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2020 Top 10 Innovations – The Scientist

We know the old saw: necessity is the mother of invention. Well, 2020 has shown us that a global pandemic is one serious mother. Typically, our Top 10 Innovations competition focuses on laboratory technologies, tools designed to plumb the mysteries of basic biology. But as biologists turned their sights to understanding SARS-CoV-2, the innovation landscape changed accordingly, with new tools developed and existing technologies bent to address the pandemic. So this year at The Scientist, our annual contest incorporates inventions aimed at understanding and ultimately solving the COVID-19 problem.

Among our independent judges picks for 2020s Top 10 Innovations were core laboratory technologiessuch as a single-cell proteome analyzer and a desktop gene synthesizeralongside pandemic-focused products, including a rapid COVID-19 test, a tool that can capture antibody profiles from the blood plasma of convalescing coronavirus patients, and a platform for characterizing glycans in the spike protein that studs the surface of SARS-CoV-2. The competition among stellar submissions was so steep that this years Top 10 actually contains 12 products, thanks to a couple of ties.

As challenging as 2020 has been for all of us, this tumultuous year has given birth to promising products and approaches for elucidating the complex world of biology. And even more than that, 2020 has shown that the scientific community, when faced with a shared problem, can rise to the challenge and come together to refocus, research, and innovate. Here, The Scientist presents the tools and technologies that make up this years Top 10 Innovations.

In late March, biotech firm AbCellera hosted a call with 40 researchers to review the data theyd collected on potential antibodies against SARS-CoV-2. Using AbCelleras high-throughput microfluidics and single-cell analysis tools to probe samples of COVID-19 patients, the companys team had deciphered the genetic sequences encoding hundreds of antibodies that might treat the disease. Sifting through all of that data by hand was tedious, though, so the team fed it into Celium, a data visualization tool that intersects more than a million high-quality data points for those antibodies to reveal which ones might work best in patients as a potential therapy. In real time, on the call, the researchers used Celium to probe those relationships and home in on the LY-CoV555 antibody that, months later, entered clinical trials as a possible COVID-19 treatment, says Maia Smith, lead of data visualization at AbCellera and creator of Celium. I think that kind of says it all.

Before Celium came on the market in 2017, scientists working with AbCellera to find antibodies would get back complex spreadsheets of data that were difficult to navigate, and it was hard to know where to start, Smith says. Using Celium, data are presented in a visual format and the tool helps you identify the right molecule for your needs, Fernando Corra, a protein engineer at Kodiak Sciences in Palo Alto, California tells The Scientist. Hes partnered with AbCellera to identify antibodies to treat retinal diseases, and says the companys package of microfluidics, single-cell analysis, and data visualization tool streamlines the process of antibody discovery in a user-friendly manner.

KAMDAR:"AbCelleras response to the pandemic underscores the real power of the Celium platform at the intersection of biology and AI to make new antibody discoveries at a blazing speed."

Since 2014, Abbotts ID NOW system has helped physicians detect influenzas A and B, strep A, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and most recently SARS-CoV-2, in less than 15 minutes. The toaster-size device works by heating nasal samples in an acidic solution that cracks open the envelope of theviruses, exposing their RNA, which ID NOW amplifies at a constant temperature instead of the heating and cooling cycles that PCR machines use. Gaining emergency authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration in late March, the COVID-19 ID NOW test was one of the first tests accessible to the US public.

Norman Moore, Abbotts director of scientific affairs for infectious diseases, says the tests short turnaround time is critical to stopping viral spread. Youre the most infectious early onand if we dont have that result in that timely fashion, what does it help if a molecular test comes back two weeks later? he tells The Scientist.

With more than 23,000 ID NOW devices in use in the US, mainly in urgent care clinics and pharmacies, Moore says his team is developing tests compatible with the platform for other infectious diseases, such as sexually transmitted infections.

J.D. Zipkin, chief medical officer of GoHealth Urgent Care, which partnered with San Francisco International Airport to administer the ID NOW COVID-19 test to travelers, calls the test a game changer. [Abbott] took a platform thats already really good at detecting very specific disease states and applied it to the biggest pandemic need that we have in this country, he says.

The ID NOW platform costs $4,500 and each COVID-19 test costs $40.

CRUICKSHANK-QUINN: The ability to receive COVID-19 test results from a throat or nasal swab in under 15 minutes can provide hospitals, schools, or any other institution with the ability to quickly test persons to determine those who would need to self-isolate at home. Since it is light-weight and portable it can be used in the field and at mobile sites like drive-thru testing locations."

In 2017, researchers from the New York Genome Center published a new approach called CITE-seq that allows scientists to assess proteins in individual cells at the same time they are doing single-cell transcriptomics. CITE-seq works by linking antibodies with oligonucleotides that can eventually be sequenced to reveal whether target proteins were present and joined to their corresponding antibodies. Life science company BioLegend licensed CITE-seq and developed the TotalSeqTM-C Human Universal Cocktail v1.0, a collection of 130 oligo-linked antibodies for massive screening of the cell-surface proteins of individual cells, for use on a single-cell sequencing platform from 10X Genomics.

In contrast to proteomics approaches based on visual assessment of tagged proteins, theres no theoretical limit anymore as to how many proteins you can [screen for], says BioLegends Head of Proteogenomics Kristopher Kit Nazor, adding that the company is already working to expand the number of antibodies included in the cocktail. That increases the opportunity for unbiased discovery massively.

Its groundbreaking in many ways, says immunologist and genomicist Alexandra-Chlo Villani of Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University. Like many researchers, Villani, who is one of the coordinators of the immune cell segment of the Human Cell Atlas, pivoted this year to studying COVID-19. She has already used BioLegends cocktail, launched in early August at a price of $5,350 for five single-use vials, to analyze blood samples from nearly 300 patients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2.

When you have surface protein and RNA in the same cell, it really helps us to derive a more granular definition of the immune cells involved in response to infection, says Villani. I actually know a lot of colleagues across the United States and Europe that have used this same panel to analyze their COVID cohorts . . . which means well be able to combine all of our data and compare. And thats incredible.

MEAGHER:This is a really nice merging of next-gen sequencing as a digital readout for sequence barcodes and single-cell barcoding technology to enable single-cell quantitative proteomics."

The release of the human reference genome in 2013 was a tremendous leap forward for biology, but as far as actually representing humanity, it fell quite short. Our genomes are rife with variants not present in the reference genome, which was built from a small sampling of individuals, primarily of European descent. To account for human genetic diversity, bioinformatics firm Seven Bridges has developed a genomic analysis platform called GRAF that attempts to include all possible iterations of genetic sequences at any given locus. The resulting GRAF/Pan Genome Reference is a graph of the known variants at particular points in the genome, rather than a linear reference sequence. When genomes are aligned to the GRAF reference, any deletions, insertions, single nucleotide polymorphisms, or other variations are therefore not missed as they might be when aligned to the linear reference genome.

With the goal of boosting the presence of underrepresented groups in genomic research, Seven Bridges announced in June that access to its GRAF Germline Variant Detection Workflow and GRAF/Pan Genome Reference would be free to academic researchers. This is the first production-grade workflow that incorporates ancestry information and diversity of the human genome to provide improved variant calls and alignment, says the companys chief scientific officer, Brandi Davis-Dusenbery.

The hope is that, by accounting for that complexity in the analysis, you will see things you were missing, says Bruce Gelb, the director of the Mindich Child Health and Development Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai. Thats been an idea floating around for a few years, but nobody prior to what Seven Bridges is doing implemented a graph-based approach that is practical. Theyre the first to do that.

Gelb has been using the GRAF platform to search for variants related to congenital heart defects and comparing those variants to what turns up when he uses traditional sequence analyses. So far, he says, it appears that GRAF is identifying some variants that would otherwise have been overlooked.

CRUICKSHANK-QUINN: The fact that SevenBridges GRAF is being made freely available to academic institutions will certainly pave the waytowards precision medicine by allowing research advancement in under-represented populations without thestruggle of cost to academic researchers."

A central challenge to delivering gene therapies to patients cells is the cost of making adeno-associated virus (AAV), a common vector for genes of interest, says Ryan Cawood, CEO of UK-based biotech company OXGENE. The first AAV gene therapy product that was approved in the EU cost a million pounds per dose, he says. If you wanted to treat a disease [with a therapy targeting a large organ] that you could apply to thousands of people, you just simply couldnt make enough of it at a cost that would make it viable.

Currently, Cawood says, batches of cultured human cells are transfected with multiple plasmids to induce them to make the AAV vectors containing a selected gene. But the plasmids are expensive to make, and the transfection process isnt very efficient. By contrast, infection with adenoviruses naturally induces cells to activate replication of AAVs. The problem is, the adenoviruses also replicate themselves and contaminate the resulting AAV product. To get around this issue, OXGENE devised a genetic switch that shuts down an adenoviruss activity halfway through its life cycle within a cell, so that it programs the cell to churn out AAV particles but not to make adenovirus. When the virus goes in, you only get AAV coming out; you dont get any more of the adenovirus coming back out, Cawood says. The company began selling its research-grade viral vector, which it calls TESSA, in September, and plans to begin offering clinical-grade material next year, he adds. The cost for the research-grade vector starts at 5,000, and depends on the size of the batch of cells to be infected.

BLAINEY:"Supports translation of gene therapies. Demonstrates the biotechnical value of biological engineering."

Biotech firm Codex DNA released the BioXp 3250 system in August 2020 as a follow-up to BioXp 3200, released in 2014. The automated platform for on-demand DNA assembly and amplification allows researchers to synthesize genes and genomes faster than ever, with the potential to accelerate the development of vaccines, diagnostics, and treatments, says Peter Duncan, director of product management at Codex DNA. The equipment can be used on cancer cells or a variety of infectious agents, including SARS-CoV-2.

Without BioXp 3250 or its predecessor, labs that want to synthesize DNA fragments, clones, or whole genomes have to send samples out to be processed by a third party. In addition to having to deal with transit, such processing could take weeks or months. With the BioXp 3250, priced at $100,000, DNA sequences up to 7,000 base pairs in length can be assembled in a matter of days, with the push of a button.

Rather than having to code genetic script on a computer for specific experiments, customers can order a module that comes in about two days, ready to go. The module has a barcode containing all the necessary information; when scanned by the device, instructions for synthesizing the desired DNA are uploaded. A lab technician merely needs to insert the module into the device and press start, Duncan says.

