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Xeloda In Combination With Oxaliplatin Shown To Be Effective In Early Colon Cancer
Roche announced results from the international phase III study NO16968 (XELOXA), investigating oral Xeloda in combination with intravenous oxaliplatin (XELOX) immediately after surgery, which show that patients with colon cancer taking XELOX live disease free for longer compared to those taking the commonly used intravenous chemotherapy combination 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin (5-FU/LV). The data prove that XELOX is superior to 5-FU/LV in terms of the time patients live without their cancer being detectable.
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Progress In Osteoporosis: Free Online Journal
No time to keep abreast of the most important osteoporosis-related research? Progress in Osteoporosis, the free online journal published by the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) on http://www.iofbonehealth.org/pio provides concise summaries of new research published in the preceding three to four months. The journal is edited by leading osteoporosis researcher and author, Professor Ego Seeman of the University of Melbourne, Australia.
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2009/043 NICE Issues Guidance To Help Healthcare Professionals Identify Child Maltreatment
NICE has issued guidance to help healthcare professionals to identify children who may have been maltreated. The guidance provides a summary of alerting features that should prompt a healthcare professional to consider, suspect or exclude child maltreatment. Child maltreatment includes neglect, physical, sexual and emotional abuse, and fabricated or induced illness.
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CytRx's INNO-206 Demonstrates Statistically Significant Tumor Shrinkage In Animal Trial For Breast Cancer

CytRx Corporation (NASDAQ: CYTR), a biopharmaceutical research and development company engaged in the development of high-value human therapeutics, today announced that its investigational cancer drug INNO-206 caused a dramatic destruction of implanted tumors in an experimental animal model of breast cancer, performing considerably better than the broadly used and generally effective chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin. In addition to improved efficacy in this animal trial, INNO-206 was comparable in toxicity with doxorubicin based on animal body-weight loss. CytRx has exclusive worldwide rights to INNO-206, a proprietary derivative of doxorubicin. The pro-drug INNO-206 is designed to allow controlled release of doxorubicin and to specifically target the delivery of drug to tumors throughout the body, which could prove more effective and less toxic in cancer patients than doxorubicin. INNO-206 has previously demonstrated safety and tolerability, and optimal dosing has been evaluated, in a Phase I clinical trial. In the animal trial - conducted under the direction of INNO-206 inventor Felix Kratz, Ph.D., Department of Medical Oncology, Clinical Research, at the Tumor Biology Center in Freiburg, Germany - human breast tumor cells were implanted in mice with compromised immune systems to avoid tumor rejection. Seven to eight animals were randomly assigned into each of three experimental groups receiving intravenous injections with either a maximum tolerated dose of INNO-206, a maximum tolerated dose of doxorubicin, or a control solution lacking either compound. At the end of the experiment 43 days after implantation, tumors had increased in volume by an average of approximately 2.7-fold in the control group while tumor growth was marginally inhibited in the doxorubicin group; increasing in volume by approximately 1.9-fold in a result that did not reach statistical significance. By contrast, tumors in the group treated with INNO-206 shrank to approximately one-half their initial volume. The decrease in final tumor volume in INNO-206-treated animals was statistically significant (pAbout Breast Cancer Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the U.S., with more than 192,000 new cases of invasive breast cancer expected to be diagnosed this year, according to American Cancer Society estimates. More than 40,000 deaths are expected to be attributed to breast cancer in the U.S. in 2009, making it the second leading cause of cancer death in U.S. women. The chance of a woman having invasive breast cancer some time during her life is about one in eight. About INNO-206 INNO-206 is a prodrug of the commonly prescribed chemotherapeutic doxorubicin and was designed to reduce adverse events by controlling release and preferentially targeting the tumor. In a Phase 1 study, doses were administered at up to six times the standard dosing of doxorubicin without an increase in observed side effects over those historically seen with doxorubicin. The Company is evaluating options for a possible Phase 2 clinical trial. CytRx Corporation


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