with no significant adverse events at doses as high as 100 mg/kg.

Read our press release

View the presentation

http://www.alnylam.com/product-pipeline/hereditary-attr-amyloidosis-with-cardiomyopathy/

 

Emerging Therapies for Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis Could Herald a New Era for the Treatment of HFPEF

Oct 14, 2015   |  Adam Castano, MDDavid Narotsky, MDMathew S. Maurer, MD, FACC

http://www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiology/articles/2015/10/13/08/35/emerging-therapies-for-transthyretin-cardiac-amyloidosis#sthash.9xzc0rIe.dpuf

Heart failure with a preserved ejection fraction (HFPEF) is a clinical syndrome that has no pharmacologic therapies approved for this use to date. In light of failed medicines, cardiologists have refocused treatment strategies based on the theory that HFPEF is a heterogeneous clinical syndrome with different etiologies. Classification of HFPEF according to etiologic subtype may, therefore, identify cohorts with treatable pathophysiologic mechanisms and may ultimately pave the way forward for developing meaningful HFPEF therapies.1

A wealth of data now indicates that amyloid infiltration is an important mechanism underlying HFPEF. Inherited mutations in transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTRm) or the aging process in wild-type disease (ATTRwt) cause destabilization of the transthyretin (TTR) protein into monomers or oligomers, which aggregate into amyloid fibrils. These insoluble fibrils accumulate in the myocardium and result in diastolic dysfunction, restrictive cardiomyopathy, and eventual congestive heart failure (Figure 1). In an autopsy study of HFPEF patients, almost 20% without antemortem suspicion of amyloid had left ventricular (LV) TTR amyloid deposition.2 Even more resounding evidence for the contribution of TTR amyloid to HFPEF was a study in which 120 hospitalized HFPEF patients with LV wall thickness ≥12 mm underwent technetium-99m 3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propranodicarboxylic acid (99mTc-DPD) cardiac imaging,3,4 a bone isotope known to have high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing TTR cardiac amyloidosis.5,6 Moderate-to-severe myocardial uptake indicative of TTR cardiac amyloid deposition was detected in 13.3% of HFPEF patients who did not have TTR gene mutations. Therefore, TTR cardiac amyloid deposition, especially in older adults, is not rare, can be easily identified, and may contribute to the underlying pathophysiology of HFPEF.

Figure 1

As no U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs are currently available for the treatment of HFPEF or TTR cardiac amyloidosis, the development of medications that attenuate or prevent TTR-mediated organ toxicity has emerged as an important therapeutic goal. Over the past decade, a host of therapies and therapeutic drug classes have emerged in clinical trials (Table 1), and these may herald a new direction for treating HFPEF secondary to TTR amyloid.

Table 1

TTR Silencers (siRNA and Antisense Oligonucleotides)

siRNA

Ribonucleic acid interference (RNAi) has surfaced as an endogenous cellular mechanism for controlling gene expression. Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) delivered into cells can disrupt the production of target proteins.7,8 A formulation of lipid nanoparticle and triantennary N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) conjugate that delivers siRNAs to hepatocytes is currently in clinical trials.9 Prior research demonstrated these GalNAc-siRNA conjugates result in robust and durable knockdown of a variety of hepatocyte targets across multiple species and appear to be well suited for suppression of TTR gene expression and subsequent TTR protein production.

The TTR siRNA conjugated to GalNAc, ALN-TTRSc, is now under active investigation as a subcutaneous injection in phase 3 clinical trials in patients with TTR cardiac amyloidosis.10 Prior phase 2 results demonstrated that ALN-TTRSc was generally well tolerated in patients with significant TTR disease burden and that it reduced both wild-type and mutant TTR gene expression by a mean of 87%. Harnessing RNAi technology appears to hold great promise for treating patients with TTR cardiac amyloidosis. The ability of ALN-TTRSc to lower both wild-type and mutant proteins may provide a major advantage over liver transplantation, which affects the production of only mutant protein and is further limited by donor shortage, cost, and need for immunosuppression.

