Life-Saving Transplants May Be Denied To Black And Hispanic Patients Due To Physician Bias

Physician bias might be the reason why African Americans are not receiving kidney/pancreas transplants at the same rate as similar patients in other racial groups. Dr. Keith Melancon, director of kidney and pancreas transplantation at Georgetown University Hospital and associate professor of surgery at Georgetown University Medical Center, and colleagues explore this phenomenon in the [...]

New Treatment Option Emerging For Some With Early Stage Lung Cancer

Patients with early stage, non-small cell lung cancer who are not able to undergo surgery, now have a highly effective treatment option. Physicians say that option, radical stereotactic radiosurgery performed with CyberKnife, leads to a 100 percent overall survival after three years in patients with good lung function before treatment. These are the results of [...]

Historic Gene Therapy Trial To Treat Alzheimer’s Disease Underway At Georgetown

Researchers in the Memory Disorders Program at Georgetown University Medical Center are now recruiting volunteers for a national gene therapy trial – the first study of its kind for the treatment of patients with dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease.

Cancer Prevention Study Reveals Encouraging News For Exemestane

An interim analysis of a breast cancer prevention study using exemestane (Aromasin®) finds an “acceptable” level of bone loss.

FDA Approves Bayer HealthCare’s Kogenate(R) FS Treatment For Routine Prophylaxis In Children With Hemophilia A

Bayer HealthCare LLC announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved routine prophylaxis with Kogenate(R) FS Antihemophilic Factor (Recombinant) to reduce the frequency of bleeding episodes and the risk of joint damage in patients aged 0-16 years with severe hemophilia A with no pre-existing joint [...]