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Researchers find new method for safe and effective delivery of medicines to the lungs

Researchers find new method for safe and effective delivery of medicines to the lungs Investigators at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey and Rutgers New Jersey Medical School recently identified a new method for safe and effective delivery of medicines to the lungs that can be used for multiple clinical applications, potentially including aerosol vaccination. The results of the study will be published online ahead of print in the December issue of Med (10.1016/j.medj.2020.10.005). Targeted pulmonary delivery may have many conceptual advantages over other routes of vaccine administration and therapeutics, particularly for certain respiratory infections (including but not limited to SARS-CoV-2) because they arrive directly at the site of the infection.

PhageNova Bio, Inc Announces Publication Describing Identification of a Safe and Effective Method of Delivering Medicines to the Lungs

Published: Dec 10, 2020   NEW YORK, Dec. 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/  PhageNova Bio, Inc. ( PhageNova ) is pleased to announce the publication of data generated through a sponsored research agreement with Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The Med (a Cell Press publication) article, entitled Targeted Phage Display-Based Pulmonary Vaccination in Mice and Non-human Primates, describes a new method for safe and effective pulmonary delivery of therapeutics, including an aerosol vaccination strategy which is being developed to address the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Our targeted method of pulmonary delivery is the initial step towards the development of aerosol phage-based vaccines for human applications against multiple diseases, says Renata Pasqualini, PhD, co-senior study author, Founder and Chief Scientific Officer of PhageNova, and Chief of the Division of Cancer Biology, Department of Radiation Oncology at Rutgers Cancer Institute and Rutgers New Jersey Medic

Symptom under-recognition may be common in breast cancer patients treated with radiotherapy

Among patients with breast cancer treated with radiotherapy, under-recognition of symptoms was common in reports of pain, pruritus, edema, and fatigue, with younger patients and Black patients having significantly increased odds of symptom under-recognition, according to data presented at the 2020 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, held Dec. 8-11.

Washington University School of Medicine — Faculty Therapy Medical Physicist, Radiation Oncology : The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education

Washington University School of Medicine — Faculty Therapy Medical Physicist, Radiation Oncology : The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education
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