Antisense Oligonucleotides

Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are under clinical investigation for their ability to inhibit hepatic expression of amyloidogenic TTR protein. Currently, the ASO compound, ISIS-TTRRx, is under investigation in a phase 3 multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial in patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP).11 The primary objective is to evaluate its efficacy as measured by change in neuropathy from baseline relative to placebo. Secondary measures will evaluate quality of life (QOL), modified body mass index (mBMI) by albumin, and pharmacodynamic effects on retinol binding protein. Exploratory objectives in a subset of patients with LV wall thickness ≥13 mm without a history of persistent hypertension will examine echocardiographic parameters, N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), and polyneuropathy disability score relative to placebo. These data will facilitate analysis of the effect of antisense oligonucleotide-mediated TTR suppression on the TTR cardiac phenotype with a phase 3 trial anticipated to begin enrollment in 2016.

TTR Stabilizers (Diflunisal, Tafamidis)

Diflunisal

Several TTR-stabilizing agents are in various stages of clinical trials. Diflunisal, a traditionally used and generically available nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), binds and stabilizes familial TTR variants against acid-mediated fibril formation in vitro and is now in human clinical trials.12,13 The use of diflunisal in patients with TTR cardiac amyloidosis is controversial given complication of chronic inhibition of cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes, including gastrointestinal bleeding, renal dysfunction, fluid retention, and hypertension that may precipitate or exacerbate heart failure in vulnerable individuals.14-17 In TTR cardiac amyloidosis, an open-label cohort study suggested that low-dose diflunisal with careful monitoring along with a prophylactic proton pump inhibitor could be safely administered to compensated patients.18 An association was observed, however, between chronic diflunisal use and adverse changes in renal function suggesting that advanced kidney disease may be prohibitive in diflunisal therapy.In FAP patients with peripheral or autonomic neuropathy randomized to diflunisal or placebo, diflunisal slowed progression of neurologic impairment and preserved QOL over two years of follow-up.19 Echocardiography demonstrated cardiac involvement in approximately 50% of patients.20 Longer-term safety and efficacy data over an average 38 ± 31 months in 40 Japanese patients with hereditary ATTR amyloidosis who were not candidates for liver transplantation showed that diflunisal was mostly well tolerated.12 The authors cautioned the need for attentive monitoring of renal function and blood cell counts. Larger multicenter collaborations are needed to determine diflunisal’s true efficacy in HFPEF patients with TTR cardiac amyloidosis.

Tafamidis

Tafamidis is under active investigation as a novel compound that binds to the thyroxine-binding sites of the TTR tetramer, inhibiting its dissociation into monomers and blocking the rate-limiting step in the TTR amyloidogenesis cascade.21 The TTR compound was shown in an 18-month double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to slow progression of neurologic symptoms in patients with early-stage ATTRm due to the V30M mutation.22 When focusing on cardiomyopathy in a phase 2, open-label trial, tafamidis also appeared to effectively stabilize TTR tetramers in non-V30M variants, wild-type and V122I, as well as biochemical and echocardiographic parameters.23,24 Preliminary data suggests that clinically stabilized patients had shorter disease duration, lower cardiac biomarkers, less myocardial thickening, and higher EF than those who were not stabilized, suggesting early institution of therapy may be beneficial. A phase 3 trial has completed enrollment and will evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of tafamidis 20 or 80 mg orally vs. placebo.25 This will contribute to long-term safety and efficacy data needed to determine the therapeutic effects of tafamidis among ATTRm variants.

