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DaVita agrees to $55 million settlement - Reuters

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DaVita agrees to $55 million settlement
Reuters
(Reuters) - DaVita Inc, the largest operator of dialysis clinics in the United States, agreed to pay $55 million to settle a lawsuit raised by an individual in 2002 related to the use of anemia drug Epogen.The.
DaVita agrees to $55M settlement Denver Post
DaVita settles False Claims case for $55 million ModernHealthcare.com
DaVita Announces Woodard Qui Tam Settlement MarketWatch (press release)
Bangor Daily News  - Jags Report
all 34 news articles »

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DaVita agrees to $55M settlement - Denver Post

DaVita Inc. agreed to pay roughly $55 million in a settlement of a lawsuit filed by an individual in 2002 related to the anemia drug Epogen.

The dialysis-service provider said the agreement, which also includes the payment of attorneys fees, contains no findings of wrongdoing or admission of liability by the company. "DaVita and its affiliated physicians did nothing wrong and stand by their anemia management practices," the company said.

In a previous SEC filing, the company identified the individual as Ivey Woodard and said it was served with a complaint under the qui tam provisions of the federal False Claims Act.

DaVita also said the government investigated allegations raised by the individual; however, it chose not

to file claims against DaVita.

DaVita's shares closed at $97.62 on Monday and were inactive premarket. The stock is up 29% year-to-date.

Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it









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Study Shows Health Benefits of Testosterone Replacement - Renal and Urology News

HOUSTON—Long-term testosterone treatment in hypogonadal men can lead to significant weight loss and improvements in components of metabolic syndrome, according to two new studies presented at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting. Both studies were conducted in Germany and used a slow-release, injectable form of testosterone (testosterone undecanoate).

“The substantial weight loss found in our study, an average of 36 pounds, was a surprise,” said lead researcher Farid Saad, PhD, who is with Gulf Medical University, Ajman, United Arab Emirates, and Berlin-headquartered Bayer Pharma.

Dr. Saad and his colleagues conducted an open-label, single-center, cumulative, prospective registry study. The trial included 255 men aged 38 to 83 years (mean age 60.6 years).  For this investigation, 215 men were studied for at least two years, 182 men were studied for three years, and 148 men were studied for four years. A total of 116 men had at least five years of follow-up.

Prior studies using testosterone therapy in testosterone-deficient men have consistently showed changes in body composition, such as increased lean mass and decreased fat mass. However, the net effect on weight seemed unchanged in those studies, according to Dr. Saad. This current study had a longer follow-up and used long-acting injections of testosterone than the previous studies.

The investigators restored testosterone to normal levels in 255 hypogonadal men and the treatment lasted for up to five years, with injections given at day 1, after 6 weeks, and then every 12 weeks after that. Patients did not follow a controlled diet or standard exercise program but received advice to improve their lifestyle habits.

On average, the men weighed 236 pounds before beginning testosterone treatment and 200 pounds after treatment (106.2 vs. 90.07 kg). Weight loss was reportedly continuous, with an average reduction in body weight ranging from about 4% after one year of treatment to more than 13% after five years. Men lost an average of nearly 3.5 inches (8.8 cm) around their waist.  The study showed that waist circumference declined from 107.24 to 98.46 cm.  In addition, body mass index (BMI) declined from 33.93 to 29.17 kg/m2. The mean weight loss after one, two, three, four, and five years was 4.12%, 7.47 %, 9.01%, 11.26%, and 13.21%, respectively.

Overall, 95% of the patients lost weight; 31% lost 20 kg or more, and 77% lost 10% or more of their initial body weight. A total of 97% of the patients experienced a reduction in waist circumference.

“There was no intention to make them lose weight,” Dr. Saad told Renal & Urology News. “The weight loss was never expected. This was found as a side effect of treatment. Some of the men came in for erectile dysfunction treatment.”

In a separate study also presented at this meeting, testosterone replacement therapy was found to significantly improve symptoms of metabolic syndrome associated with testosterone deficiency.  Investigators started collecting data in 2004 from 261 patients with late-onset hypogonadism at a single center in Germany. Patients received 1,000 mg of testosterone undecanoate on the first day of the study, at week 6, and then every three months. At each visit, investigators measure subjects' hormone, glucose, and lipid levels, as well as blood pressure (BP).

The mean follow-up was 4.25 years. The prevalence of metabolic syndrome dropped from 56% to 30% after 57 months of treatment. Triglyceride levels decreased in 77% of patients, glucose levels decreased in 67% of patients, and mean arterial pressure decreased in 78% of patients. The average waist circumference shrank by 11 cm.

“When indicated, testosterone treatment is both essential and safe in elderly patients with symptomatic late-onset hypogonadism,” said lead author Aksam Yassin, MD, PhD, Chairman of the Institute of Urology & Andrology in Norderstedt-Hamburg, Germany. “Further analysis is needed to confirm if our findings are due to a direct effect of restoring physiologic testosterone levels.”

Previous research has linked metabolic syndrome to testosterone deficiency. In addition, testosterone deficiency is associated with individual components of metabolic syndrome.

To determine the presence of metabolic syndrome among study participants, investigators used the definition from the International Diabetes Federation. All subjects were diagnosed with the syndrome if they displayed central obesity combined with at least two of the following risk factors: elevated triglycerides levels, decreased high-density lipoproteins, high BP, and excessive blood sugar concentrations.

“Testosterone investigation in elderly patients with health problems is an essential part of men's health practice,” Dr. Yassin said.

Testosterone undecanoate is not yet available in the United States, but it is marketed in Europe, Latin America, Australia, and parts of Asia and Africa.  Dr. Saad is an employee of Bayer Pharma, which makes a brand of testosterone undecanoate. Bayer Pharma partially funded Dr. Saad's study in its final two years.

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DaVita Agrees to $55 Million Settlement - Wall Street Journal
Wall Street Journal
The dialysis-service provider said the agreement, which also includes the payment of attorneys fees, contains no findings of wrongdoing or admission of liability by the company. "DaVita and its affiliated physicians did nothing wrong and stand by their

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Study finds obesity linked to kidney injury after heart surgery - Medical Xpress

Considered common after cardiac surgery, AKI represents a fivefold increase in within 30 days after the procedure and is associated with longer hospital stays and a range of complications.

The study, led by anesthesiologist Frederic T. (Josh) Billings IV, M.D., M.Sc., followed a sample of 455 cardiac surgery patients at Vanderbilt University Hospital and Brigham and Women?s Hospital in Boston. Some 25 percent of the patients developed AKI after their procedure.

The study found that patients with a higher body mass index (BMI) had a much greater risk. After adjusting for several other risk factors, the odds of AKI increased a staggering 26.5 percent for every five-point increase in a patient?s BMI.

Billings and colleagues used a statistical technique called mediation analysis to discover that oxidative stress could be the mechanism by which influences acute . Oxidative stress is the toxic overabundance of reactive oxygen species, brought on by excess generation or insufficient elimination.

?By identification of this mechanism, we now may be able to target intraoperative oxidative stress with the hope of reducing injury following . That may be particularly appropriate for obese individuals,? Billings said.

The authors noted that the finding is ?consistent with the hypothesis that oxidative partially mediates the association between BMI and AKI.?

?I think we learned something really important by doing the mediation analysis,? said biostatistician Jonathan Schildcrout, Ph.D., one of the study?s authors. ?You could have just examined the BMI and AKI association, and everybody would have said, ?OK, obese people have higher risk of AKI.?

?When you learn the mechanism, you can start to learn how to intervene to prevent the injury,? Schildcrout said.

More information: The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (RO1HL77389, RO1HL65193, and UL1RR024975). Clinical Trial Registration: NCT00141778.

Journal reference: Journal of the American Society of Nephrology search and more info website

Provided by Vanderbilt Medical Center search and more info website

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