The BioXp has enabled us to perform simple subcloning steps hands-free, Mark Tornetta, VP of Biologics Discovery at Tavotek Biotherapeutics, tells The Scientist in an email, describing how the lab uses the device to generate NGS libraries. All of these methods [that are run] on the BioXP save us time and cost to perform.

BLAINEY:"Democratizing gene synthesis by placing capability in individual labs for faster turnaround and lower costs at high throughput."

The Single-Cell Intracellular Proteome solution from IsoPlexis grew out of several labs at Caltech, all seeking better ways to monitor protein-protein interactions in cancer cells with the goal of developing targeted treatments. With traditional methods such as Western blot, mass spectrometry, and flow cytometry, only a couple of protein types can be tracked at a given time. With Isoplexiss system, launched in July, researchers can monitor 30 or more protein pathways, with results available on the same day.

With previous technology, phosphorylation was used to identify the function of the individual proteins, with no insight as to how they work together. The Single-Cell Intracellular Proteome reveals the function the same way, but is also able to provide the context of entire protein signaling pathways, uncovering how the network operates as a whole.

Understanding the entire network of cellular pathways allows researchers to better understand the downstream effects of aberrant cells, says Sean Mackay, CEO and cofounder of IsoPlexis. In cancers, he adds, this approach helps evaluate the efficacy of targeted treatments such as antibody therapies or small-molecule drugs.

Such pathways basically define how cells are activated, [which] is particularly important for cancer, where activated phosphoprotein signaling is not only a hallmark of cancer, says James Heath, who ran the Caltech lab that created the technology eight years ago, but is a major focus of targeted inhibitors.

MEAGHER:"The Single-Cell IntracellularProteome solution uses innovative microfluidics to scale down what looks like well-established ELISA chemistry down to the level of single cells."

Scientists have used intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) to treat immunodeficient or immunosuppressed patients and convalescent plasma to treat infectious diseases for more than a century. And plasma is one of many treatments now being tried for COVID-19. But biological samples drawn from donors are not the most standardized therapeutics. Enter GigaGens Surge platform, which uses single-cell sequencing to capture and recreate libraries of antibodies from blood donors. To create these libraries, the company runs donors blood samples through the Surge platform to isolate individual antibody-producing B cells into microdroplets and extract the RNA that encodes the antibodies. From these genetic sequences they can create a blueprint of that persons immune system, says GigaGen CEO David Johnson.

Company researchers then select some of those antibodies to engineer in mammalian cells to create a recombinant antibody treatment, which they say is much more potent than convalescent plasma or IVIG, based on in vitro experiments and tests in animal models. GigaGen does not currently plan to sell Surge, but rather has been using the platform to develop treatments for cancers, immunodeficiency disorders, and, most recently, COVID-19. GigaGen hopes to start clinical trials on their COVID-19 treatment, which uses more than 12,500 antibodies from 16 donors, in early 2021. The goal of Surge is to tease apart the complexity of the immune system, says Johnson, and then tailor antibody treatments that elicit the strongest response.

Fred and Vicki Modell, who founded the Jeffrey Modell Foundation after their son Jeffrey died at 15 due to complications from primary immunodeficiency, say they have been searching for an alternative to IVIG, which is sometimes in short supply and can lead to side effects in many patients. [GigaGen] is giving the greatest gift of alltheyre giving hope to [immunodeficient] patients, Fred Modell says.

CRUICKSHANK-QUINN: "By combining single-cell emulsion droplet microfluidics technology, genomics, and protein library engineering, this antibody drug therapy, if successful, could revolutionize COVID-19 treatment as well as treatments for many different diseases."

A few years ago, 10X Genomics launched an assay, ATAC-seq, to identify regions of open chromatin in single cells; the product won a spot in The Scientists 2019 Top 10 Innovations. According to product marketing manager Laura DeMare, it wasnt long before customers were clamoring for more, with feedback to the effect of, This is great, but wed really love to get the gene expression information and the ATAC-seq information in the same cell. In September, 10X rolled out Chromium Single Cell ATAC + Gene Expression, which harvests both epigenetic and gene expression data from individual nuclei.

The platform tags mRNA and open chromatin fragments from each nucleus with DNA barcodes, DeMare explains, and the nucleic acids are then amplified and analyzed. You can begin to actually link which regulatory elements in the genome are turning on or off genes, she says. It costs approximately $2,400 per reaction for the reagents and a microfluidic chip.

Ansu Satpathy, an immunologist at Stanford University School of Medicine and a former postdoc of ATAC-seq codeveloper Howard Chang, tells The Scientist that hes using the new assay to investigate the effects of epigenetic changes associated with T cell exhaustion in tumor samples biopsied from cancer patients. When exhausted, T cells become less effective at battling cancer, and what were doing now with the RNA and ATAC method combined is asking, How do each of those molecular switches regulate genes that lead to this dysfunctional outcome in the cell? Satpathy says.

KAMDAR:"This approach allows, for the first time, the simultaneous profiling of the epigenome and transcriptome from the same single cell, enabling a better understanding of cell functionality."

Over the last several years, single-cell transcriptomics has provided a wealth of gene expression information for individual cells and cell types. Now, 10X Genomics advances the newer technology of spatial transcriptomics, which provides whole transcriptome data for just one or a few cells, and reveals exactly where in a tissue sample that gene expression is taking place. The Visium Spatial Gene Expression Solution, launched in October 2019, exposes 55-micrometer areas at 5,000 locations within a tissue sample to mRNA-binding oligonucleotides, and overlays the resulting gene expression data with histological images.

The technology was developed and originally marketed by Swedish company Spatial Transcriptomics, which 10X Genomics acquired in 2018. Then 10X developed the product further before launching Visium last year. The Visium Spatial Gene Expression Solution, which sells for $1,000 per sample, has smaller and more densely packed spotsand five times more of themthan it did when the company inherited it, says Nikhil Rao, 10X Genomicss director of strategic marketing for the spatial platform. This increases resolution, he explains. We also improved the sensitivity of the assay dramatically, being able to pick up tens of thousands of unique molecular identifiers per spot.

Rao says that many of Visiums users focus on neuroscience, studying neurodegenerative diseases, for example. But the product is also being used in developmental biology, oncology, and immunology. Johns Hopkins University computational biologist Elana Fertig has used Visium to understand how a cancer can resist treatment. By virtue of having the spatial information of these cells, you can really figure out the molecular mechanisms where they interact directly, because you can see if the cells are interacting physically, she explains.

MEAGHER: "This is another frontier in biology: not just single-cell or few-cell gene expression, but now collecting gene expression data with spatial resolution at the level of a few cells."

While CRISPR-based genome editing has become a widely used technique in labs all over the globe, there are research questions that require a scale of nucleotide tinkering that can be cumbersome, if not prohibitive, for some labs. Inscripta Inc.s Onyx Digital Genome Engineering Platform offers a solutionfully automated genome-engineered libraries with hundreds of thousands of single edits in microbial genomes. The benchtop device, which launched in October 2019 and sells for $347,000, allows users to plant desired variants in the DNA of E. coli bacteria and S. cerevisiae yeast, and the instrument takes care of the rest.

The platform combines everything from the algorithms for optimizing the editing process to the microfluidics for handling cells to the reagents themselves. Biologists dont have to worry about the technical optimization anymore and can go ahead and focus on any problem in biology now, says Nandini Krishnamurthy, the vice president of applications development at Inscripta.

Shelley Copley, a molecular biologist at the University of Colorado Boulder, is an early tester of Onyx. Shes using it to examine the effects of synonymous mutations, those that dont change the resulting protein, on fitness inE. coli. The high-throughput part of it is critical to be able to address this, she says. Rather than attempt to engineer each mutation she wants to examine one by one, Onyx enables Copley to generate all 50,000 variants. Her team can then move straight to the fitness assays. I dont know of any other technology that can do it.

KAMDAR:"CRISPR is a powerful tool for editing genomes and allowing functional assessments that can elucidate causality and improve our understanding of genome biology. But those outcomes will not be achieved without overcoming a number of the technical and scalability challenges. This is what the Onyx Digital Genome Engineering Platform enables."

John McLean, a bioanalytical chemist at Vanderbilt University, wants to know exactly whats in a puff of gas, down to a vaporized blood or tissue samples very last lipid molecule. For years, he has used mass spectrometry to catalog compounds in a sample by weight. Sometimes different molecules can have the same mass and the same atomic composition, making it hard to distinguish them. Ion mobility separation runs gas samples down meter-long tubes to differentiate molecules by shape and structure, getting around the mass issue. But because the technique was designed decades ago, it hasnt achieved the same resolution as mass spectrometry. To achieve a similar resolution, the ion separation instrument would need a 13-meter tube.

Making a linear tube that length is impractical due to constraints on lab space. So a few years ago, Richard Smith of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and colleagues began brainstorming ways to get ions to turn corners. That discussion led to the development of MOBILions SLIM, or Structures for Lossless Ion Manipulation, an instrument with a 13-meter track cut as switchbacks in two circuit boards that fit in a 3-meter-long box; the device provides data on the size and shape of compounds in samples in minutes. SLIM reveals the unseen, says Laura Maxon, MOBILions head of business development and corporate strategy, without the sacrifice of time. This first iteration of SLIM, which MOBILion began deploying as a Beta version to early adopter collaborators the second quarter of 2020, is built for scientists in a pharmaceutical or clinical research academic environment. The price is competitive with existing technologies, she notes, and the company plans to design the instrument for use in the clinic to identify biomarkers of disease.

What were seeing today, from MOBILion on SLIM, is just the tip of the iceberg, McLean says. Theres a lot of untapped potential . . . from an analytical standpoint, so people should really expect huge advances for these technologies.

BLAINEY: "Ion-selective chromatography is central to biochemistry. Nice integration of microelectronic technology with biotechnology. "

Paul Blainey

Associate professor of biological engineering at MIT and a core member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University. The Blainey lab integrates new microfluidic, optical, molecular, and computational tools for application in biology and medicine. The group emphasizes quantitative single-cell and single-molecule approaches, aiming to enable studies that generate data with the power to reveal the workings of natural and engineered biological systems across a range of scales. Blainey did not consider products submitted by 10X Genomics in his rankings due to his financial ties to the company.

