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Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the middle of the week. Congratulations on making it this far, and remember there are only a few more days until the weekend arrives. So keep plugging away. After all, what are the alternatives? While you ponder the possibilities, we invite you to join us for a needed cup of stimulation. Our choice today is ginseng honey, a favorite from our pantry. Meanwhile, here is the latest menu of tidbits to help you on your way. We hope you conquer the world and have a wonderful day. And as always, please do stay in touch. …
An experimental Alzheimer’s drug from Biogen, designed with a novel approach, slowed cognitive decline in a mid-stage trial at roughly comparable rates as approved medicines, new data that bolstered the company’s case to move the treatment into a Phase 3 trial, STAT says. Although experts will wait to see the pivotal trial data before making their final assessments of the drug, called diranersen, the results from the Phase 2 trial, if backed up in the larger study, could rekindle the debate about how strong trial results have to be to signify that a drug can offer meaningful benefits for patients and caregivers.
Potential signs of frailty in older adults taking Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 obesity drug Zepbound may signal relatively high risks for adverse outcomes , Reuters writes, citing a large study that underscores concerns about how best to monitor seniors as U.S. Medicare expands access to obesity therapies. In general, frailty-associated conditions such as malnutrition, dehydration and loss of muscle mass and strength developed only rarely and the results should not discourage appropriate use of Zepbound or Novo Nordisk’s GLP-1 drug Wegovy in older adults, the researchers said. Instead, they encouraged closer follow-up of older patients taking the medicines.
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