Amyloid Degraders (Doxycycline/TUDCA and Anti-SAP Antibodies)

Doxycycline/TUDCA

While silencer and stabilizer drugs are aimed at lowering amyloidogenic precursor protein production, they cannot remove already deposited fibrils in an infiltrated heart. Removal of already deposited fibrils by amyloid degraders would be an important therapeutic strategy, particularly in older adults with heavily infiltrated hearts reflected by thick walls, HFPEF, systolic heart failure, and restrictive cardiomyopathy. Combined doxycycline and tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) disrupt TTR amyloid fibrils and appeared to have an acceptable safety profile in a small phase 2 open-label study among 20 TTR patients. No serious adverse reactions or clinical progression of cardiac or neuropathic involvement was observed over one year.26 An active phase 2, single-center, open-label, 12-month study will assess primary outcome measures including mBMI, neurologic impairment score, and NT-proBNP.27 Another phase 2 study is examining the tolerability and efficacy of doxycycline/TUDCA over an 18-month period in patients with TTR amyloid cardiomyopathy.28 Additionally, a study in patients with TTR amyloidosis is ongoing to determine the effect of doxycycline alone on neurologic function, cardiac biomarkers, echocardiographic parameters, modified body mass index, and autonomic neuropathy.29

Anti-SAP Antibodies

In order to safely clear established amyloid deposits, the role of the normal, nonfibrillar plasma glycoprotein present in all human amyloid deposits, serum amyloid P component (SAP), needs to be more clearly understood.30 In mice with amyloid AA type deposits, administration of antihuman SAP antibody triggered a potent giant cell reaction that removed massive visceral amyloid deposits without adverse effects.31 In humans with TTR cardiac amyloidosis, anti-SAP antibody treatments could be feasible because the bis-D proline compound, CPHPC, is capable of clearing circulating human SAP, which allow anti-SAP antibodies to reach residual deposited SAP. In a small, open-label, single-dose-escalation, phase 1 trial involving 15 patients with systemic amyloidosis, none of whom had clinical evidence of cardiac amyloidosis, were treated with CPHPC followed by human monoclonal IgG1 anti-SAP antibody.32 No serious adverse events were reported and amyloid deposits were cleared from the liver, kidney, and lymph node. Anti-SAP antibodies hold promise as a potential amyloid therapy because of their potential to target all forms of amyloid deposits across multiple tissue types.

Mutant or wild-type TTR cardiac amyloidoses are increasingly recognized as a cause of HFPEF. Clinicians need to be aware of this important HFPEF etiology because the diverse array of emerging disease-modifying agents for TTR cardiac amyloidosis in human clinical trials has the potential to herald a new era for the treatment of HFPEF.