Charmion Cruickshank-Quinn

Application scientist at Agilent Technologies.Previously, she was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Colorado Denver - Anschutz Medical Campus, a research fellow at National Jewish Health in Denver, and a graduate student at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where she worked in the instrument center.

Kim KamdarManaging partner at Domain Associates, a healthcare-focused venture fund creating and investing in biopharma, device, and diagnostic companies. She began her career as a scientist and pursued drug-discovery research at Novartis/Syngenta for nine years.

Robert Meagher

Principal member of Technical Staff at Sandia National Laboratories. His main research interest is the development of novel techniques and devices for nucleic acid analysis, particularly applied to problems in infectious disease, biodefense, and microbial communities. Most recently this has led to approaches for simplified molecular diagnostics for emerging viral pathogens which are suitable for use at the point-of-need or in the developing world. Meaghers comments represent his professional opinion but do not necessarily represent the views of the US Department of Energy or the United States government.

Editors Note: The judges considered dozens of entries submitted for a variety of life science products by companies and users. The judging panel evaluated submissions with only basic instructions fromThe Scientist, and its members were invited to participate based on their familiarity with life science tools and technologies. With the exception of Paul Blainey, who has financial ties to 10X Genomics and therefore did not consider that firm's products in his rankings, they have no financial ties to the products or companies involved in the competition. In this issue ofThe Scientist, any advertisements placed by winners named in this article were purchased after our independent judges selected the winning products and had no bearing on the outcome of the competition.

Corrections (December 1): The original version of this story stated that GigaGen's Surge platform captured antibodies from samples that came from plasma donors. They were, in fact, blood donors. Changes were also made to clarify the title of AbCellara's Maia Smith and the nature of Celium and collaborations surrounding the tool.The Scientistregrets these errors.

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2020 Top 10 Innovations - The Scientist

Global Regenerative Medicine Market to Rise Impressively at 26.1% CAGR and Hit USD 151,949.5 Million by 2026; Integra’s Latest Product Offerings to…

December 01, 2020 02:25 ET | Source: Fortune Business Insights

Pune, India, Dec. 01, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The global regenerative medicine market size is likely to expand considerably in the coming years due to growing applications in the treatment of chronic diseases. The market was valued at US$ 23,841.5 Million in 2018. Fortune Business Insights states that the market will reach US$ 151,949.5 Million by the end of 2026, thereby exhibiting a CAGR of 26.1%. North America generated maximum revenue of US$ 9,128.2 Million in 2018 and is expected to dominate the global regenerative medicine market throughout the forecast period. Due to presence of substantial number of key market players based in U.S., presence of research institutes involved in development of novel therapeutics and availability of advanced technologies are attributive to the high number of clinical trials in North America.

Key Industry Developments:

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Increasing Investment in R&D of Regenerative Medicine to Enable Growth

The growing investment in research and development of regenerative medicine has made a significant contribution to the growth of the global market. The increasing investment from private as well as government organizations has had a positive impact on the global market. IN March 2018, SanBio collaborated with Hitachi Chemical Advanced Therapeutics Solutions for developing regenerative medicine across a wide range of applications.

Novartis Receives EU Approval for Luxturna

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In 2018, Novartis received usage approval from the European Union for its latest regenerative medicine Luxturna. The drug was used to treat and restore sight for people with vision impairment. Luxturna was widely useful in treatment of rare retinal diseases.

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The advancements in regenerative medicine have fueled their demand across the world. Increasing product launches have contributed to the rising uptake of regenerative medicine across the world. In 2017, Integra LifeSciences announced the launch of Integra Dermal Regeneration Template Single Layer Thin.

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By Product

Cell Therapy

Gene Therapy

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Platelet Rich Plasma

By Application

Orthopedics

Wound Care

Oncology

Others

By Distribution Channel

Hospitals

Clinics

Others

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North America (USA and Canada)

Europe (UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia and Rest of Europe)

Asia Pacific (Japan, China, India, Australia, Southeast Asia and Rest of Asia Pacific)

Latin America (Brazil, Mexico and Rest of Latin America)

Middle East & Africa (South Africa, GCC and Rest of Middle East & Africa)

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Global Regenerative Medicine Market to Rise Impressively at 26.1% CAGR and Hit USD 151,949.5 Million by 2026; Integra's Latest Product Offerings to...

Precision Cancer Therapies Market Report 2020: Top Companies, Regions, Driving Force and Forecast 2026 – The Market Feed

The Precision Cancer Therapies Market grew in 2019, as compared to 2018, according to our report, Precision Cancer Therapies Market is likely to have subdued growth in 2020 due to weak demand on account of reduced industry spending post Covid-19 outbreak. Further, Precision Cancer Therapies Market will begin picking up momentum gradually from 2021 onwards and grow at a healthy CAGR between 2021-2025

Deep analysis about market status (2016-2019), competition pattern, advantages and disadvantages of products, industry development trends (2019-2025), regional industrial layout characteristics and macroeconomic policies, industrial policy has also been included. From raw materials to downstream buyers of this industry have been analysed scientifically. This report will help you to establish comprehensive overview of the Precision Cancer Therapies Market

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Key product type: Hormone Therapy Immunotherapies Targeted Therapy Monoclonal Antibody Therapy Gene Therapy

Key applications: Hospitals Diagnostic Centers Oncology Clinics Research Institutes

Key players or companies covered are: Abbott Laboratories Bayer HealthCare GlaxoSmithKline OncoGenex Pharmaceuticals Hospira Boehringer Ingelheim AstraZeneca Aveo Pharmaceuticals

The report provides analysis & data at a regional level (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa , Rest of the world) & Country level (13 key countries The U.S, Canada, Germany, France, UK, Italy, China, Japan, India, Middle East, Africa, South America)

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Key questions answered in the report: 1. What is the current size of the Precision Cancer Therapies Market, at a global, regional & country level? 2. How is the market segmented, who are the key end user segments? 3. What are the key drivers, challenges & trends that is likely to impact businesses in the Precision Cancer Therapies Market? 4. What is the likely market forecast & how will be Precision Cancer Therapies Market impacted? 5. What is the competitive landscape, who are the key players? 6. What are some of the recent M&A, PE / VC deals that have happened in the Precision Cancer Therapies Market?

The report also analysis the impact of COVID 19 based on a scenario-based modelling. This provides a clear view of how has COVID impacted the growth cycle & when is the likely recovery of the industry is expected to pre-covid levels.

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Hemophilia Treatment Market Research Report Forecast to 2029 (Includes Business Impact of COVID-19) – Cheshire Media

Trusted Business Insights answers what are the scenarios for growth and recovery and whether there will be any lasting structural impact from the unfolding crisis for the Hemophilia Treatment market.

Trusted Business Insights presents an updated and Latest Study on Hemophilia Treatment Market 2020-2029. The report contains market predictions related to market size, revenue, production, CAGR, Consumption, gross margin, price, and other substantial factors. While emphasizing the key driving and restraining forces for this market, the report also offers a complete study of the future trends and developments of the market.The report further elaborates on the micro and macroeconomic aspects including the socio-political landscape that is anticipated to shape the demand of the Hemophilia Treatment market during the forecast period (2020-2029). It also examines the role of the leading market players involved in the industry including their corporate overview, financial summary, and SWOT analysis.

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Abstract, Snapshot, Market Analysis & Market Definition: Hemophilia Treatment Market Industry / Sector Trends

Hemophilia Treatment Market size was valued USD 10.5 billion in 2018 and is expected to witness 5.0% CAGR from 2019 to 2025.

U.S. hemophilia treatment market, by disease, 2018 & 2025 (USD Million)

Growing prevalence of hemophilia across the globe will be one of the major market augmenting factors over the forthcoming years. As per the recent statistics published by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), hemophilia A affects around 1 in 5,000 live male births in the U.S. Majority of the people with hemophilia are diagnosed at a young age. According to the CDC data, average age of hemophilia diagnosis in the U.S. is 36 months for mild hemophilia, 8 months for moderate hemophilia and 1 month for severe hemophilia. Hence, rise in number of people suffering from hemophilia will enhance the hemophilia treatment market growth in the near future.

Rise in several government initiatives will augment the industry growth over the projection period. Organization including the World Hemophilia Organization along with governments of several countries carry out awareness and diagnosis programs. Government efforts to enhance public health and treat underprivileged people will result in boosting the hemophilia treatment market growth in the near future.

However, high cost of hemophilia medications will be one the major growth impeding factors. High investment, R&D, manufacturing and marketing of drugs by manufacturers is the reason for high cost of the products. High cost of products are unaffordable for the middle and lower income class families, thus resulting in restraining the business growth.

Market Segmentation, Outlook & Regional Insights: Hemophilia Treatment Market

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Disease

Germany hemophilia treatment market share, by disease, 2018

Hemophilia A treatment market was valued at USD 6,743.7 million in the year 2018. Hemophilia A is a common blood disorder and the prevalence rate is high in developing and underdeveloped regions. As per the recent statistics, around 19,000 people in India suffer from hemophilia and only 15% of the patients are registered. Increase in number of people suffering from hemophilia A and rise in awareness among the people regarding the treatment and medications of hemophilia will result in rise in demand and adoption rate of hemophilia drugs, fueling the business growth.

Hemophilia B treatment market is estimated to grow at 4.0% over the estimation period. As per a recent research article, the prevalence of hemophilia B is quite rare as compared to hemophilia A and the incidence of hemophilia B is around 1 in 30,000 in the U.S. Recent technological advancements has led to growing medications for hemophilia B treatment, hence resulting in boosting the segmental growth.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Product

Recombinant factor concentrates market was valued at USD 6,626.9 million in the year 2018. Rise in production of recombinant factor concentrates has provided growth opportunity to treat hemophilia and overcome limited availability of plasma-derived concentrates. Also, increased safety of replacement therapy with the help of recombinant factor concentrates has dramatically enhanced the quality of patient life. Increase in preference of recombinant factor concentrates in treatment of hemophilia will ultimately lead to augmenting the business growth over the forecast period.

