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ANNA hands out special awards, grants - NephrologyNews.com

Each year, the American Nephrology Nurses’ Association hands out special recognition awards and grants at its annual meeting. Here is a list of those special honors from their 48th national symposium, held in Orlando, Fla. last week.

 

Association awards

Outstanding Contribution to ANNA: Carol Headley, DNSc, ACNP-BC, RN, CNN

Ron Brady Memorial Award for Excellence in Volunteer Leadership: Barbara Sandy Miholics, RN, CNNe

Clinical Practice Award: Linda Ford, BS, RN, CDN

Nephrology Nurse Educator Award: Kristin Larson, MSN, RN, APN, GNP, CNN

Excellence in Nephrology Nursing Management Award: Camille May, RN, CNN

Nephrology Nurse Researcher Award: Cynthia Russell, PhD, RN, FAAN

Quality Care Award: Donna Buglisi, BSN, RN, CNN

 

Chapter recognition

Outstanding Chapter Recognition Award: #329 Greater Minnesota                     

Chapter Strategic Collaboration Award: #324 Platte River Chapter  

                   

Chapter STAR Awards

Advocacy: #205 Alamo City

Evidence: #323 Black Swamp

Education: #202 Gtr. Charlotte

Membership: #224 Dogwood

Leadership: #503 Gtr. Puget Sound

 

Chapter Road to Success Awards

Recruitment and Retention: #210 Caribbean

Associate Member: #240 Memphis Blues

Certified Members: #271 Palm Valley

 

Chapter Rising STAR Awards

Advocacy: #134 First State

Evidence: #314 Buckeye

Education: #312 Michigan

ANNA Membership: #125 Garden State

Leadership: #268 Tar River

The Helen Feigenbaum Award for the Promotion of Excellence in Nephrology Nursing: Maura McCann, BS, RN, CNN

Chapter Voting Contest: #276 - First Coast (22.22%)

 

Board of Directors Awards

Mary Schira PhD, RN, ACNP-BC

Representation Award: Sharon Hoffman, BSN, RN, CNN

Research Abstract Award: Loretta Jackson-Brown PhD(c) RN, CNN

 

Nephrology Nursing Journal/Writing Awards

New Author (ANNA Publication): Jennifer E. Payton, MHCA, BSN, RN, CNN

Education: Cheryl Groenhoff, MBA, MSN, RN, CNN

Research: Patricia Marck, PhD, RN

Clinical: Jean Colaneri, ACNP-BC CNN                    

 

Research

Research Sharing Award: Caroline Steward, APN, CCRN, CNN

Kelly McManus Memorial Award: Barbara Richelieu, BSN, MA, CNN

 

Scholarships

ANNA Career Mobility: Karen Joann Gaietto, RN, BSN, MSN, CNN

ANNA Career Mobility: Ellen Zwilling, BS, RN

ANNA Career Mobility: Sarah Stabenow, RN, BSN

ANNA Career Mobility: Eric James Ryan, BSN, RN, CDN

ANNA Career Mobility: Haley Erl, RN

Pamela Balzer Career Mobility: A. Maria Toplosky, RN, BSN, CNN

Angelini Pharma, Inc. Career Mobility: Wendy Lester, BSN, RN, CNN

Janel Parker Career Mobility: Tracy Rodriguez, RN

Dare to Soar Career Mobility: Amy Marthenze, RN, BS

NNCC Career Mobility: Alice Luehr, BA, RN, CNN

NNCC Career Mobility: Kelly Dyar, MSN, RN, CNN

NNCC Career Mobility: Allison Treadwell, NP-C CDE

 

Grants

Gloria Scharf Beedie Memorial Grant: Sara Kennedy, BSN, RN, CNN

NIWI: Linda Takvorian, MSN, RN, CNN

Reseach Grant: Tamara Kear, PhD, RN, CNN

Evidenced-Based Practice Research Grant: Janet Welch, PhD, RN, FAAN

Barbara Prowant Research Grant: Tamara Kear, PhD, RN, CNN

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CPR Rate High In End Stage Dialysis Patients Despite Poor Outcomes - Medical Research News and Interviews on MedicalResearch.com (blog)

MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Susan P. Y. Wong, M.D.
Acting Instructor & Senior Research Fellow
Division of Nephrology
University of Washington

Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?

Dr. Wong:There is a paucity of information on the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and its outcomes among patients receiving maintenance dialysis. To address this knowledge gap, we performed a retrospective study to define contemporary trends in in-hospital CPR use and its outcomes among a nationally representative sample of 663,734 patients receiving maintenance dialysis between 2000 and 2011. We found that in-hospital CPR use among this cohort of patients was very high—nearly 20 times more common than that found in the general population. The rate of in-hospital CPR use has also been increasing among patients receiving maintenance dialysis despite evidence of poor long-term survival among these patients. Median survival after hospital discharge for members of this cohort was only 5 months, and this has not change substantially in the recent decade.