References

  1. Maurer MS, Mancini D. HFpEF: is splitting into distinct phenotypes by comorbidities the pathway forward? J Am Coll Cardiol 2014;64:550-2.
  2. Mohammed SF, Mirzoyev SA, Edwards WD, et al. Left ventricular amyloid deposition in patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction. JACC Heart Fail 2014;2:113-22.
  3. González-López E, Gallego-Delgado M, Guzzo-Merello G, et al. Wild-type transthyretin amyloidosis as a cause of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Eur Heart J 2015.
  4. Castano A, Bokhari S, Maurer MS. Unveiling wild-type transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis as a significant and potentially modifiable cause of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Eur Heart J 2015 Jul 28. [Epub ahead of print]
  5. Rapezzi C, Merlini G, Quarta CC, et al. Systemic cardiac amyloidoses: disease profiles and clinical courses of the 3 main types. Circulation 2009;120:1203-12.
  6. Bokhari S, Castano A, Pozniakoff T, Deslisle S, Latif F, Maurer MS. (99m)Tc-pyrophosphate scintigraphy for differentiating light-chain cardiac amyloidosis from the transthyretin-related familial and senile cardiac amyloidoses. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging 2013;6:195-201.
  7. Fire A, Xu S, Montgomery MK, Kostas SA, Driver SE, Mello CC. Potent and specific genetic interference by double-stranded RNA in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nature 1998;391:806-11.
  8. Elbashir SM, Harborth J, Lendeckel W, Yalcin A, Weber K, Tuschl T. Duplexes of 21-nucleotide RNAs mediate RNA interference in cultured mammalian cells. Nature 2001;411:494-8.
  9. Kanasty R, Dorkin JR, Vegas A, Anderson D. Delivery materials for siRNA therapeutics. Nature Mater 2013;12:967-77.
  10. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Phase 2 Study to Evaluate ALN-TTRSC in Patients With Transthyretin (TTR) Cardiac Amyloidosis (ClinicalTrials.gov website). 2014. Available at: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01981837. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  11. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Efficacy and Safety of ISIS-TTRRx in Familial Amyloid Polyneuropathy (Clinical Trials.gov Website. 2013. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01737398. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  12. Sekijima Y, Dendle MA, Kelly JW. Orally administered diflunisal stabilizes transthyretin against dissociation required for amyloidogenesis. Amyloid 2006;13:236-49.
  13. Tojo K, Sekijima Y, Kelly JW, Ikeda S. Diflunisal stabilizes familial amyloid polyneuropathy-associated transthyretin variant tetramers in serum against dissociation required for amyloidogenesis. Neurosci Res 2006;56:441-9.
  14. Epstein M. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and the continuum of renal dysfunction. J Hypertens Suppl 2002;20:S17-23.
  15. Wallace JL. Pathogenesis of NSAID-induced gastroduodenal mucosal injury. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 2001;15:691-703.
  16. Mukherjee D, Nissen SE, Topol EJ. Risk of cardiovascular events associated with selective COX-2 inhibitors. JAMA 2001;286:954-9.
  17. Page J, Henry D. Consumption of NSAIDs and the development of congestive heart failure in elderly patients: an underrecognized public health problem. Arch Intern Med 2000;160:777-84.
  18. Castano A, Helmke S, Alvarez J, Delisle S, Maurer MS. Diflunisal for ATTR cardiac amyloidosis. Congest Heart Fail 2012;18:315-9.
  19. Berk JL, Suhr OB, Obici L, et al. Repurposing diflunisal for familial amyloid polyneuropathy: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA 2013;310:2658-67.
  20. Quarta CCF, Solomon RH Suhr SD, et al. The prevalence of cardiac amyloidosis in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy with predominant neuropathy: The Diflunisal Trial. International Symposium on Amyloidosis 2014:88-9.
  21. Hammarstrom P, Jiang X, Hurshman AR, Powers ET, Kelly JW. Sequence-dependent denaturation energetics: A major determinant in amyloid disease diversity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2002;99 Suppl 4:16427-32.
  22. Coelho T, Maia LF, Martins da Silva A, et al. Tafamidis for transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy: a randomized, controlled trial. Neurology 2012;79:785-92.
  23. Merlini G, Plante-Bordeneuve V, Judge DP, et al. Effects of tafamidis on transthyretin stabilization and clinical outcomes in patients with non-Val30Met transthyretin amyloidosis. J Cardiovasc Transl Res 2013;6:1011-20.
  24. Maurer MS, Grogan DR, Judge DP, et al. Tafamidis in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy: effects on transthyretin stabilization and clinical outcomes. Circ Heart Fail 2015;8:519-26.
  25. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Safety and Efficacy of Tafamidis in Patients With Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy (ATTR-ACT) (ClinicalTrials.gov website). 2014. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01994889. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  26. Obici L, Cortese A, Lozza A, et al. Doxycycline plus tauroursodeoxycholic acid for transthyretin amyloidosis: a phase II study. Amyloid 2012;19 Suppl 1:34-6.
  27. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Safety, Efficacy and Pharmacokinetics of Doxycycline Plus Tauroursodeoxycholic Acid in Transthyretin Amyloidosis (ClinicalTrials.gov website). 2011. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01171859. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  28. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Tolerability and Efficacy of a Combination of Doxycycline and TUDCA in Patients With Transthyretin Amyloid Cardiomyopathy (ClinicalTrials.gov website). 2013. Available at: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01855360. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  29. U.S. National Institutes of Health. Safety and Effect of Doxycycline in Patients With Amyloidosis (ClinicalTrials.gov website).2015. Available at: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01677286. Accessed 8/19/2015.
  30. Pepys MB, Dash AC. Isolation of amyloid P component (protein AP) from normal serum as a calcium-dependent binding protein. Lancet 1977;1:1029-31.
  31. Bodin K, Ellmerich S, Kahan MC, et al. Antibodies to human serum amyloid P component eliminate visceral amyloid deposits. Nature 2010;468:93-7.
  32. Richards DB, Cookson LM, Berges AC, et al. Therapeutic Clearance of Amyloid by Antibodies to Serum Amyloid P Component. N Engl J Med 2015;373:1106-14.

