Thursday, 8 November 2012

Novartis heart failure drug cuts death by 37 percent: study

LOS ANGELES: An experimental Novartis AG drug to treat hospitalized acute heart failure patients reduced deaths by 37 percent compared with a placebo and appeared to be safe, according to data from a late stage clinical trial presented on Tuesday.
The drug, serelaxin, which is a form of a human hormone that relaxes blood vessels and eases stress on the heart and other organs, is considered one of the most important medicines in the Swiss drugmaker's developmental pipeline.
"With a meaningful mortality benefit, we believe Serelaxin could represent a $2.5 billion (annual) sales opportunity," Deutsche Bank analysts said in a research note prior to release of the final data at the American Heart Association scientific meeting in Los Angeles.
Novartis said it now planned to seek approval for serelaxin. In the study of 1,161 patients, the drug cut deaths from any cause at six months by 37 percent and led to a marked reduction in worsening of heart failure during hospitalization, researchers said.
Patients who received 48 hours of continuously infused serelaxin experienced more than 45 percent fewer episodes of worsening heart failure symptoms than those who got a placebo.
Novartis had previously disclosed that serelaxin met one of the study's two primary goals measuring relief of dyspnea, or extreme shortness of breath - a common symptom of acute heart failure - and that it reduced deaths. But the company did not say by how much. By one measure, serelaxin led to a 19 percent improvement in dyspnea, researchers said.
The drug failed to hit a secondary goal of the study that combined cardiovascular death with need for reshospitalizations, but researchers felt the life saving benefit was more important.
"We did have a startling death benefit. One of the reasons there may have been an inability to show a decrease in hospitalizations is more patients were alive to be rehospitalized," said Dr John Teerlink, one of the trial's co-lead researchers.
The data showed that only 29 acute heart failure patients would have to be treated with serelaxin to prevent one cardiovascular death, said Teerlink, a cardiologist and heart failure specialist at the San Francisco VA Medical Center.
Doctors say there is an enormous need for a treatment for acute heart failure, with few available options for the condition in which the heart is unable to pump enough blood.
"If it was approved we would not only use it, there would be a mandate to use it because we don't have anything for acute decompensated heart failure," said Dr. Milton Packer, a prominent cardiologist from the University of Texas Southwest Medical Center in Dallas, who was not involved in the study.
"If that mortality finding is real, boy are we going to get excited," said Packer, who has been a member of FDA advisory panels for heart drugs.
There are more than one million hospitalizations in the United States each year for acute heart failure and another million in Europe. About half of all patients die within five years of diagnosis, often as a result of acute episodes that require urgent hospital care.
TREATMENT BENEFITS
The study showed the Novartis drug also reduced the duration of time spent in intensive care units by almost half a day and cut the length of hospital stay by almost a full day.
There was no difference in serious side effects between the two groups, but there was a significant increase in kidney impairment in the placebo group, as the Novartis drug appears to prevent worsening of kidney function, researchers said.
Despite missing some of the pre-set end points, or goals, of the study, Novartis said it is likely to seek approval of the drug based on the trial results.
"We believe this is a strong set of data and have started discussions with the main regulatory agencies. Our filing strategy will be determined by the outcome of these discussions," said Ameet Nathwani, Novartis' global business franchise head for critical care.
Dr John McMurry of the University of Glasgow, who was on a panel to critique the study, said that if there were a second serelaxin trial that also showed a mortality benefit it would be hard for health regulators to ignore.
"I think the agent was beneficial. This drug is doing something good in terms of relief," he said. (Reuters)

Govt sends letter to Swiss authorities

ISLAMABAD: The much awaited letter that led to ouster of former prime minister Yusuf Raza Gilani from his office has been written and sent to Swiss authorities following the Supreme Court orders in NRO implementation case, Geo News reported on Wednesday.
According to reports the letter was written on November 5. The apex court had given the government one-month deadline to write the letter to the Swiss to withdraw a previous letter to the Swiss government by former attorney general Malik Qayyum, seeking closure of alleged graft cases against President Asif Ali Zardari.
The government would have to submit a compliance report with regard to the implementation of the court orders .
The tussle between the judiciary and the PPP government came to an end following the latter’s decision to implement the former’s orders