Extended half-life products market is estimated to witness a robust growth of 5.3% over the forecast period. Recent research and development has led to the production of new factor concentrates that are efficient and need less frequent injections. The reason for fewer injections are due to the increased half-life of the product. Hence, recent technological advancements and new product launches will lead to increase in demand and adoption rate of extended half-life products, thereby fueling the business growth.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Patient

Hemophilia treatment in adults was valued at USD 6,778.1 million in the year 2018. As per a recent research article, around 65% of the people suffering from hemophilia are adults. In some of the adults mild hemophilia is diagnosed in the later stages of life. As the age of patients increases, the need for hemophilia care also increases. There are various possibilities of developing moderate to severe hemophilia in adults. Hence, growing age results in rise in chances of developing hemophilia in adults, thereby boosting the demand for hemophilia treatment in the near future.

Hemophilia treatment in pediatrics is projected to grow at 5.2% over the estimation period. Hemophilia is inherited diseases that are passed to children from gene located on X-chromosome. In approximately one third of children, no family history of hemophilia is found, and the disease occurs due to gene mutation. Children with hemophilia gene bruise easily, bleed more with surgeries and have frequent nose bleedings. According to the National Center for Biotechnology Information, severe form of factor deficiencies including hepatitis A and hepatitis B were diagnosed in the neonates with 52% and 68% of cases respectively. Hence, increase in prevalence of hemophilia in children will augment the hemophilia treatment market growth in the near future.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Treatment

Prophylaxis treatment market was valued at USD 7,219.9 million in the year 2018. Long-term prophylaxis treatment is considered as standard of care to prevent chronic arthropathy and joint bleeding in patients with severe hemophilia. As per a recent research, it was observed that the prophylaxis treatment for hemophilia was quite effective and slowed the progression of joint damage. Majority of patients and healthcare providers opt for prophylaxis treatment owing to its efficiency and better end results. Hence, increase in preference of prophylaxis treatment will further augment the business growth in the near future.

On demand treatment market is estimated to grow at 5.2% over the forthcoming years. People suffering from mild to moderate hemophilia are treated with on demand treatment to prevent bleeding. Children with severe hemophilia initially receive prophylactic therapy to prevent bleeding; however, after reaching adulthood, they switch to on-demand treatment for several reasons, such as strict work schedules, inconvenience of visiting doctors or going to a clinic several times a week, along with high expenditure related to continuous prophylactic therapy. Hence, the aforementioned reasons will be responsible for the market growth of on demand treatment segment.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Therapy

Factor replacement therapy market was valued at USD 9,574.2 million in the year 2018. As per the Medical and Scientific Advisory Council (MASAC) of National Hemophilia Foundation (NHF), the use of recombinant factor concentrates in children is quite effective as the recombinant factor does not contain actual human blood and cannot transmit harmful viruses including hepatitis. Hence, the use of factor replacement therapy is quite common due to direct infusion of clotting factors, resulting in boosting the segmental growth.

Non-factor replacement therapy is projected to show rapid growth of 38.3% over the estimation period. One of the challenging problems in the treatment of hemophilia is the development of alloantibodies against the infused factor concentrates. Development of inhibitors render the factor replacement therapy ineffective, leading to high risk of morbidity and mortality in patients. Also, there is growing interest in non-factor replacement therapy agents that act by inhibiting anticoagulant pathways or enhancing coagulation. Hence, introduction of new therapeutic agents in hemophilia treatment will enhance the business growth.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Drug Class

Coagulation factors market was valued at USD 9,948.3 million in the year 2018. Hemophilia is considered as hereditary blood disease with coagulation time. The use of coagulation factors is quite common and is used mostly in the replacement therapy. Absence or improper functioning of several clotting factors in the blood such as factors VIII, XI, etc. result in causing hemophilia. Hence, use of several clotting factors to replace the absent blood clotting factors will lead to boosting the hemophilia treatment market growth.

Vasopressin drug class market is estimated to grow at 6.0% in the near future. Patients suffering from mild hemophilia use vasopressin drugs for joint and muscle bleeds, bleeding in mucous membranes of nose and mouth and pre and post-surgery. Vasopressin drugs comes in injectable and nasal spray form and is comparatively easy to use. Hence, the aforementioned factors will be responsible for the market growth of vasopressin drug class.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By Route of Administration

Injectable route of administration for hemophilia treatment was valued at USD 9,629.3 million in the year 2018. Majority of the drugs and factor concentrate products are intravenously given to patients for better and quick results. Intravenous route of administration helps the medications to directly interact with the blood. Hence, majority of healthcare providers opt for injectable or intravenous route of drug administration to treat hemophilia for better and quick results, hence boosting the market growth.

Nasal spray or intra nasal route of administration will grow at 6.0% over the forecast period. Drugs including vasopressin are required to be taken by patients for joint and muscle bleeds, and bleeding in mucous membranes of nose and mouth. Several advantages offered by nasal spray such as ease of use and user convenience will result in growing demand, thereby fueling the business growth.

Hemophilia Treatment Market, By End-use

Hemophilia treatment centers as end-use was valued at USD 4,134.6 million in the year 2018. A substantial proportion of hemophilia treatment is carried out in such centers. During the forecast period, the hemophilia treatment center end-use market segment will continue to lead, owing to rising number of special care provided and peoples increased preference for these centers over other healthcare settings.

Clinics as end-use is estimated to grow at 5.3% in the near future. Clinics provide fast-track treatment and infusion of factor concentrates to patients. Also, immediate and short-time treatment provided during the daytime to people with busy and hectic work schedule will enhance business growth in the near future.

Hemophilia treatment Market, By Region

Europe hemophilia treatment market, by country, 2025 (USD Million)

U.S. dominated the North America hemophilia treatment market and was valued at USD 3,539.3 million in the year 2018. As per the Hemophilia Federation of America, hemophilia A affects around 1 in 5,000 people in the U.S. and approximately 400 new-borns are diagnosed with hemophilia every year. Also, presence of favorable reimbursement and insurance in the country will result in growing demand and adoption rate of hemophilia medications, expanding the hemophilia treatment market growth in the country.

India hemophilia treatment market is projected to grow at 9.2% over the estimation period. Various government initiatives has helped in building necessary infrastructure, empower healthcare providers and patients to self-administer treatment at home, hence helping patients achieve a better quality of life. Recent technological advancements, rise in awareness among people, new product launches and government initiatives will augment the business growth over the forecast period.

Key Players, Recent Developments & Sector Viewpoints: Hemophilia Treatment Market

Major industry players involved in the hemophilia treatment market include Swedish Orphan Biovitrum AB, Sanofi SA, Pfizer, Novo Nordisk, Genentech, CSL Behring, Biogen, among other market players. These players have implemented several strategic initiatives such as collaborations, merger and acquisitions, new product launches and partnerships that have enhanced their financial stability, helped them evolve as major industrial players and gain strong market position.

Hemophilia Treatment Industry Viewpoint

Hemophilia has been an extremely old and critical disease that the global population has been facing. People in ancient times have written and articulated about bleeding problems. Some of the bleeding problems identified have been different as compared to others. But little they knew about blood clots and the disease caused by their deficiency. Until before World War II, doctors learned about hemophilia A and its cause due to deficiency of factor VIII. Several other blood factors were recognized later on and Roman numeral names were given to avoid confusion. Hemophilia research has come a long way with scientists discovering human blood in different groups, hence helping blood transfusions to be more successful. In 1960s, Dr. Judith Pool discovered a procedure to freeze and thaw plasma to get a layer of factor-rich plasma called as cryoprecipitate. Use of cryoprecipitate was the best way of stopping hemophilia bleeding. Later on, the greatest breakthrough that came in hemophilia treatment was the development and introduction of factor concentrates. These clotting factors can be freeze-dried to a powder that can be easily stored and consumed. With the help of these factor concentrates, people suffering from hemophilia can be treated quickly with maximum efficiency. Also, factor concentrates have helped people treat their bleedings at home or at work, resulting in people to lead normal lives. Also, development and introduction of new medications and technologies such as non-factor replacement therapy, extended half-life products, gene therapy, etc. will augment the growth of hemophilia treatment market growth in the near future.

Key Insights Covered: Exhaustive Hemophilia Treatment Market

1. Market size (sales, revenue and growth rate) of Hemophilia Treatment industry.

2. Global major manufacturers operating situation (sales, revenue, growth rate and gross margin) of Hemophilia Treatment industry.

3. SWOT analysis, New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis, Upstream raw materials and manufacturing equipment & Industry chain analysis of Hemophilia Treatment industry.

4. Market size (sales, revenue) forecast by regions and countries from 2019 to 2025 of Hemophilia Treatment industry.

Research Methodology: Hemophilia Treatment Market

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Development of New Stem Cell Type May Lead to Advances In Regenerative Medicine – Newswise

Newswise DALLAS Dec. 3, 2020 A team led by UT Southwestern has derived a new intermediate embryonic stem cell type from multiple species that can contribute to chimeras and create precursors to sperm and eggs in a culture dish.

The findings, published online this week in Cell Stem Cell, could lead to a host of advances in basic biology, regenerative medicine, and reproductive technology.

Cells in early embryos have a range of distinct pluripotency programs, all of which endow the cells to create various tissue types in the body, explains study leader Jun Wu, Ph.D., assistant professor of molecular biology. A wealth of previous research has focused on developing and characterizing nave embryonic stem cells (those about four days post-fertilization in mice) and primed epiblast stem cells (about seven days post-fertilization in mice, shortly after the embryo implants into the uterus).

However, says Wu, theres been little progress in deriving and characterizing pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) that exist between these two stages largely because researchers have not been able to develop a paradigm for maintaining cells in this intermediate state. Cells in this state have been thought to possess unique properties: the ability to contribute to intraspecies chimeras (organisms that contain a mix of cells from different individuals of the same species) or interspecies chimeras (organisms that contain a mix of cells from different species) and the ability to differentiate into primordial germ cells in culture, the precursors to sperm and eggs.

For this study, the researchers successfully created intermediate PSCs, which they named XPSCs from mice, horses, and humans.

Wu says that these results could eventually lead to an array of advances in both basic and applied research. For example, looking at gene activity in XPSCs from different species and interspecies chimeras could help researchers understand which signatures have been conserved through evolution. Examining the communication between cells in chimeras may help scientists identify strategies that could be used to accelerate the development of tissues and organs from stem cells used for transplantation. And using chimera-derived primordial germ cells to create sperm and eggs could aid in preserving endangered animal species and advancing infertility treatments.

These XPSCs have enormous potential. Our study helps open the door to each of these possibilities, says Wu, who is a Virginia Murchison Linthicum Scholar in Medical Research.