 

The Acid-Mediated Denaturation Pathway of Transthyretin Yields a Conformational Intermediate That Can Self-Assemble into Amyloid

Zhihong Lai , Wilfredo Colón , and Jeffery W. Kelly *
Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-3255
Biochemistry199635 (20), pp 6470–6482   http://dx.doi.org:/10.1021/bi952501g
Publication Date (Web): May 21, 1996  Copyright © 1996 American Chemical Society

Transthyretin (TTR) amyloid fibril formation is observed during partial acid denaturation and while refolding acid-denatured TTR, implying that amyloid fibril formation results from the self-assembly of a conformational intermediate. The acid denaturation pathway of TTR has been studied in detail herein employing a variety of biophysical methods to characterize the intermediate(s) capable of amyloid fibril formation. At physiological concentrations, tetrameric TTR remains associated from pH 7 to pH 5 and is incapable of amyloid fibril formation. Tetrameric TTR dissociates to a monomer in a process that is dependent on both pH and protein concentration below pH 5. The extent of amyloid fibril formation correlates with the concentration of the TTR monomer having an altered, but defined, tertiary structure over the pH range of 5.0−3.9. The inherent Trp fluorescence-monitored denaturation curve of TTR exhibits a plateau over the pH range where amyloid fibril formation is observed (albeit at a higher concentration), implying that a steady-state concentration of the amyloidogenic intermediate with an altered tertiary structure is being detected. Interestingly, 1-anilino-8-naphthalenesulfonate fluorescence is at a minimum at the pH associated with maximal amyloid fibril formation (pH 4.4), implying that the amyloidogenic intermediate does not have a high extent of hydrophobic surface area exposed, consistent with a defined tertiary structure. Transthyretin has two Trp residues in its primary structure, Trp-41 and Trp-79, which are conveniently located far apart in the tertiary structure of TTR. Replacement of each Trp with Phe affords two single Trp containing variants which were used to probe local pH-dependent tertiary structural changes proximal to these chromophores. The pH-dependent fluorescence behavior of the Trp-79-Phe mutant strongly suggests that Trp-41 is located near the site of the tertiary structural rearrangement that occurs in the formation of the monomeric amyloidogenic intermediate, likely involving the C-strand−loop−D-strand region. Upon further acidification of TTR (below pH 4.4), the structurally defined monomeric amyloidogenic intermediate begins to adopt alternative conformations that are not amyloidogenic, ultimately forming an A-state conformation below pH 3 which is also not amyloidogenic. In summary, analytical equilibrium ultracentrifugation, SDS−PAGE, far- and near-UV CD, fluorescence, and light scattering studies suggest that the amyloidogenic intermediate is a monomeric predominantly β-sheet structure having a well-defined tertiary structure.

 

Prevention of Transthyretin Amyloid Disease by Changing Protein Misfolding Energetics

Per Hammarström*, R. Luke Wiseman*, Evan T. Powers, Jeffery W. Kelly   + Author Affiliations

Science  31 Jan 2003; 299(5607):713-716   http://dx.doi.org:/10.1126/science.1079589

Genetic evidence suggests that inhibition of amyloid fibril formation by small molecules should be effective against amyloid diseases. Known amyloid inhibitors appear to function by shifting the aggregation equilibrium away from the amyloid state. Here, we describe a series of transthyretin amyloidosis inhibitors that functioned by increasing the kinetic barrier associated with misfolding, preventing amyloidogenesis by stabilizing the native state. The trans-suppressor mutation, threonine 119 → methionine 119, which is known to ameliorate familial amyloid disease, also functioned through kinetic stabilization, implying that this small-molecule strategy should be effective in treating amyloid diseases.