Election most tweeted event in US political history


WASHINGTON: Election day in the United States became the most tweeted about event in US political history Tuesday with enthusiastic netizens firing off 20 million poll-related tweets, the social network said.
Americans flocked to Twitter and other platforms all day in a massive social media burst, posting photographic proof they had cast their ballots, cheering their favorite candidates along and analyzing the latest polls.
"With 20 million tweets, Election Day just became the most tweeted about event in US political history," Twitter announced on its official government and politics account @gov.
The number far surpassed the 10.3 million tweets sent during the first presidential debate last month -- an event the popular social network had at the time billed a record in US political history.
In an indication of the importance of social networks in the presidential race, both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney took to Twitter, Facebook and Reddit just hours ahead of polls closing to make last-ditch pushes for votes.
The campaigns have used social media extensively over the past few months to push people to vote and even try and beat the record 2008 turnout, when two-thirds of US voters cast a ballot.

Policeman among three killed in Karachi


KARACHI: A policeman was killed when a police mobile was attacked at Al-Asif Square in Karachi Thursday morning while two more were gunned down in a separate incident in Orangi, Geo News reported.
According to details, unknown culprits opened fire on a police van at Al-Asif Square in Sohrab Goth today that critically injured a policeman. He was being shifted to Abbasi Shaheed Hospital but he succumbed to his injuries on the way.
Police told that unidentified gunmen riding a motorcycle sprayed bullets on two men who were also relatives in Orangi Town. The victims were targeted and killed while they were on their way to work. The deceased were identified as Najam Abbas and Nisar Mehdi and were the employees of a textile mill.
The city is in the grip of violence since morning as a suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden pickup truck into the gate of Sachal Rangers Headquarters located in North Nazimabad, causing a huge blast that killed two Rangers men and wounded at least 21 people.


Thursday, 1 November 2012

Clinton warns Syria rebels to resist extremism

        Free Syrian Army fighters gather after defeating government troops at Salqin city near Idlib October 29, 2012. US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has urged Syria's opposition to resist efforts by extremist groups to "hijack the revolution".
Speaking on a trip to Croatia, she said the rebel leadership needed to be more inclusive of those fighting in Syria.
The Turkey-based Syrian National Council (SNC) has been powerless to stop the escalating violence.
Mrs Clinton also revealed the Obama administration has suggested who should feature in the rebel leadership.
"There has to be a representation of those who are in the front lines fighting and dying," she told reporters.
"This cannot be an opposition represented by people who have many good attributes but who, in many instances, have not been inside Syria for 20, 30, 40 years."
The secretary of state said there had been "disturbing reports" of Islamic extremists entering Syria to try and take advantage of the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad
The rebels should "strongly resist the efforts by the extremists to hijack the Syrian revolution", she warned.
There have been reports of foreign Islamist fighters entering Syria to fight alongside the rebels, and hardline Salafist groups like the al-Nusra front have claimed responsibility for several bomb attacks.
Syria's disparate opposition groups are meeting in the Qatari capital Doha next week.
Mrs Clinton said Washington wanted to help the opposition to unite behind an effective strategy to move toward political transition in Syria.
Syria's rebels are divided on how best to achieve the overthrow of President Assad's government and what kind of state should come afterwards.