We also found that a large proportion  of dialysis patients who died in hospital settings had received CPR during their terminal hospitalization. This proportion has also been steadily increasing over time, and in 2011, 1 in 5 dialysis patients who died in hospital had received CPR during their terminal hospitalization.

Medical Research: What should clinicians and patients take away from your report?

Dr. Wong:These findings raise concern about the aggressiveness in the care that patients receiving maintenance dialysis experience near the end-of-life. This information may be helpful to patients and providers in supporting advance care planning and informed decisions about potentially life-sustaining treatments.

Medical Research: What recommendations do you have for future research as a result of this study?

Dr. Wong:More research is needed on the forces driving trends in in-hospital CPR use and the degree to which CPR practices reflect patients’ treatment goals and preferences.

Citation:

 

MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Susan P. Y. Wong, M.D. (2015). CPR Rate High In End Stage Dialysis Patients Despite Poor Outcomes 

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If It Gets Approval Quickly, Merck Could Challenge Gilead Sciences In Hepatitis C - Seeking Alpha

Last week, Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE:MRK), a large cap pharma (market value at $163.48 billion, with cash flows of $7.32 billion in 2014), reported data from several studies of investigational hepatitis C virus (HCV) once-daily regimens of direct-acting antivirals ((DAAs)) grazoprevir (GZR, a NS3/4A protease inhibitor) and elbasvir (EBR, a NS5A replication complex inhibitor). Merck is trying to gain a foothold into the HCV market which Gilead Sciences, Inc. (NASDAQ:GILD) dominates with Sovaldi ($10.3 billion in 2014; $1.73 billion in Q4 2014) and Harvoni (launched in Q4 with $2.11 billion in worldwide sales, mostly U.S.). In U.S. practice, Gilead's agents are among the treatments of choice for every HCV genotype (GT, see Appendix), though officially Sovaldi is approved for patients with GT1-4, while Harvoni is only for patients with GT1. The trials covered HCV GT1, 3, 4 or 6, representing more than 80% of HCV patients (see Table 1). These data were presented at The International Liver Congress 2015 - the 50th annual congress of the European Association for the Study of the Liver, which ended on Sunday. Some of the results are promising enough for Merck to advance and ultimately compete with Gilead's products.

Table 1. Hepatitis C Virus Prevalence in the United States

The HCV market is extremely competitive (see Table 2). Abbvie (NYSE:ABBV), Enanta Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ENTA) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE:BMY) also have commercially available products. Achillion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ACHN) and Bristol-Myers Squibb are also working on shorter-duration treatments. Shorter treatments mean the trials will only take a few months, not years. The high prevalence of HCV also makes for rapid enrollment completion. Thus, companies like Merck can quickly submit potential better treatments before regulators.

Table 2. HCV Combinations (Marketed Products Are in BOLD).

The first available data was from C-SURFER, a Phase 2/3 parallel-group, randomized, placebo-controlled trial (RCT) of 12 weeks of treatment with GZR/EBR in 122 GT1-infected patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages 4 or 5, regardless of prior treatment experience or cirrhosis. GZR/EBR was effective based on a sustained virologic response 12 weeks after the completion of treatment (SVR12) in 99.1% (115/116) of evaluable patients. Six patients had missing data because of death or early discontinuation for reasons unrelated to the study drugs; if they are counted as failures, SVR12 is 94.3%. More deaths (3 vs. 1) and discontinuations of treatment due to adverse events (AEs, 4 vs. 0) occurred with the placebo group. GZR/EBR has a great chance of approval here, as C-SURFER is the first RCT with an all-oral ribavirin (RBV)-free treatment regimen in CKD patients. One of the two Breakthrough Therapy designations GZR/EBR has received from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is for the treatment of GT1 infection in patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD) on hemodialysis (CKD Stage 5), which may expedite the review of the combo for this indication.

The next body of evidence was courtesy of Merck's ongoing C-EDGE pivotal Phase 3 program evaluating GZR/EBR in patients with or without cirrhosis who are infected with GT1, 4 or 6. Data was available from 3 of the 5 C-EDGE trials, and overall SVR12 rates were in the 90s (see Table 3). However, that number is skewed by the preponderance of the most common and most easily-treated GT1, as well as non-cirrhotic patients.