 

Rational design of potent human transthyretin amyloid disease inhibitors

Thomas Klabunde1,2, H. Michael Petrassi3, Vibha B. Oza3, Prakash Raman3, Jeffery W. Kelly3 & James C. Sacchettini1

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 2000; 7: 312 – 321.                http://dx.doi.org:/10.1038/74082

The human amyloid disorders, familial amyloid polyneuropathy, familial amyloid cardiomyopathy and senile systemic amyloidosis, are caused by insoluble transthyretin (TTR) fibrils, which deposit in the peripheral nerves and heart tissue. Several nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and structurally similar compounds have been found to strongly inhibit the formation of TTR amyloid fibrils in vitro. These include flufenamic acid, diclofenac, flurbiprofen, and resveratrol. Crystal structures of the protein–drug complexes have been determined to allow detailed analyses of the protein–drug interactions that stabilize the native tetrameric conformation of TTR and inhibit the formation of amyloidogenic TTR. Using a structure-based drug design approach ortho-trifluormethylphenyl anthranilic acid and N-(meta-trifluoromethylphenyl) phenoxazine 4,6-dicarboxylic acid have been discovered to be very potent and specific TTR fibril formation inhibitors. This research provides a rationale for a chemotherapeutic approach for the treatment of TTR-associated amyloid diseases.

 

First European consensus for diagnosis, management, and treatment of transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy

Adams, Davida; Suhr, Ole B.b; Hund, Ernstc; Obici, Laurad; Tournev, Ivailoe,f; Campistol, Josep M.g; Slama, Michel S.h; Hazenberg, Bouke P.i; Coelho, Teresaj; from the European Network for TTR-FAP (ATTReuNET)

Current Opin Neurol: Feb 2016; 29 – Issue – p S14–S26      http://dx.doi.org:/10.1097/WCO.0000000000000289

Purpose of review: Early and accurate diagnosis of transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy (TTR-FAP) represents one of the major challenges faced by physicians when caring for patients with idiopathic progressive neuropathy. There is little consensus in diagnostic and management approaches across Europe.

Recent findings: The low prevalence of TTR-FAP across Europe and the high variation in both genotype and phenotypic expression of the disease means that recognizing symptoms can be difficult outside of a specialized diagnostic environment. The resulting delay in diagnosis and the possibility of misdiagnosis can misguide clinical decision-making and negatively impact subsequent treatment approaches and outcomes.

Summary: This review summarizes the findings from two meetings of the European Network for TTR-FAP (ATTReuNET). This is an emerging group comprising representatives from 10 European countries with expertise in the diagnosis and management of TTR-FAP, including nine National Reference Centres. The current review presents management strategies and a consensus on the gold standard for diagnosis of TTR-FAP as well as a structured approach to ongoing multidisciplinary care for the patient. Greater communication, not just between members of an individual patient’s treatment team, but also between regional and national centres of expertise, is the key to the effective management of TTR-FAP.

http://images.journals.lww.com/co-neurology/Original.00019052-201602001-00003.FF1.jpeg

Transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy (TTR-FAP) is a highly debilitating and irreversible neurological disorder presenting symptoms of progressive sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy [1▪,2▪,3]. TTR-FAP is caused by misfolding of the transthyretin (TTR) protein leading to protein aggregation and the formation of amyloid fibrils and, ultimately, to amyloidosis (commonly in the peripheral and autonomic nervous system and the heart) [4,5]. TTR-FAP usually proves fatal within 7–12 years from the onset of symptoms, most often due to cardiac dysfunction, infection, or cachexia [6,7▪▪].

The prevalence and disease presentation of TTR-FAP vary widely within Europe. In endemic regions (northern Portugal, Sweden, Cyprus, and Majorca), patients tend to present with a distinct genotype in large concentrations, predominantly a Val30Met substitution in the TTR gene [8–10]. In other areas of Europe, the genetic footprint of TTR-FAP is more varied, with less typical phenotypic expression [6,11]. For these sporadic or scattered cases, a lack of awareness among physicians of variable clinical features and limited access to diagnostic tools (i.e., pathological studies and genetic screening) can contribute to high rates of misdiagnosis and poorer patient outcomes [1▪,11]. In general, early and late-onset variants of TTR-FAP, found within endemic and nonendemic regions, present several additional diagnostic challenges [11,12,13▪,14].

