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Hematology News
Hydroxyurea does not affect ovarian reserve of girls, young women with sickle cell disease
Hydroxyurea did not affect ovarian reserve among girls and young women with sickle cell disease, according to results published in Blood Advances.
Efanesoctocog alfa offers ‘highly efficacious protection’ to children with hemophilia A
Efanesoctocog alfa prophylaxis exhibited high sustained factor VIII activity among younger children with severe hemophilia, according to findings published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
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Diagnostic delays, morbidity, mortality improving among patients with calciphylaxis
Time to diagnosis as well as morbidity outcomes and mortality rates among patients with calciphylaxis has steadily improved since 2006, according to a study.
ASH to present honorific awards to ‘visionary’ hematologists
Several hematologists will be honored during this year’s ASH Annual Meeting.
‘Broader and more inclusive design’ needed for novel cancer trials
Individuals with therapy-refractory cancer who received waivers to participate in a clinical trial for off-label targeted therapies achieved similar clinical benefits as those who took part in the study without an exception.
Antibody boosts platelets, shows ‘rapid and sustained efficacy’ in immune thrombocytopenia
Treatment with the novel antibody CM313 boosted platelet levels and demonstrated long-term durability among adults with immune thrombocytopenia, results from a phase 2 study showed.
World Sickle Cell Awareness Day: Gene therapy ‘transformative’
Today is World Sickle Cell Awareness Day.
Patient-reported outcomes leveraged to overcome barriers to clinical trial enrollment
Participation in cancer-related clinical trials could increase dramatically if researchers screened and recruited individuals using routine care patient-reported outcomes, according to results published in JAMA Oncology.
Clinical trials may not offer ‘best management’ for cancer care
Patients participating in clinical trials for anticancer drugs do not gain a survival benefit compared with individuals who received routine care, according to study results published in JAMA.
AI has ‘promising utility’ to give high-quality, empathetic answers to patient questions
AI could have the ability to answer some patient questions on cancer instead of clinicians, reducing clinician burdens and improving access to care, according to study results published in JAMA Oncology.
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Headline News
Expected drop in HIV care providers may signal potential shift to primary care physicians
November 11, 20242 min read -
Headline News
Q&A: What to know about surge of ‘walking pneumonia’ in children
November 09, 20244 min read -
Headline News
Racial gaps in preemptive living donor kidney transplant persist during last 2 decades
November 12, 20241 min read