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Bariatric Surgery Patients Have 67 Percent Lower Chance Of Complications At Top Hospitals: Study
The HealthGrades Fourth Annual Bariatric Surgery Trends in American Hospitals Study released today identifies 88 hospitals as "best" performers (five-star rated), with mortality rates, complication rates and patient lengths of stay that are dramatically lower than poorly rated hospitals.
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Obama's Embryonic Stem Cell Proposal Goes 'Only Halfway' To Improving Research, Columnist Says
The Obama administration"s draft guidelines outlining criteria for federal funding of stem cell research "go only halfway toward freeing embryonic stem cell research" because "[s]ome of the most promising investigations will still be denied federal funding," syndicated columnist Froma Harrop writes in a Providence Journal opinion piece. Harrop writes that although "the public supports the research by more than two to one," there is "a vocal minority opposed to this work because it requires the destruction of embryos." According to Harrop, although Obama allowed research on embryos willingly donated by fertility clinic patients and lifted former President George W. Bush"s restrictions limiting federal funding to research on 21 existing stem cell lines, he "wouldn"t budge on the prohibition against funding research that allows for the creation of embryos out of human cells," known as therapeutic cloning. She notes that "therapeutic cloning has little to do with human cloning, which is about making new people and is illegal most everywhere. But say that cloning is being used in research, and many folks think they"re going to have a clone as a neighbor in a few years."Harrop continues, "[B]y allowing the use of embryos from fertility clinics and not those created by researchers, the administration lends credence to the view that embryos are full human beings." However, the "only difference between embryos in fertility clinics and the ones cloned for research is the motive of the people who created them." She concludes, "Obama"s timidity in rewriting the guidelines has slowed down important research and produced more confusion. And for Americans praying for cures from this science, the choice seems rather clear" (Harrop, Providence Journal, 5/28).
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MDRNA, Inc. Receives Full FDA Approval Of Generic Calcitonin-Salmon Nasal Spray For Osteoporosis
MDRNA, Inc. (NASDAQ: MRNA) announced that it has obtained full U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of its Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) for generic calcitonin-salmon nasal spray for the treatment of osteoporosis and that Par Pharmaceutical Companies, Inc. (NYSE: PAR) has launched the product.
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Optimizing Molecular Signatures For Predicting Prostate Cancer Recurrence

UroToday.com - The mortality rate for prostate cancer is declining due to improvements in earlier detection and in local therapy strategies, however, the ability to predict the metastatic behavior of a patient"s cancer, as well as to detect and eradicate disease recurrence remains some of the greatest clinical challenges in oncology. It is estimated that 25-40% of men undergoing radical prostatectomy will have disease relapse, often termed a biochemical recurrence as the first clinical indication a rising serum level of prostate specific antigen (PSA). The accurate identification of patients at risk for relapse would greatly facilitate the rational application of adjuvant treatment strategies. The advent of microarray gene expression technology has greatly enabled the search for predictive disease biomarkers. Numerous exploratory studies have demonstrated the potential value of gene expression signatures in assessing the risk of post-surgical disease recurrence beyond the current clinical systems. However, existing molecular predictive models were derived using relatively simple computational algorithms, and the critical issue of whether proposed gene signatures are ready for randomized, prospective clinical validation trials is still under debate in the oncology community. Key to resolving this issue is the development of advanced algorithms that are capable of identifying relevant genes (features in bioinformatic terms) in a background of tens of thousands of genes, and on the basis of a limited number of patient tissue samples. This process is known as feature selection, and achieving this in high-dimensional data remains a major challenge in bioinformatics and machine learning. In order to overcome current restraints, we have derived a feature selection algorithm that addresses several major issues with prior work including computational efficiency and solution accuracy. We have experimentally demonstrated that our algorithm is capable of handling problems with extremely large input data dimensionality, to a point far beyond that needed for gene expression data analysis of genetically complex organisms. In the study published in The Prostate journal, we conducted a computational analysis to investigate whether the application of our computational algorithm can lead to the derivation of more accurate prognostic molecular signatures for predicting prostate cancer recurrence. To this end, we used a rigorous experimental protocol to compare the prognostic performance of newly identified genetic signatures with those previously derived. Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curves and survival data analyses demonstrate the superior performance of the new gene signature over previous work. We further derived a hybrid prognostic signature, obtained by integrating gene expression data and clinical variables, that significantly outperformed both the gene signature and the predictive nomogram. Our results demonstrate that advanced computational modeling can significantly improve the accuracy of molecular prognostic signatures for prostate cancer. Written by Steve Goodison, MD as part of Beyond the Abstract on UroToday.com UroToday - the only urology website with original content written by global urology key opinion leaders actively engaged in clinical practice. To access the latest urology news releases from UroToday, go to: www.urotoday.com Copyright © 2009 - UroToday Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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