Wu notes that developing XPSCs presented a special challenge because the conditions that keep nave PSCs in a stable state are exactly the opposite from those that stabilize primed PSCs. While culture conditions for nave PSCs must activate a WNT cell-signaling pathway and suppress the FGF and TGF- pathways, the conditions to maintain primed PSCs must suppress WNT and activate FGF and TGF-.

Aiming for the preferred environment for XPSC derivation, Wu and his colleagues placed cells from early mouse embryos into cultures containing chemicals and growth factors that activate all three pathways. These lab-grown cells were extremely stable in culture and able to multiply without developing any further for approximately two years.

Additional experiments showed that these cells met the expectations researchers have long strived to meet of contributing to chimeras and directly differentiating into primordial germ cells. Wu and his colleagues made intraspecies chimeras of mice using cells derived from mice with different coat colors by injecting the cells into early mouse embryos. They also tracked the contributions of the XPSCs by tagging the cells with a fluorescent protein and then identifying them throughout the resulting offsprings body.

Wus team made interspecies chimeras by injecting horse XPSCs into early mouse embryos and allowing the embryos to develop in mice for several days. Surprisingly, although horses have a comparatively long gestational period nearly a year the researchers found that these foreign cells had contributed to mouse organ development, indicating that signals from the mouse cells determine organ developmental timelines.

Like XPSCs from other species, the human cells showed that they were capable of differentiating into a variety of tissues if culture conditions allowed them to progress in development, as well as directly form primordial germ cells in a dish.

Other UTSW researchers who contributed to this study include Leqian Yu, Yulei Wei, Carlos A. Pinzon Arteaga, Masahiro Sakurai, Daniel A. Schmitz, Canbin Zheng, and Emily D. Ballard. Yu and Wu are inventors on a patent application arising from this work.

This study was funded by the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT No. RR170076), the Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine, the Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Genome Read and Write (No. 2017B030301011), and the Asahi Glass Foundation.

About UTSouthwestern Medical Center

UTSouthwestern, one of the premier academic medical centers in the nation, integrates pioneering biomedical research with exceptional clinical care and education. The institutions faculty has received six Nobel Prizes, and includes 23 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 17 members of the National Academy of Medicine, and 13 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators. The full-time faculty of more than 2,500 is responsible for groundbreaking medical advances and is committed to translating science-driven research quickly to new clinical treatments. UTSouthwestern physicians provide care in about 80 specialties to more than 105,000 hospitalized patients, nearly 370,000 emergency room cases, and oversee approximately 3 million outpatient visits a year.

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Development of New Stem Cell Type May Lead to Advances In Regenerative Medicine - Newswise

UCLA receives $7.3 million grant to build state-of-the-art facility for developing gene, cell therapies – UCLA Newsroom

UCLA Health

The new 13,000-square-foot facility will be located in UCLAs Center for the Health Sciences.

UCLA has received a $7.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to build a state-of-the-art facility in which to produce gene and cell therapies aimed at treating a host of illnesses and conditions.

The new 13,000-square-foot facility, to be constructed in UCLAs Center for the Health Sciences, will provide a highly regulated environment with features such as systems to manage air flow and filtering, laboratory spaces and bioreactors. The new facility is expected to be ready for use in 2023.

This grant provides critical funds to build a facility that will enable the development of a new generation of cellular therapies for cancer and other deadly diseases, said Dr. AntoniRibas, a UCLA professor of medicine and director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy Center at UCLA.

The new facility will be built according to U.S. Food and Drug Administrationgood manufacturing practices, a set of guidelines intended to ensure that facilities producing products for human use are built to maximize safety and effectiveness, and to reduce the risk for contamination.

It will replace a facility in UCLAs Factor Building that UCLA scientists currently use for similar research. But that space, which was put together by combining existing research laboratories, lacks the capacity to process certain cells and handle other bioengineered products, and it cannot accommodate the growing number of UCLA scientists pursuing research on gene and cell therapies, said Dr. Stephen Smale, vice dean for research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and principal investigator of the NIH grant.

The new facility will be larger, so it will be able to support more projects simultaneously, and its design will allow a smooth flow of products into and out of the facility, Smale said. The larger number of rooms is really important because even when a single therapy is being tested, cells from each patient need to be processed in their own room.

Dr. Eric Esrailian, chief of theUCLA Vatche and Tamar Manoukian Division of Digestive Diseases, is helping to lead the expansion of UCLAs immunology and immunotherapy efforts. It will be a cornerstone for UCLAs commitments to building on existing strengths in the areas of immunology and immunotherapy and expanding toward the creation of a transformational institute in these fields, he said.

Despite the shortcomings of the current space, UCLA researchers have still produced groundbreaking work in it. These include tumor-targeting therapies developed by Ribas, Dr. Donald Kohn, Dr. Linda Liau, and other UCLA researchers.

Ribas, Kohn and Liau are also members of theUCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Centerand theUCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center. Kohn is a distinguished professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics and Liau is chair of UCLAs department of neurosurgery.

Kohn, who alsodeveloped a cure for bubble baby syndrome,said he will welcome the new facility because of its increased capacity for researchers to pursue treatments and cures that could significantly improve the health and quality of life of so many people. For instance, it will have the capacity to produce large batches of viral vectors microbes that make it possible to introduce potentially curative genes into cells for gene therapy studies.

This new facility will allow the innovative cell and gene therapies pioneered at UCLA to be available to a wider number of patients and accelerate the development of novel cures, said Kohn, whose work has also led to an experimental stem cell gene therapy for sickle cell disease that is showing promising early results in clinical trials.

Liau, a neuro-oncologist, said the new facility will enable researchers to create personalized vaccines and cell therapies for a much larger number of patients.

In the current facility, we are only able to enroll one patient at a time in our cell therapy trials, so many eligible patients have had to be turned away, Liau said.With greater capacity to manufacture gene and cell therapy products that meet FDA good manufacturing practice standards, this new UCLA facility will really allow us to further innovate and accelerate our translational research toward a cure for brain cancer.

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UCLA receives $7.3 million grant to build state-of-the-art facility for developing gene, cell therapies - UCLA Newsroom

Possible Role for Comprehensive Molecular ProfilingBased Treatment Selection in Newly Diagnosed AML, Study Suggests – Cancer Therapy Advisor

The feasibility of a precision medicinebased approach was demonstrated for patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML), according to findings from a phase 1/2 clinical trial reported in Nature Medicine.

The current standard of care for the treatment of patients diagnosed with AML involves prompt initiation of intensive induction chemotherapy, such as 7 days of standard-dose cytarabine and 3 days of daunorubicin, or administration of a hypomethylating agent for those deemed unable to tolerate standard induction therapy, to prevent rapid progression of disease in this predominantly older patient population.

Hence, time for comprehensive molecular characterization of the disease is not built into typical treatment protocols for patients with newly diagnosed AML. However, long-term outcomes of patients with newly diagnosed AML treated with intensive chemotherapy without autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation have been shown to be poor, and hypomethylating agents are not a curative approach in the setting of AML.

This nonrandomized, open-label, multicenter, umbrella protocol study sponsored by the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (BEAT AML Master Trial; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03013998) enrolled adult patients with suspected AML prior to the administration of frontline treatment.

During a 7-day period prior to treatment assignment, bone marrow biopsy specimens of eligible patients were subjected to cytogenetic analysis, comprehensive molecular profiling using next-generation sequencing, and a FLT3-ITD ratio testing. On the basis of these results, patients with a dominant AML clone characterized by an actionable alteration were assigned to 1 of multiple molecularly defined substudy treatment arms, whereas those without evidence of such an alteration were assigned to the marker-negative subgroup.

In describing the purpose of this study, the investigators stated that they collaboratively implemented a new prospective clinical trial approach aimed at facilitating frontline treatment assignments to specific genomic-defined AML subtypes.

Of the 395 eligible patients, approximately 95% were assigned to treatment within 7 days of bone marrow biopsy collection. Of note, only 26 of these patients exhibited evidence of rapid disease progression necessitating initiation of therapy during the 7-day testing window.

The most common mutational drivers identified were DNMT3A (22.7%), TET2 (19.6%), TP53 (19.1%), ASXL1 (19.1%) and SRSF2 (18.4%).

Regarding molecularly based treatment assignment, the study authors commented that these data show that there were few co-occurring dominant mutations that could have been used for an alternative therapeutic assignment.

Only 224 (56.7%) of patients agreed to receive treatment according to their assigned BEAT AML substudy treatment arm, with 103, 28, and 38 patients selecting standard-of-care treatment, alternative investigational therapy, and palliative care, respectively.

Patients were encouraged to select an alternative therapy (alternative investigational therapy, [standard of care] or palliative care) if the patient with their health-care providers deemed this a better option, the study investigators noted.

A key finding from this study was the 30-day mortality of patients starting at initial study enrollment was 3.7% for patients enrolled on the BEAT AML trial protocol and 20.4% for those who choose to receive standard-of-care therapy.

Furthermore, rates of 1-year overall survival were 54.7%, 27.6%, 11%, and 57.4% for patients treated on the BEAT AML protocol, or with standard-of-care therapy, palliative care, and alternative investigational therapy, respectively.

However, the study investigators noted that while our study demonstrates the feasibility of precise molecular treatment assignment in older adults with AML, it does not clearly differentiate the benefit of treatment assignment based on a molecular target from better outcome that occurs simply from enrolling on a clinical trial.

They also emphasized that this approach requires a detailed team-coordinated effort by investigators, patients and caregivers, genomic laboratories, cytogenetic laboratories and a central treatment assignment team.

In their concluding remarks, the researchers commented that randomization of specific large genomic groups to targeted therapy versus [standard of care] or, in less common genomic groups, comparison of treatment with targeted therapy to either real-world data or synthetic controls, will be required to determine the comparative effectiveness of a precision medicine-based approach vs standard-of-care therapy in patients with newly diagnosed AML.

Reference

Burd A, Levine RL, Ruppert AS, et al. Precision medicine treatment in acute myeloid leukemia using prospective genomic profiling: feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the Beat AML Master Trial. Nat Med. Published online October 26, 2020. doi:10.1038/s41591-020-1089-8

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Possible Role for Comprehensive Molecular ProfilingBased Treatment Selection in Newly Diagnosed AML, Study Suggests - Cancer Therapy Advisor

Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market in Global : Current and the Future Trends: Astellas Pharma Inc/ Ocata Therapeutics, Stemcell Technologies Inc – The…

A new report added by Big Market Research claims that the globalHuman Embryonic Stem Cells marketgrowth is set to reach newer heights during the forecast period,2020-2026.