C-EDGE TN was a blinded RCT in which 22% of the treatment-naïve patients had liver cirrhosis. C-EDGE TE was an RCT in patients with prior null response, partial response or relapse with pegylated interferon (NYSE:PEG)/RBV. Of the 209 patients randomized to the 12 weeks treatment, 35% of patients in the GZR/EBR only arm had cirrhosis, while 34% had cirrhosis among the patients receiving GZR/EBR plus RBV. Of the 211 patients in the 16 week arms, the GZR/EBR only arm had 36% with cirrhosis, while the GZR/EBR plus RBV arm had 35% cirrhotic patients. C-EDGE CO-INFXN was an open label, single-arm study in which 16% of HIV/HCV co-infected, treatment-naïve patients had cirrhosis.

Relapse rates and AEs become more important in the large Phase 3 trials. In C-EDGE TN, virologic failure occurred in 4.1% of treated patients (13/316), while serious AEs occurred in 3% of patients in both treatment and placebo arms; none were considered drug-related. In C-EDGE CO-INFXN, virologic failure occurred in seven patients 3.2% (7/218), but there were no reported drug-related serious AEs. In the C-EDGE TE 12 week groups, 6% in each had virologic relapse, and more serious AEs were reported in the GZR/EBR only arm than in the RBV-containing arm (4% vs. 3%). In the 16 week arms, virologic failures were only recorded among the patients receiving GZR/EBR only (7% vs. 0), although there were also fewer incidences of serious AEs (4% vs. 3%).

Table 3. Rates of Sustained Virologic Response 12 Weeks after Treatment (SVR12) in C-EDGE Pivotal Trials.

In C-EDGE TN and TE, SVR12 for GZR/EBR alone was comparable with Harvoni for GT1 patients (see Table 4); GZR/EBR also has the slight edge in relapse rate. However, with the trend of research going towards shorter-duration regimens, it's probably not worth it for Merck to pursue approval in this indication directly. The better goals for GZR/EBR even with RBV are GT4 and 6, where Harvoni is still used in but not approved for. The race is on for GT4, as Gilead also scored good results for Harvoni from a French trial (see Table 5). Merck remains on track to submit a New Drug Application (NDA) with the FDA in the first half of 2015, and the second of GZR/EBR's two Breakthrough Therapy designations is in HCV GT4. However, Gilead only needs a supplemental NDA to make Harvoni official for GT4. C-EDGE CO-INFXN suggests that GZR/EBR will perform better than Sovaldi plus RBV (see Table 6) in GT1 patients.

Table 4. Rates of SVR12 in Harvoni's Pivotal Trials.

Table 5. Rates of SVR12 in Harvoni Phase 2 Trial (Study 1119).

Table 6. Rates of SVR12 in Sovaldi's Pivotal Trials.

There was also good news for patients with GT1 infection who have previously failed treatment with PEG and RBV combined with a DAA (Merck's Victrelis, Janssen's Olysio or Vertex's discontinued Incivek). GZR/EBR plus RBV showed high rates of SVR12 in C-SALVAGE, a Phase 2 open label trial (see Table 7). Virologic failure was reported for 3.8% (3/79) of patients in the trial, which was better than the 6.5% relapse rate of Harvoni in ION-2. If GZR/EBR is approved, it could come down to a preference of 12 weeks of taking RBV or 24 weeks of Harvoni, which would likely favor Merck.

Table 7. Rates of SVR12 in C-SALVAGE Phase 2 Trial.

The last batch of results came from the C-SWIFT, a proof-of-concept Phase 2 open label trial n treatment-naïve patients with GT1 or GT3 for potentially shortening HCV treatment durations below 12 weeks. The final C-SWIFT data indicates that GZR/EBR in combination with Sovaldi is worse than Gilead's triple DAA (see Table 8) in GT1 patients.

Table 8. Rates of SVR12 in C-SWIFT Phase 2 Trial.

Table 8. Results of Sovaldi + GS-5816 + GS-9857 Phase 2 Trial.

In short, Merck has many shots on goal with HCV. Specifically, Merck's best bet is the 10% of U.S. dialysis patients who get infected with HCV. The latest available incidence of ESRD in the U.S. was 112,775 in 2012, which could almost make GZR/EBR a blockbuster just in this indication. Being able to compete on some level in GT1 and 3 would bring many millions due to the sheer size of the HCV market. The important thing is to get FDA approval, which, given the new available data, should be likely sometime in early 2016.

Appendix

Summary of Recommendations for Patients Who are Initiating Therapy for HCV Infection or Who Experienced Relapse after Prior PEG/RBV Therapy, by HCV Genotype

HCV Genotype 1a: Three options with similar efficacy in general are recommended.

