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Inconclusive Research Links Glargine Insulin (Lantus) With Cancer
Diabetes UK has today cautioned that research claiming there is a link between certain insulins and some cancers is "inconclusive".
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NACDS Supports Delaying The Implementation Of The GS1 DataBar Technology
National Association of Chain Drug Stores (NACDS) expressed its support for postponing the removal of the Universal Product Code (UPC-A) barcode system - scheduled for January 1, 2010. NACDS compliments and supports the Grocery Manufacturers Association"s (GMA) recommendation that the GS1 DataBar system implementation be delayed until January 1, 2011.
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Which Country Ranks Highest In Biotech Innovation
In a first of its kind study, Scientific American cut through the marketing messages to take a hard look at what countries across the globe are doing to bolster biotech programs within their borders. Many rankings compare Europe, Asia, and the US -- the Scientific American Worldview: A Global Biotechnology Perspective digs deeper, examining all the elements that impact overall biotech innovation. You might be surprised by some of the results.
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Experimental Drug Five Times More Effective Against MDR-TB Than Conventional Therapy

A Johnson & Johnson-run study found that its experimental drug TMC207 could make conventional tuberculosis treatment five times more effective against multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) because it cleared traces of the TB bacteria in the sputum of 48 percent of study volunteers after eight weeks, Reuters reports (Emery, Reuters, 6/3). The results were published on Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. TMC207 was tested in a Phase 2 trial of 47 South African patients with newly diagnosed MDR-TB, the Dow Jones Newswires/Wall Street Journal reports. "About half received TMC207 and the rest received a fake drug for about eight weeks; all patients took a standard regimen of five existing TB drugs. A higher proportion of patients who received TMC207 tested negative for TB in lung-fluid cultures at eight weeks than the placebo, 48 percent versus 9 percent," the Dow Jones Newswires/Wall Street Journal reports (Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires/Wall Street Journal, 6/3). According to Reuters, TMC207 is "being billed as the first new TB drug in 40 years." David McNeeley of Tibotec Inc., the subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson that developed the drug, said that TMC207 differs from other TB drugs because it "starves" the bacteria. "It"s like cutting off your food supply," he said (Reuters, 6/3). In a related NEJM editorial, Clifton Barry of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, writes that the development of TMC207 "represents an important advance in the chemotherapy of TB" and outlines three reasons why. According to Barry, "It is also a humbling case study that is worth some reflection," for those in the "tuberculosis field [who] turned up our noses at looking for compounds that killed anything less than the real human pathogen" (Barry, NEJM, 6/4). NEJM published a second study that "describes an international effort to detect" TB in immigrants and refugees that come to the U.S., HealthDay News/Forbes reports. "The TB rate in [foreign-born individuals] is 9.8 times higher than among U.S.-born individuals - 20.6 cases per 100,000 people versus 2.1 per 100,000 people for the native-born. Nearly 58 percent of the new TB cases in the United States in 2007 were diagnosed in the foreign-born group," according to HealthDay News/Forbes (HealthDay News/Forbes, 6/3). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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