This report is meticulous research formulated by market professionals by deeply analyzing key driving and restraining factors, major regional market situations, major players, and size & scope of the market. The report also offers value chain analysis, Porters Five Forces model, and PEST analysis. Furthermore, the competitive landscape in different regions is elucidated in the report to assist top market players, new entrants, and investors determine investment opportunities.

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The report also explains the factors boosting the market growth. The major drivers of the Human Embryonic Stem Cells market are:

Astellas Pharma Inc/ Ocata Therapeutics, Stemcell Technologies Inc., Biotime, Inc. / Cell Cure Neurosciences LTD, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., CellGenix GmbH, ESI BIO, PromoCell GmbH, Lonza Group AG, Kite Pharma, Cynata Therapeutics Ltd. ,

In addition, the research report provides a comprehensive analysis of the key segments of the Human Embryonic Stem Cells market. An outline of each market segment such as type, application, and region are also provided in the report.

By Application: Regenerative Medicine, Stem Cell Biology Research, Tissue Engineering, Toxicology Testing

On the basis of region, the market is evaluated across:

North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico, etc.)

Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, India, Korea, Australia, Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand, etc.)

Europe (Germany, UK, France, Italy, Russia, Spain, etc.)

Middle East & Africa (Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, Nigeria, UAE, Israel, South Africa, etc.)

South America (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela, Peru, etc.)

The report outlines company profiles, product specifications and capacity, production value, and 2020-2026 market shares of key players active in the market. Moreover, the research presents the performance and recent developments of the foremost players functioning in the market. The insights delivered in the report are valuable for individuals or companies interested in investing in the Human Embryonic Stem Cells industry. These insights might help market players in devising effective business strategies and taking the required steps to obtain a leadership position in the industry.

Shareholders, stakeholders, product managers, marketing officials, investors, and other professionals in search of detailed data on supply, demand, and future predictions of the Human Embryonic Stem Cells market would find the report beneficial. Furthermore, we endeavor to deliver a customized report to fulfill the special requirements of our clients, on-demand.

Research Objective

To analyze and forecast the market size of global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market.

To classify and forecast global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market based on product, sources, application.

To identify drivers and challenges for global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market.

To examine competitive developments such as mergers & acquisitions, agreements, collaborations and partnerships, etc., in global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market.

To conduct pricing analysis for global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market.

To identify and analyze the profile of leading players operating in global Human Embryonic Stem Cells market.

The report is useful in providing answers to several critical questions that are important for the industry stakeholders such as manufacturers and partners, end users, etc., besides allowing them in strategizing investments and capitalizing on market opportunities. Key target audience are:

Manufacturers of Human Embryonic Stem Cells

Raw material suppliers

Market research and consulting firms

Government bodies such as regulating authorities and policy makers

Organizations, forums and alliances related to Human Embryonic Stem Cells

Highlights following key factors:

:- Business description A detailed description of the companys operations and business divisions. :- Corporate strategy Analysts summarization of the companys business strategy. :- SWOT Analysis A detailed analysis of the companys strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats. :- Company history Progression of key events associated with the company. :- Major products and services A list of major products, services and brands of the company. :- Key competitors A list of key competitors to the company. :- Important locations and subsidiaries A list and contact details of key locations and subsidiaries of the company. :- Detailed financial ratios for the past five years The latest financial ratios derived from the annual financial statements published by the company with 5 years history.

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Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Executive Summary

Chapter 2. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market Definition and Scope

Chapter 3. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market Dynamics

Chapter 4. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market: Industry Analysis

Chapter 5. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market, by Method

Chapter 6. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market, by Style

Chapter 7. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market, by Application

Chapter 8. Global Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market, Regional Analysis

Chapter 9. Competitive Intelligence

Chapter 10. Research Process

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Hydraulic Cylinder Market: Key Players, Growth, Analysis, 2019-2026

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Human Embryonic Stem Cells Market in Global : Current and the Future Trends: Astellas Pharma Inc/ Ocata Therapeutics, Stemcell Technologies Inc - The...

4D hires a trio of area heads as it ramps up its gene therapy pipeline – FierceBiotech

4D Molecular Therapeutics raised $75 million in June to get several gene therapy programs into and through the clinic. Now, its adding a trio of executives to spearhead its work in heart, eye and lung diseases as it looks to shepherd treatments in those focus areas forward.

Robert Fishman, M.D. becomes 4Ds chief medical officer and therapeutic area head for pulmonology. He joins from Xoc Pharmaceuticals, where as chief medical officer he led phase 1 development for programs in Parkinsons disease and migraine. Before that, he headed clinical development at InterMune, overseeing the pivotal trial of Esbriet, an idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis drug now marketed by Roche.

GenScript ProBio is the bio-pharmaceutical CDMO segment of the worlds leading biotech company GenScript, proactively providing end-to-end service from drug discovery to commercialization with professional solutions and efficient processes to accelerate drug development for customers.

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Raphael Schiffmann, M.D., signs on as senior vice president and therapeutic area head for 4Ds cardiology stable. He was previously director of the Institute of Metabolic Disease at the Baylor Research Institute and the lead investigator of the developmental and metabolic neurology branch at the NIHs National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Robert Kim, M.D., joins 4D as a senior vice president and clinical therapeutic area head of ophthalmology. Hes held multiple chief medical officer roles at ViewPoint Therapeutics, Apellis Pharma and Vision Medicines, and earlier in his career worked in ophthalmology at GlaxoSmithKline, Genentech and Novartis.

The three executives arrive six months after 4D topped up its coffers with a $75 million series C round. The capital, which came two years after a $90 million B round, was earmarked to push three programs into the clinic, including two that are partnered with Roche.

Those programs include 4D-310, a treatment for Fabry disease in which patients cells accumulate a type of fat called globotriaosylceramide, and 4D-125, a treatment for the eye disease X-linked retinitis pigmentosa. Roche has the exclusive right to develop and commercialize the latter. Roche has licensed the third prospect, 4D-110, a treatment for a type of vision loss called choroideremia.

RELATED: 4D raises $90M to move gene therapies into clinical testing with AstraZeneca and Roche

The funds will also bankroll the development of 4Ds preclinical pipeline, including IND-enabling studies for 4D-710, a program in cystic fibrosis, and other candidates for neuromuscular diseases and ophthalmology.

With the addition of Robert Fishman, Raphael Schiffmann and Robert Kim to our clinical R&D leadership team, 4DMT gains not only extensive experience in clinical development and translational medicine, but also unique and specific experience within each of the initial 4DMT therapeutic areas," said 4D CEO David Kim, M.D., in a statement.

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4D hires a trio of area heads as it ramps up its gene therapy pipeline - FierceBiotech

Nobel Prize history from the year you were born – Herald & Review

Nobel Prize history from the year you were born

Since 1901, Nobel Prizes have honored the worlds best and brightest and showcased the work of brilliant and creative minds, thanks to Swedish businessman Alfred Nobel, who made his fortune with the invention of dynamite.

The Prize in Physiology or Medicine often honors those whose discoveries led to medical breakthroughs, new drug treatments, or a better understanding of the human body that benefit us all.

The Prize in Literature celebrates those skilled in telling stories, creating poetry, and translating the human experience into words. The Prizes in Chemistry and Physics remind most of us how little we understand of genetics, atomic structures, or the universe around us, celebrating the scientists who further knowledge. A later addition to the award roster, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is not an original Prize, but was established by the Central Bank of Sweden in 1968 as a memorial to Alfred Nobel. It applauds those who can unravel the mysteries of markets, trade, and money.

The Peace Prize celebrates, in Nobels words, the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses, sometimes risking their lives to do so.

So precious are the awards that the medals of German physicists Max von Laue and James Franck, stored away for safekeeping in Copenhagen during World War II, were dissolved in acid to keep them away from approaching Nazi troops. After the war, the gold was reconstituted from the acid and recast into new medals.

But Nobel history has not been entirely noble. In 1939, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, known for his policy of appeasement toward Nazi Germany, was nominated for the Peace Prize. In an act of irony and protest, members of the Swedish Parliament nominated Adolf Hitler. That nomination was withdrawn. Some recipients have ordered oppressive crackdowns on their own people or ignored genocides, either before or after receiving the Prize. The 1918 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was given to Germanys Fritz Haber, who invented a method of producing ammonia on a large scale, which was helpful in making fertilizer. But the same chemist helped develop the chlorine gas that was used as a chemical weapon in World War I.

Stacker looked at facts and events related to the Nobel Prizes each year from 1931 to 2020, drawing from the Nobel Committees recollections and announcements, news stories, and historical accounts.

Take a look, and see what was happening with the Nobel Prizes the year you were born.

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Erik Axel Karlfeldt was the first Nobel winner to be awarded posthumously. The Swedish poet was alive during the nomination and deliberation process but died six months before the Literature Prize was announced. As of 1974, the rules were changed so that awards can only be given posthumously if the winner dies after the announcement but before the formal award is bestowed.

John Galsworthy, author of The Forsyte Saga, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. The chronicle of English life became a hugely popular miniseries in 1967 on American public television.

Ivan Bunin, the first Russian writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, departed Russia after the 1917 revolution and settled in France as a permanent exile. His books were banned by Soviet authorities due to his anti-Bolshevik writing. To accept his Nobel Prize in Stockholm, Bunin had to travel through Germany, where he was arrested by the Nazis and falsely accused of smuggling jewels. The Nazis forced him to drink a bottle of castor oil before letting him go.

Three Americans shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their research into anemia, when the bodys red blood cell count is low. George Whipple found dogs formed new blood cells by eating diets of liver, kidney, meat, and apricots, and George Minot and William Murphy applied those findings to humans with pernicious anemia. They also delved into the cause of pernicious anemia: a shortage of vitamin B12.

The 1935 Peace Prize was awarded to Carl von Ossietzky, a journalist and critic of Nazi Germany who was being held in a concentration camp. Hitler would not allow him to accept the prize. He died in 1938 in a prison hospital. Also in 1935, married couple Frdric Joliot and Irne Joliot-Curie won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Joliot-Curie was the daughter of Marie Curie and Pierre Curie, also Nobel Prize winners.

