In another marathon session Tuesday, the third U.S. House committee with jurisdiction over prescription drug pricing issues marked up H.R. 3, the Lower Drug Costs Now Act, clearing the way for a House vote on the partisan measure yet this month.
Radiologists review thousands of images a day. The hope is that artificial intelligence (AI) applications will become useful soon to verify diagnoses, prioritize queued images and even to offer a level of detection and measurement that aren't feasible for humans. One of the latest efforts on this front is by researchers at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) and the University of California at Berkeley.
A recent medical journal article says the terminology used by physicians to denote a fatality in the FDA adverse event reporting system has led to underreporting of fatalities associated with two prominent cardiology devices, a predicament the authors say skews the public understanding of these devices' safety profiles.
Diagnosis and treatment of infections typically occurs after people exhibit obvious signs of illness, such as fever or a cough. By then, they may already have exposed others and are well on the way to developing more serious symptoms themselves. In the military, such delays can hamper medical countermeasures to contain potential outbreaks and reduce downtime among active duty personnel. Now, Amsterdam-based Royal Philips NV and the U.S. Department of Defense's Defense Threat Reduction Agency and Defense Innovations Unit have built an early warning algorithm – using artificial intelligence – to detect infection before a person shows any signs or symptoms of infection.
The FDA's September 2019 final guidance for the humanitarian device exemption program brought some clarity to several issues, but device makers must still untangle the question of which tasks an institutional review board (IRB) has delegated to an appropriate local committee for a specific clinical site.
The U.S. FDA has given 510(k) clearance to the Advanced Intelligent Clear-IQ Engine (AiCE) for Canon Medical Systems USA Inc.'s Aquilion Precision CT scanner. The regulatory green light brings artificial intelligence (AI)-based image reconstruction capabilities to the world's first ultra-high resolution CT imaging system.
Researchers at the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania have developed an algorithm to better personalize immunotherapy treatment. The algorithm works by examining neoantigen quality, not just their quantity. Neoantigens are proteins that are the result of genetic mutations in a tumor.
The ideological divide between Republicans and Democrats proved to be an uncrossable chasm Thursday as two U.S. House committees marked up H.R. 3, the Lower Drug Costs Now Act, and a third committee held its first hearing on the bill that was crafted behind the closed doors of Speaker Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) office.
Briefing documents released ahead of Wednesday’s meeting of the FDA’s Antimicrobial Drugs Advisory Committee, slated to review Shionogi & Co. Ltd.’s cefiderocol for treatment of complicated urinary tract infections (cUTIs), spotlighted a finding of increased mortality among critically ill cefiderocol-treated patients in the company’s Credible-CR study.
CEO Mark McKenna told BioWorld Asia that San Diego-based Prometheus Biosciences Inc. has "cracked the code" in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) – progress underscored by the firm's deal with Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., of Osaka, Japan, which brings an undisclosed up-front payment and as much as $420 million more if development, regulatory and commercial milestones are reached in three programs.