- How Technology Is Changing the Inhaler Industry (pharmacytimes.com)
Michael Cawley, BS, PharmD, RRT, CPFT, FCCM, professor of clinical pharmacy at the University of the Sciences, discusses how new technology is changing the inhaler manufacturing industry.
- Organ-on-a-chip startup Emulate raises $28.75M Series B (medcitynews.com)
Cambridge organ-on-a-chip startup Emulate has raised $28.75 million in a Series B round, with aims to commercialize its "Human Emulation System" on the R&D circuit. The idea, as with most lab-on-a-chip technologies, is to enhance in vitro research so as to make animal and in-human studies more efficient – using algorithms and microfluidics to accurately predict human response to medicines, chemicals and diseases...The financing will help expand Emulate’s organ-on-a-chip portfolio. Currently, it’s got organ emulations of the lung, liver, intestine and skin – but it plans to branch into organs like the kidney, heart and brain. Beyond that, however, is the concept of developing specific labs-on-chips to address important disease states, such as cancers, disorders of the intestine and microbiome, and infectious disease...Emulate wants its technology to operate as a plug-and-play system in the hands of product development teams at pharmaceutical, chemical, food and consumer products companies...
- Aprecia announces availability of 3D-printed drug Spritam (drugstorenews.com)
Aprecia Pharmaceuticals announced the U.S. availability of its Spritam (levetiracetam) tablets...The epilepsy medication is the first tablet made using the company’s ZipDose 3D printing technology to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration. It is designed to dissolve with a sip of liquid, easing the process of taking medication for patients with difficulty swallowing...
- SENDing data to meet new FDA standards (outsourcing-pharma.com)
According to PDS (PDS Life Sciences), SEND Express is a "turnkey solution for the generation of Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data datasets."...We aggregate and harmonize data from multiple organizations, information systems and file formats...to produce one set of harmonized SEND files, including define.xml and define.pdf, as required by the FDA...The platform's launch parallels the FDA's deadline for standardized electronic data submissions, which will require all datasets from studies supporting new drug applications, biologics license applications, and abbreviated new drug applications to be submitted in SEND format by Dec. 17...Having an industrywide, harmonized model allows for efficient analysis by regulatory authorities...The common formats assist in enabling the exchange of nonclinical data within companies and consortiums...this consistency of data makes it easier for vendors to develop tools that can use this data...
- Why hackers are going after health-care providers (washingtonpost.com)
Washington is reeling from the news of a hack at MedStar, one of the largest medical providers in the area. A computer virus infecting the organization's computer systems forced MedStar to shut down much of its online operations...The exact nature of the attack is not yet known, but MedStar is just the latest victim in a string of cyberattacks that have hit the health-care industry hard. Here's what you need to know about how health-care providers became the latest digital battleground.
- Why would cybercriminals go after the health-care industry?
- Just how vulnerable is the health-care sector to cyberattacks?
- What is the health-care sector doing to fix all this?
- iMedicare launches RefillReport.com (drugstorenews.com)
iMedicare, a company that provides Medicare Part D plan comparison software to pharmacies, announced recently that it had launched RefillReport.com, a platform that aims to help patients connect with local pharmacies to save money on their Medicare plan...The site is looking to help patients compare plans at different community pharmacies and potentially save money on a Medicare plan. It also features information about how Medicare Part D works, answers frequently asked questions and keeps information updated about different challenges that could affect patients throughout the year...
- Hackers hit two California hospitals with ransomware (healthcareitnews.com)
Two California hospitals – Chino Valley Medical Center in Chino and Desert Valley Hospital in Victorville – have been attacked by hackers demanding a ransom...The latest hit comes just a month after Hollywood Presbyterian paid hackers a $17,000 ransom to regain control over its computer systems and during the same week on the heels of ransomware attacks against Methodist Hospital in Henderson, Kentucky, and Ottawa Hospital in Ontario, Canada...Organizations with a good defense-in-depth strategy, advanced detection capabilities and solid response and contingency plans will fare far better when attacked...Make no mistake about it. Protecting information assets is a business issue and organizations that don't recognize this will pay for it.
- Jean Coutu launches Rx image transmission service (chaindrugreview.com)
Jean Coutu Group has introduced an image transmission service for new prescriptions that’s designed to make it easier for patients to fill medications...The Canadian drug chain said...that the new service is accessed via the Jean Coutu mobile application. To use the service, patients open their Health Record in the app and then take a photo of their prescription. The image is then sent directly to their Jean Coutu pharmacy. When the medication is ready for pickup, the pharmacy sends a text message to the patient...the image transmission service is a time-saver for both patients and their pharmacists. Prescriptions can be sent to the pharmacy as soon as patients get them from their doctors, and pharmacists can prepare the medications in advance...Besides the new prescription image transmission service, the Health Record also enables users to complete a simultaneous request for prescription renewals for one or more family members; receive an "it’s ready" notification via email or text when prescriptions are available for pickup...and scan a prescription label to request a refill.
- Pharmacy Week in Review: March 24, 2016 (pharmacytimes.com)
Mike Glaicar, Business Development: Pharmacy Times...(PTNN) This weekly video program provides our readers with an in-depth review of the latest news, product approvals, FDA rulings and more.
- Mathematical model may improve hepatitis C drug treatment (upi.com)DAA medication could lead to revolution in hepatitis C treatment (news-medical.net)HCV kinetic and modeling analyses indicate similar time to cure among sofosbuvir combination regimens with daclatasvir, simeprevir or ledipasvir (abstract) (journal-of-hepatology.eu)
Treatment cost for the average patient would go down by 16 to 20 percent, but for 40 percent of patients, the cost may go down by as much as 50 percent...Hepatitis C patients are often cured before completing a treatment regimen, suggesting patients require less of the drugs needed to fight the disease, according to a recent study...Researchers at Loyola University devised a mathematical model that predicts the length of time patients need direct-acting antiviral drugs, potentially limiting the cost of being treated with an expensive drug...Using more frequent blood testing, the researchers were able to determine hepatitis C levels and predict when the drug sofosbuvir, combined with one of three others, could be stopped...Treatment currently is standardized to be given for a set period of time, not tailored to the patient...In many cases, this may result in the prolonged use of expensive drugs with essentially no additional positive effect...