Delay in the time to diagnosis is a major obstacle to the optimal management of TTR-FAP. With the exception of those with a clearly diagnosed familial history of FAP, patients still invariably wait several years between the emergence of first clinical signs and accurate diagnosis [6,11,14]. The timely initiation of appropriate treatment is particularly pertinent, given the rapidity and irreversibility with which TTR-FAP can progress if left unchecked, as well as the limited effectiveness of available treatments during the later stages of the disease [14]. This review aims to consolidate the existing literature and present an update of the best practices in the management of TTR-FAP in Europe. A summary of the methods used to achieve a TTR-FAP diagnosis is presented, as well as a review of available treatments and recommendations for treatment according to disease status.

Patients with TTR-FAP can present with a range of symptoms [11], and care should be taken to acquire a thorough clinical history of the patient as well as a family history of genetic disease. Delay in diagnosis is most pronounced in areas where TTR-FAP is not endemic or when there is no positive family history [1▪]. TTR-FAP and TTR-familial amyloid cardiomyopathy (TTR-FAC) are the two prototypic clinical disease manifestations of a broader disease spectrum caused by an underlying hereditary ATTR amyloidosis [19]. In TTR-FAP, the disease manifestation of neuropathy is most prominent and definitive for diagnosis, whereas cardiomyopathy often suggests TTR-FAC. However, this distinction is often superficial because cardiomyopathy, autonomic neuropathy, vitreous opacities, kidney disease, and meningeal involvement all may be present with varying severity for each patient with TTR-FAP.

Among early onset TTR-FAP with usually positive family history, symptoms of polyneuropathy present early in the disease process and usually predominate throughout the progression of the disease, making neurological testing an important diagnostic aid [14]. Careful clinical examination (e.g., electromyography with nerve conduction studies and sympathetic skin response, quantitative sensation test, quantitative autonomic test) can be used to detect, characterize, and scale the severity of neuropathic abnormalities involving small and large nerve fibres [10]. Although a patient cannot be diagnosed definitively with TTR-FAP on the basis of clinical presentation alone, symptoms suggesting the early signs of peripheral neuropathy, autonomic dysfunction, and cardiac conduction disorders or infiltrative cardiomyopathy are all indicators that further TTR-FAP diagnostic investigation is warranted. Late-onset TTR-FAP often presents as sporadic cases with distinct clinical features (e.g., milder autonomic dysfunction) and can be more difficult to diagnose than early-onset TTR-FAP (Table 2) [1▪,11,12,13▪,14,20].

http://images.journals.lww.com/co-neurology/LargeThumb.00019052-201602001-00003.TT2.jpeg

Genetic testing is carried out to allow detection of specific amyloidogenic TTR mutations (Table 1), using varied techniques depending on the expertise and facilities available in each country (Table S2, http://links.lww.com/CONR/A39). A targeted approach to detect a specific mutation can be used for cases belonging to families with previous diagnosis. In index cases of either endemic and nonendemic regions that do not have a family history of disease, are difficult to confirm, and have atypical symptoms, TTR gene sequencing is required for the detection of both predicted and new amyloidogenic mutations [26,27].

Following diagnosis, the neuropathy stage and systemic extension of the disease should be determined in order to guide the next course of treatment (Table 4) [3,30,31]. The three stages of TTR-FAP severity are graded according to a patient’s walking disability and degree of assistance required [30]. Systemic assessment, especially of the heart, eyes, and kidney, is also essential to ensure all aspects of potential impact of the disease can be detected [10].