  1. Harvoni for 12 weeks*.
  2. Viekira Pak plus twice-daily dosed dasabuvir (250 mg) and weight-based RBV for 12 weeks (no cirrhosis) or 24 weeks (cirrhosis).
  3. Sovaldi (400 mg) plus Olysio (150 mg) daily with or without weight-based RBV for 12 weeks (no cirrhosis) or 24 weeks (cirrhosis).

HCV Genotype 1b: Three options with similar efficacy in general are recommended.

  1. Harvoni for 12 weeks*.
  2. Viekira Pak plus twice-daily dosed dasabuvir (250 mg) for 12 weeks. The addition of weight-based RBV is recommended in patients with cirrhosis.
  3. Sovaldi (400 mg) plus Olysio (150 mg) daily for 12 weeks (no cirrhosis) or 24 weeks (cirrhosis).

HCV Genotype 2: Recommended regimen.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV for 12 weeks. Extending treatment to 16 weeks is recommended in patients with cirrhosis.

Alternative regimens.

None.

HCV Genotype 3: Recommended regimen.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV for 24 weeks.

Alternative regimens.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV plus weekly PEG-IFN for 12 weeks for IFN-eligible, treatment-naive patients with HCV Genotype 3 infection.

HCV Genotype 4: Three options with similar efficacy in general are recommended.

  1. Viekira Pak and weight-based RBV for 12 weeks.
  2. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV for 24 weeks.
  3. Harvoni for 12 weeks.

Alternative regimens.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV plus weekly PEG-IFN for 12 weeks.
  2. Sovaldi (400 mg) plus Olysio (150 mg) daily with or without weight-based RBV for 12 weeks.

HCV Genotype 5: Recommended regimen.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV plus weekly PEG-IFN for 12 weeks.

Alternative regimen.

  1. Weekly PEG-IFN plus weight-based RBV for 48 weeks for IFN-eligible, treatment-naive patients with HCV Genotype 5 infection.

HCV Genotype 6: Recommended regimen.

  1. Harvoni for 12 weeks.

Alternative regimen.

  1. Sovaldi (400 mg) daily and weight-based RBV plus weekly PEG-IFN for 12 weeks for IFN-eligible, treatment-naive patients with HCV Genotype 6 infection.

* Relapse rates were higher (4.6%, 20/431) in the 8-week arms compared with 12-week arm (1.4%, 3/216). Post hoc analyses identified lower relapse rates in patients receiving 8 weeks of Harvoni who had baseline HCV RNA levels below 6 million IU/mL (1.6%; 2/123), and was the same for patients with similar baseline HCV RNA levels who received 12 weeks (1.5%; 2/131). This analysis was not controlled and thus substantially limits the generalizability of this approach to clinical practice. Shortening treatment to less than 12 weeks should be done with caution and performed at the discretion of the practitioner.

Disclosure:The author is long GILD, ENTA. (More...)The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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Is Humana (HUM) Poised to Beat Q1 Earnings Estimates? - Zacks.com

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Hepatitis C Patients at Risk of Prostate and Renal Cancers and non-Hodgkin's ... - Maine News Online
Hepatitis C Patients at Risk of Prostate and Renal Cancers and non-Hodgkin's lym

It is already known that hepatitis C can cause liver cancer, especially if left untreated. Now, a novel study has unveiled that those having hepatitis C are also at the risk of prostate and renal cancers, as well as non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

These people are at increased risk to face these problems than the general population who do not have the disease. The researchers have gone through the medical records of cancer diagnosis for patients above 18 year old between 2008 and 2012.

Initially, it was considered that these people were affected by hepatitis C or not. In the same period, at least 145,000 men and women had hepatitis C and more than 13 million people did not. Of the ones who were having the disease, more than 2,000 cancer cases were reported within 5 years. It was equivalent to more than 1,500 per 100,000 people.

If the liver cancer diagnoses are not included then the number reduced to 1,139 per 100,000. As per researchers, the number was still high when compared to non-hepatitis C population. Overall, the risk of develop cancer for those having the virus was at least 2.5 times higher than the general population if liver cancer is included.

If it is not included than at least 2 times. When other factors were included like smoking and alcohol then the risk increased. Hepatitis C is caused by a virus that causes severe inflammation of the liver. Infected blood spreads the disease and there is no known cure for the problem. But there are certain drugs that can delay the advancement.

"The results suggest that cancer rates are increased in the cohort of hepatitis C patients versus the non-hepatitis C patients, both including and excluding liver cancers", said senior study author Lisa Nyberg from the Kaiser Permanente, Southern California.

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