The Norwegian royal family chose not to attend the Nobel ceremony following the controversial choice of German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky to win the Peace Prize. Critics said the prize decision would provoke Germany. The royal family offered no official explanation for skipping the ceremony, but it was widely believed that Norway wanted to distance itself from the prize selection.

American physicist Clinton Davisson won the Nobel Prize partly by accident. When he was testing the hypothetical relation between particle velocity and wavelength, he bombarded a nickel block with electrons and measured how they scattered. But when the nickel was baked at high heat after accidental contamination, the structure of its atoms changed, as did the patterns of the electrons, proving the hypothesis.

No Nobel prizes were awarded in 1940 due to World War II. Norway was occupied by German forces, and Adolf Hitler was angry about the 1936 Peace Prize awarded to Carl von Ossietzky, a journalist who disclosed that Germany had been secretly rearming, a violation of the Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I. Ossietzky was tried and convicted of treason.

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Not only were no Nobel Prizes awarded while the world was locked in war, but a significant brain drain was underway that would see Europe lose many of its brilliant thinkers. By 1941, a dozen Nobel-winning scientists had left for England and the United States, including physicists Niels Bohr, a winner in 1922, Albert Einstein, who won in 1921, and Enrico Fermi, who won in 1938.

Ralph Bunche was principal secretary of the United Nations Palestine Commission when he was awarded the Peace Prize for his role in mediating the 1949 cease-fires between Israel and Arab states after the partition of Palestine. Bunche, an academic and U.S. State Department advisor, was the first Black person to receive a Nobel Prize.

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The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was established in 1968 by Sveriges Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden. It was created to mark the banks 300th anniversary. The first recipients would be awarded in 1969.

The first Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was shared by Norwegian economist Ragnar Frisch and Dutch economist Jan Tinbergen, who helped develop the study of economics based upon mathematics. Tinbergen created a model of macroeconomics, placing economic variables in mathematical relationships to each other. His younger brother, Nikolaas Tinbergen, was one of three scientists awarded the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their studies of animal behavior, particularly how animals communicate and care for their young.

Swedens Ulf von Euler discovered the bodys neurotransmitter norepinephrine, which is involved in the fight-or-flight process, and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. His father, Hans von Euler-Chelpin, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1929 for his research in the fermentation of sugar and the enzymes involved in the process.

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Physicist Dennis Gabor won the Nobel Prize in Physics for inventing the holograph, and German Chancellor Willy Brandt won the Peace Prize for helping ease relations between East and West Germany. Under his administration, West Germany signed a nuclear weapons non-proliferation treaty, reached a nonviolence deal with the Soviet Union, and laid the groundwork for making family visits easier in the divided city of Berlin.

In awarding the Prize in Literature, the Nobel Committee honored German writer Heinrich Bll, saying his a broad perspective on his time and a sensitive skill in characterization has contributed to a renewal of German literature." After World War II, Bll was part of the Gruppe 47, a number of influential writers who would meet over the course of three decades as they dealt with the wars destruction and the aftermath of the Holocaust.

In a controversial decision, the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded jointly to U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam for the Vietnam ceasefire negotiations. But the North Vietnamese leader refused to accept the prize, on grounds that the war was ongoing and the United States violated terms of the agreement. Kissinger did not travel to Norway to accept the prize and said he wanted to return it but was told he could not do so.

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Snchez is credited for his leadership in encouraging five presidents in Central America to sign a peace agreement ending the regions civil wars. The peace plan signed by Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua called for human rights safeguards, free elections, and an end to interference by other countries.

The winners of the Prize in Physiology or Medicine brought relief to millions with their drug discoveries. The work of Sir James Black led to the use of receptor-blocking drugs to treat heart disease, hypertension, and peptic ulcers, and collaborators Gertrude Elion and George Hitchings made discoveries that led to drugs for the treatment of leukemia, malaria, gout, and herpes virus infections.

Myanmars human rights activist Aung San Suu Kyi was under house arrest when she was awarded the Peace Prize. In 2015 she was released and elected to national office, but she has come under strong criticism for her countrys treatment of its Muslim Rohingya minority and its possible genocide. Calls were made for her Nobel Prize to be revoked, but the head of the Nobel Foundation said it would not be withdrawn for events that took place after it was awarded.

South Africa took the spotlight when the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Nelson Mandela and Frederik Willem de Klerk for their roles in ending the apartheid system of racial separation. Mandela was imprisoned 27 years for his political activism, and de Klerk, the president of South Africa, released him in 1990. They went on to work together to end apartheid and design a new constitution that allowed universal voting rights, regardless of race.

American John Nash was one of three winners of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on game theory. Nashs struggle with schizophrenia was portrayed in the 2001 Academy Award-winning film A Beautiful Mind, starring Russell Crowe as the Princeton-educated mathematician. His work, which became known as the Nash equilibrium, is used in understanding the processes of chance and decision-making.

Joseph Rotblat, a physicist and longtime opponent of nuclear weapon development, won the Nobel Peace Prize 50 years after atom bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He withdrew in 1943 from the Manhattan Project, which was producing nuclear weapons. He worked with the anti-nuclear Pugwash movement, a series of conferences with which he shared the Peace Prize.

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Southeast Asias East Timor was highlighted when the Peace Prize was awarded to Carlos Belo and Jos Ramos-Horta. Ramos-Horta was a leader of resistance in East Timor to the occupation by Indonesia and helped build international support for self-determination, and Belo, a Roman Catholic bishop, demanded the United Nations and the United Nations Commission on Human Rights take notice. The Peace Prize is considered a major factor in East Timor achieving independence in 2002.

Citing the more than 100 million anti-personnel landmines estimated to be strewn around the world, the Nobel Committee gave the Peace Prize to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines and to its coordinator Jody Williams for their accomplishments in banning and clearing mines. Their work culminated in the United Nations Mine Ban Convention, adopted in 1997, that prohibited the stockpiling and use of landmines and required countries to clear mines.

Two political leadersDavid Trimble and John Humein Northern Ireland shared the Peace Prize for helping bring about the Good Friday Agreement that laid out plans for governance of Northern Ireland. Key to the agreement were the Protestant Ulster Unionist Party, led by Trimble, and the Catholic Social Democratic and Labour Party, led by Hume.

The Nobel Committee applauded Mdecins Sans Frontires, known as Doctors without Borders in English, for its extensive humanitarian work across several continents. It said the organization maintained a high degree of independence, helped build public opinion in opposition to humanitarian abuses, and helped forge contacts between sides in conflicts.

Understanding our relation to money earned the Nobel Prize for two American economists. James Heckman researched factors that affect statistical sampling, and his findings have been used to understand how early life experiences influence earnings potential and economic status. Daniel McFadden studied how people make decisions, developing so-called discrete choice models that can explain and predict behavior and are applied to such real-life uses as public transportation systems and senior housing.

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Americans George Akerlof, Michael Spence, and Joseph Stiglitz were awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics for their work on markets with asymmetric informationmarkets in which one side has better information than the other. Akerlof looked at the consequences of such markets in areas like developing world lending and medical insurance, Spence demonstrated how market participants convey information, and Stiglitz showed how asymmetric markets work in areas like unemployment and credit.

Jimmy Carter was commended for decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development. The Committee cited his foreign policy achievements including the Panama Canal treaties, Camp David Middle Eastern accord, and SALT II treaty with the Soviet Union as well as his founding afterward of The Carter Center, which specialized in international conflict mediation and election monitoring.

The creators of magnetic resonance imagining, or MRI, took home the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Paul Lauterbur of the United States and Britains Sir Peter Mansfield researched the behavior of atoms and molecules in a magnetic field to develop interior imagery of the human body.

Wangari Maathai, the first female professor in Kenya, became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Already active in the nations democratic movement, Maathai launched a grassroots movement that mobilized women to plant trees to fight deforestation. Called the Green Belt Movement, it spread elsewhere in Africa and led to the planting of more than 30 million trees.

Winners of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Australians J. Robin Warren and Barry Marshall discovered the bacterium that causes gastritis and peptic ulcer disease. Their discovery ran counter to the commonly held belief that peptic ulcer disease was caused by lifestyle and stress. The revelation influenced research into the causes of other chronic inflammatory conditions and the links between chronic infection, inflammation, and cancer.

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The winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, American Roger Kornberg, researched the structure and role of an enzyme called RNA polymerase in a genetic process essential to building and maintaining molecular and cell structure. His father Arthur Kornberg won the 1959 Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his pioneering work in genetics.

Doris Lessing, author of dozens of books including the novel The Golden Notebook, became the oldest winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature at age 88. She told reporters from her doorstep in London that she was not that surprised because her name had been under consideration for decades. Either they were going to give it to me sometime before I popped off or not at all, she said.

The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman won the Nobel memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work in international trade patterns and economic geography. Krugman was instrumental in the development of New Trade Theory, which concerns factors in international market patterns such as economies of scale and the network effect, when goods become more valuable with wider use.

U.S. President Barack Obama was presented the Peace Prize during his first year in office. The Committee said it recognized Obama for his "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples. Critics questioned whether Obama, the countrys first Black president, had earned such a distinction so early in his term.

Chinas Liu Xiaobo was in prison when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. The human rights activist had been jailed following the 1989 massacre at Tiananmen Square, imprisoned again for criticizing Chinese policies toward Taiwan and the Dalai Lama, and sentenced to prison again in 2009 for seeking political reform. He died in 2017.

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When the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was announced, the Foundation learned that one of the winners, Ralph Steinman, had died three days earlier of cancer. Although the rules say the awards are not given posthumously, it was decided that the Canadian immunologist should be a Nobel Laureate because the Nobel Assembly had announced the winners without knowing he was dead.

Sir John Gurdon of England and Shinya Yamanaka of Japan, winners of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, researched the way cells and organisms develop. They discovered how mature specialized cells could be reprogrammed to become immature cells, a major medical breakthrough applicable to stem cell research.

The three American economists who shared the Nobel Prize made discoveries that help predict the long-term prices of stocks and bonds. Eugene Famas research was used in the development of stock index funds, Robert Shiller discovered certain dynamics about stock prices and dividends, and Lars Hansen looked at theories of risks and returns that are used in asset pricing.