Table 4

http://images.journals.lww.com/co-neurology/LargeThumb.00019052-201602001-00003.TT4.jpeg

Image Tools

The goals of cardiac investigations are to detect serious conduction disorders with the risk of sudden death and infiltrative cardiomyopathy. Electrocardiograms (ECG), Holter-ECG, and intracardiac electrophysiology study are helpful to detect conduction disorders. Echocardiograms, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, scintigraphy with bone tracers, and biomarkers (e.g., brain natriuretic peptide, troponin) can all help to diagnose infiltrative cardiomyopathy[10]. An early detection of cardiac abnormalities has obvious benefits to the patient, given that the prophylactic implantation of pacemakers was found to prevent 25% of major cardiac events in TTR-FAP patients followed up over an average of 4 years [32▪▪]. Assessment of cardiac denervation with 123-iodine meta-iodobenzylguanidine is a powerful prognostic marker in patients diagnosed with FAP [33].

…..

Tafamidis

Tafamidis is a first-in-class therapy that slows the progression of TTR amyloidogenesis by stabilizing the mutant TTR tetramer, thereby preventing its dissociation into monomers and amyloidogenic and toxic intermediates [55,56]. Tafamidis is currently indicated in Europe for the treatment of TTR amyloidosis in adult patients with stage I symptomatic polyneuropathy to delay peripheral neurological impairment [57].

In an 18-month, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of patients with early-onset Val30Met TTR-FAP, tafamidis was associated with a 52% lower reduction in neurological deterioration (P = 0.027), a preservation of nerve function, and TTR stabilization versus placebo [58▪▪]. However, only numerical differences were found for the coprimary endpoints of neuropathy impairment [neuropathy impairment score in the lower limb (NIS-LL) responder rates of 45.3% tafamidis vs 29.5% placebo; P = 0.068] and quality of life scores [58▪▪]. A 12-month, open-label extension study showed that the reduced rates of neurological deterioration associated with tafamidis were sustained over 30 months, with earlier initiation of tafamidis linking to better patient outcomes (P = 0.0435) [59▪]. The disease-slowing effects of tafamidis may be dependent on the early initiation of treatment. In an open-label study with Val30Met TTR-FAP patients with late-onset and advanced disease (NIS-LL score >10, mean age 56.4 years), NIS-LL and disability scores showed disease progression despite 12 months of treatment with tafamidis, marked by a worsening of neuropathy stage in 20% and the onset of orthostatic hypotension in 22% of patients at follow-up [60▪].

Tafamidis is not only effective in patients exhibiting the Val30Met mutation; it also has proven efficacy, in terms of TTR stabilization, in non-Val30Met patients over 12 months [61]. Although tafamidis has demonstrated safe use in patients with TTR-FAP, care should be exercised when prescribing to those with existing digestive problems (e.g., diarrhoea, faecal incontinence) [60▪].

Back to Top | Article Outline

Diflunisal

Diflunisal is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) that, similar to tafamidis, slows the rate of amyloidogenesis by preventing the dissociation, misfolding, and misassembly of the mutated TTR tetramer [62,63]. Off-label use has been reported for patients with stage I and II disease, although diflunisal is not currently licensed for the treatment of TTR-FAP.

Evidence for the clinical effectiveness of diflunisal in TTR-FAP derives from a placebo-controlled, double-blind, 24-month study in 130 patients with clinically detectable peripheral or autonomic neuropathy[64▪]. The deterioration in NIS scores was significantly more pronounced in patients receiving placebo compared with those taking diflunisal (P = 0.001), and physical quality of life measures showed significant improvement among diflunisal-treated patients (P = 0.001). Notable during this study was the high rate of attrition in the placebo group, with 50% more placebo-treated patients dropping out of this 2-year study as a result of disease progression, advanced stage of the disease, and varied mutations.

One retrospective analysis of off-label use of diflunisal in patients with TTR-FAP reported treatment discontinuation in 57% of patients because of adverse events that were largely gastrointestinal [65]. Conclusions on the safety of diflunisal in TTR-FAP will depend on further investigations on the impact of known cardiovascular and renal side-effects associated with the NSAID drug class [66,67].

 

 

 

 

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »