Study finds link between blood-clotting protein and cancer
Groundbreaking research from Germany shows how stressed cells increase the production of thrombin, an important clot performer. Presented in the journal Molecular Cell, the study provides new insight into how cancer cells may be profiting from this process. Researchers could use this information to develop novel ways to treat various disorders.
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EU project to improve follow-up care after childhood cancer
Childhood cancer survivors, though being 'cured' of cancer, often experience late physical and psychological effects secondary to their cancer or its treatment. To accelerate the search for new successful treatments and improve the quality of life after cancer, 16 research institutes from 11 European countries have decided to join forces and launch a groundbreaking study funded by the EU.
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Software releases researchers from microscope
EU-funded scientists have developed a system that releases researchers from the chore of spending hours hunched over a microscope looking for cells of interest in large samples. The system is described in the journal Nature Methods by a team led by the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Germany.
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Study points to potential new cancer drug
Scientists have uncovered details of the workings of a protein that both slows the spread of cancer and boosts the efficiency of chemotherapy. The molecule, called histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG) could therefore prove useful to researchers' efforts to develop anti-cancer drugs. The study, which was partly funded by the EU, is published in the journal Cancer Cell.
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First DataBank's FIRSTLight Goes Live
First DataBank's new online medicines reference tool, FIRSTLight, is now live and First DataBank is offering a free extended trial until the end of January 2011. FIRSTLight provides instant access to reliable medicines information, empowering clinicians and supporting safer, faster clinical decision making.
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Study highlights smoking-rheumatoid arthritis link
Smoking may be responsible for over a third of cases of the commonest and most severe form of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), new EU-funded research suggests. Furthermore, in people with a greater genetic susceptibility to RA, smoking may be behind over half of all cases. The findings, published in the journal the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, provide another reason for health workers to advise people against smoking, particularly for those with a family history of RA.
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Government Initiatives will Unlock Enormous Potential Opportunities for the Russian Pharmaceutical Market
With total revenues of $15.3 billion in 2009, the Russian pharmaceutical market is one of the largest in the world. The market is anticipated to remain on a path of dynamic growth from 2010 to 2016 mainly due to multiple initiatives of the Russian Government. However, in the short term, the process of implementing legislative changes could slightly restrain the market's development.
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