At age 17, Malala Yousafzai was the youngest Nobel Laureate when she was awarded the 2014 Peace Prize. Yousafzai, an outspoken advocate for girls education and rights, survived an attempted assassination in 2012 by the Taliban in Pakistan. She shared the Peace Prize with Indian activist Kailash Satyarthi, who was honored for his work fighting child labor.

Jeffrey Hall, who shared the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work understanding the human body clock, had left science about a decade before winning his prize. He was outspoken about his frustration with what he saw as an inadequate, wasteful, and unfair research funding process.

At 96 years old, Arthur Ashkin became the oldest Nobel Laureate until he was surpassed by a 97-year-old winner the following year. Ashkin invented optical tweezers, sharp laser beams that can grab particles, atoms, molecules, and bacteria. The Nobel Prize in Literature was postponed due to scandal involving sexual misconduct, conflicts of interest, and financial malpractice at the Swedish Academy.

At 97, John Goodenough became the oldest Nobel Laureate when he won the Prize for Chemistry. His work led to the development of lithium-ion batteries, which had higher voltage than previous batteries, and are used to power mobile telephones and electric cars.

The three winners of the Prize in PhysicsBritains Roger Penrose, Germanys Reinhard Genzel, and Andrea Ghez of the United Stateswere honored for research into the existence and formation of black holes in the Milky Way. Penrose proved how the theory of relativity leads to the formation of black holes, while Genzel and Ghez discovered the role of a massive black hole at the center of the galaxy in affecting the orbits of stars.

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Germanys Adolf Butenandt won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his research into sex hormones that would be used in the development of oral contraception. Like Richard Kuhn in 1938, he was forced by the Nazis to decline the prize but was able to accept the certificate and medal in 1949. Germanys Gerhard Domagk, whose research led to the development of antibiotics, also had to turn down the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine but got it after the war.

While no Nobel Prizes were awarded, 1942 was the year that the name United Nations was coined by President Franklin Roosevelt in a declaration by 26 nations to stand together against the Axis powers. Founded three years later, the United Nations, along with its agencies, programs, and staff, has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize a dozen times. The U.N.s High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has won it twice, and most recently, the U.N.s World Food Programme won in 2020.

Henrik Dam and Edward Doisy shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work in the discovery of vitamin K, which the human body uses for clotting and healing. Dam determined that Vitamin K is needed for blood to coagulate, and Doisy found ways to produce it artificially, which was useful in stopping bleeding in small children.

The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Committee of the Red Cross for the work it had done during the war on behalf of humanity. It was the first Peace Prize bestowed in five years; the prizes were not given out from 1939, the year Germany invaded Poland at the start of World War II, to 1943.

Two American activists shared the Nobel Peace Prize. One was Emily Greene Balch, co-founder of the Womens International League for Peace and Freedom and a professor at Wellesley College for 22 years until she was fired for her activism. John Raleigh Mott, head of the Young Mens Christian Association, promoted international youth programs, worked with relief programs for prisoners of war, and was an outspoken critic of colonial oppression and race discrimination.

Gerty Cori, the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, was honored with her husband Carl Cori for their work in understanding the metabolism process. When the couple moved to America in 1922 from Austria, Carl Cori was hired as a biochemist at a New York research institute. Gerty Cori could only find work as an assistant pathologist, despite having the same degrees and research experience, because she was a woman. She was finally allowed a position equal with her talent and experience at Washington University in St. Louis in 1938.

Although the Nobel Prize in Literature is considered to honor a writers body of work, the Nobel Academy singled out The Old Man and the Sea when it chose American author Ernest Hemingway. It said the novel demonstrated his mastery of the art of narrative.

The winner of the Chemistry Prize, Vincent du Vigneaud, studied biochemical sulphur compounds, including oxytocin, a hormone involved in sexual intimacy and reproduction. Sometimes called the cuddle or love hormone, it is released when people bond, including as couples or parents with children. Vigneaud isolated oxytocin, calculated its chemical composition, and determined how to produce it artificially.

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The king of Sweden goodnaturedly reprimanded John Bardeen for leaving most of his family homehis children were in schoolwhen he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics. The American physicist told the king he would bring his family the next time. Sure enough, Bardeen won a second Nobel Prize in 1972, and he took his whole family to theceremony.

Biochemists Severo Ochoa and Arthur Kornbergs work on DNA and RNA earned them the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Ochoa discovered how to create RNA, and Kornberg, formerly a student of Ochoas, found ways of making DNA. Kornbergs son, Roger, a chemical physicist, also conducted genetic research and won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2006.

Winners of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Roger Guillemin and Andrew Schally used pig brains and lamb brains in their research on hormonal roles and structure. They shared the prize with Rosalyn Yalow, a nuclear physicist who developed radioimmunoassay, a method that can measure extremely small amounts of bodily substances. It was used in helping determine the cause of type 2 diabetes.

In awarding the Peace Prize to the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, the Nobel Committee singled out its Soviet founder Yevgeny Chazov and American founder Bernard Lown to accept the award because of their cooperative influence. The IPPNW consists of tens of thousands of medical professionals, now in 64 countries, who banded together in hopes of preventing and averting nuclear war.

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Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi was nominated five times for the Nobel Peace Prize, the final time being in 1948 not long before he was assassinated. That year, the Nobel Committee chose not to bestow any award, declaring there was no suitable living candidate.

The winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine, Portugals Egas Moniz, invented the lobotomy. He discovered how a surgical incision into the brains prefrontal lobe could alter behavior. Lobotomies were used widely to treat mental illness in the 1940s and 1950s until they were widely recognized as dangerous, and medication for mental illness became more commonly prescribed.

The awarding of the Peace Prize to Dag Hammarskjld, the second Secretary-General of the United Nations, was only the second time a Nobel was given posthumously. The first occasion was the posthumous literature prize awarded to Erik Axel Karlfeldt in 1931. The rules were changed in 1974 so that prizes could not be awarded posthumously unless the winner dies after the announcement but before the award ceremony.

The winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, to American James Watson, would later sell it at auction at Christies in 2014 to raise money for charity. Russian tycoon Alisher Usmanov paid $4.7 million, then said he was returning the award to the scientist. Watson won for discovering the structure of DNA along with Francis Crick.

Free-market economist Friedrich von Hayek, a critic of central planning, shared the Nobel Prize with Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal. Hayek argued for a decentralized market system with open competition and disagreed with the use of government fiscal policy to moderate movements of the economy as promoted by economist John Maynard Keynes.

American economist Milton Friedman was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on monetarypolicy. Friedman advocated for free markets and opposed government economic intervention. His views influenced the conservative fiscal policies of U.S. President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. He was a major proponent of school vouchersusing public tax funds to pay for students to attend private schoolsa system that remains hugely controversial to this day.

Mother Teresa of the Missionaries of Charity was given the Nobel Peace Prize for her work assisting the poor in Kolkata, especially its orphans, lepers, and terminally ill. Pope Francis declared the Albanian nun a saint in 2016. She started the Missionaries of Charity with a dozen nuns and it had nearly 5,000 at the time of her death in 1997.

Marking the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus landing in the Americas, Mayan Rigoberta Mench Tum of Guatemala was hailed for her campaign for human and Indigenousrights. Taking a global approach, she facilitated the use of international intermediaries in negotiations between guerrilla forces and the government, culminating in a 1996 peace agreement that ended a 36-year civil war.

Max Theiler of South Africa was honored for his research on yellow fever, a deadly disease found in subtropical and tropical South America and Africa and spread primarily by mosquitoes. Theiler discovered how to transmit the yellow fever virus to mice, helping produce weaker forms of the virus that could be used as a vaccine for humans.

For his role in the discovery of streptomycin, Selman Waksman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Streptomycin was the first antibiotic found to be effective against tuberculosis. Waksman studied how the bacteria that causes tuberculosis interacted with microorganisms in soil and found that a bacterium called Streptomyces griseus blocked its growth.

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill won the Nobel Prize in Literature for his works that included an autobiography, several volumes about the First and Second World Wars, and his notable speeches during World War II. From 1946 to 1953, Churchill was nominated in seven years for the Literature Prize and twice for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Ending conflict in the Middle East was the focus of Canadian historian and diplomat Lester Pearson, who won the Peace Prize for his role in ending violence that erupted in 1956 over control of the Suez Canal. The conflict among the major superpowers could have had severe global consequences. Thanks to Pearsons efforts, a United Nations Emergency Force was dispatched to oversee a cease-fire.

Russias Boris Pasternak was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, which he at first accepted but later was forced to turn down by Soviet authorities who banned his novel Doctor Zhivago. The only novel the poet wrote, Dr. Zhivago was deemed to be anti-Soviet and remained forbidden until the late 1980s.

Frances Jean-Paul Sartre was awarded, and declined, the Nobel Prize in Literature.He explained that he always declined official honors and that as a writer, he felt he should remain distinct from any institution.

The United Nations Childrens Fund, better known as UNICEF, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. UNICEF started out in 1946 providing food, clothes, and medicine to children and mothers but expanded to promote nutrition, school attendance, and health care in developing countries. The Nobel Committee honored UNICEF for its effort to enhance solidarity between nations and reduce the difference between rich and poor states.

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Peyton Rous won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine when he was 87, the oldest winner ever in the category. The American studied the role of viruses in cancer cells and transmission. His work was based on research begun in the early 1910s.

Contributions to understanding how the human eye functions earned the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for a scientific trio. Finnish scientist Ragnar Granit researched the types of cones responsible for seeing color; American Keffer Hartline analyzed how the eye processes contrasts; and American George Wald studied the role of light in visual impressions.

Danish physicist Aage Bohr won the Nobel Prize for his experiments on the structure of atoms. His father, Niels Bohr, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1922, also for work on atomic structure. The elder Bohr created a theory that explained how moving electrons cause atoms to emit light.

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The Camp David Agreement, which laid out a framework for peace in the Middle East, earned the Nobel Peace Prize for Egyptian President Mohamed Anwar al-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. U.S. President Jimmy Carter was to have been a third recipient, but a technicality prevented him from being nominated within the Committees deadline. But he won the Peace Prize nevertheless in 2002.

Alva Myrdal, along with Mexicican diplomat Alfonso Garca Robles, won the Nobel Peace Prize for working toward nuclear disarmament. Myrdal was a Swedish scientist, government official, and diplomat, and she was married to Gunnar Myrdal, a Swedish economist who was awarded an Economics Nobel in 1974.

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Nobel Prize history from the year you were born - Herald & Review