Cyclone Nilam: India search for missing sailors

Local fishermen in a skiff assist in search operation near the oil tanker Pratibha Cauvery after the ship ran aground October 31 off the coast in Chennai, on November 1, 2012Rescue operations are under way in India's southern city of Chennai to find five sailors missing from an oil tanker that ran aground in a cyclone.
Coast guard helicopters and boats are combing the sea for sailors from the Pratibha Cauvery.
One of the crew members drowned after a boat carrying him and others capsized near Chennai, in Tamil Nadu state.
Seven people were killed when Cyclone Nilam struck the south-eastern coast with winds of up to 100km/h (60mph).
More than 100,000 people have been evacuated.
The rescue operation had to be suspended overnight because of bad weather, the BBC's Sanjoy Majumder reports from Chennai.
The authorities say they are concerned because the vessel is carrying oil which could create a major problem if it spills out.
Roads and agricultural land across the coast have been badly damaged and power lines have been brought down in several areas by the cyclone struck.
More than 100,000 people were evacuated ahead of the storm and shifted to higher ground, into schools and other temporary shelters.
Many believe the prompt response of the authorities to Cyclone Nilam is one reason why its impact was minimised, our correspondent adds.
Cyclone Nilam hit the Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, and the town of Pondicherry on Wednesday night.
Schools, colleges and cargo operations at the port in Chennai were shut. Fishermen in both states were warned not to venture out to sea.
In December 2011, more than 30 people died and many homes were damaged after a cyclone struck near Pondicherry.
And in May 2010 at least 23 people died as a powerful cyclone caused widespread havoc across Andhra Pradesh.

Russia internet blacklist law takes effect

        Children using a computerThe law is aimed at protecting children from harmful internet content 


   A law that aims to protect children from harmful internet content by allowing the government to take sites offline has taken effect in Russia.
The authorities are now able to blacklist and force offline certain websites without a trial.
The law was approved by both houses of parliament and signed by President Vladimir Putin in July.
Human rights groups have said the legislation might increase censorship in the country.
The law is the amendment to the current Act for Information.
The authorities say the goal is to protect minors from websites featuring sexual abuse of children, offering details about how to commit suicide, encouraging users to take drugs and sites that solicit children for pornography.
If the websites themselves cannot be shut down, internet service providers (ISPs) and web hosting companies can be forced to block access to the offending material.

Start Quote

It will be [an attack on] the freedom of speech on the internet”
Yuri VdovinCitizens' Watch
Critics have described it another attempt by President Vladimir Putin to exercise control over the population.
"Of course there are websites that should not be accessible to children, but I don't think it will be limited to that," Yuri Vdovin, vice-president of Citizens' Watch, a human rights organisation based in Saint-Petersburg, told the BBC.
"The government will start closing other sites - any democracy-oriented sites are at risk of being taken offline.
"It will be [an attack on] the freedom of speech on the internet."
Mr Vdovin said that to close a website, the government would simply have to say that its content was "harmful to children".
"But there are lots of harmful websites out there already, for example, fascist sites - and they could have easily been closed down by now - but no, [the government] doesn't care, there are no attempts to do so," he added.
A risk for websites?
Besides NGOs and human rights campaigners, websites including the Russian search engine giant Yandex, social media portal Mail.ru and the Russian-language version of Wikipedia have all protested against the law.
Screengrab of Russian Wikipedia pageThe Russian version of Wikipedia went dark for a day in protest at the law in July
The latter, for instance, took its content offline for a day ahead of the vote in July, claiming the law "could lead to the creation of extra-judicial censorship of the entire internet in Russia, including banning access to Wikipedia in the Russian language".
Yandex temporarily crossed out the word "everything" in its "everything will be found" logo.
"The way the new law will work depends on the enforcement practice," said a spokesman.
"Yandex, along with other key Russian market players, is ready to discuss with lawmakers the way it is going to work."
In July, the Russian social networking site Vkontakte posted messages on users' homepages warning that the law posed a risk to its future.
However, the country's telecom minister Nikolai Nikiforov, suggested that such concerns were overblown when he spoke at the NeForum blogging conference this week.
"Internet has always been a free territory," he said, according to a reportby Russian news agency Tass.
"The government is not aimed at enforcing censorship there. LiveJournal, YouTube and Facebook showcase socially responsible companies.
"That means that they will be blocked only if they refuse to follow Russian laws, which is unlikely, in my opinion."