Author Archives: Zuzanna Walter

Meet Our August Partner of the Month: Vumedi

VuMedi is the largest video education platform for doctors. A comprehensive resource with over 30,000 videos from medical institutions including Cleveland Clinic, UCSF, Stanford, Columbia and other globally recognized institutions. 450,000 doctors use the platform to educate themselves and ensure they are up to date on practice changing medical advances. VuMedi’s mission is to help clinicians make optimal patient care decisions through comprehensive video education from a variety of trustworthy institutions and practitioners.

VuMedi builds a robust video-sharing community by partnering with doctors, hospitals, meetings and societies to allow for the rapid dissemination of groundbreaking medical information.  VuMedi engages doctors who are publishing cutting edge research, allowing them to distribute their findings quickly to other clinicians around the world, who then take the learnings and apply them as needed across their practices.

VuMedi takes great pride in the trust placed by the medical community in the content we provide. The content is paired with the ability for our technology to target the right communities through a unique, proprietary algorithm paired with a human “education” team of subject matter experts.   Physicians who need to access new topics and research can easily find multiple points of view on the exact subject they are looking to better understand.

VuMedi was founded at the University of California, Berkeley by Roman Giverts. In the ensuing decade, it has focused on ensuring authentic content is delivered in the right way and at the right time to help the medical community deliver the best patient care.  It’s why today, doctors trust VuMedi to provide clinically relevant, succinct presentations of data in a compressed and categorized footprint.

Interested in joining VuMedi’s physician community?  Visit us at www.vumedi.com

Interested in contributing content or partnering at the hospital, meeting society level?  Send us a note [email protected]

*Disclaimer: there is no cost for either of the above!!

Novel Blood Test Shows Promise for Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a debilitating and incurable condition affecting approximately 6 million Americans aged 65 and older. As the number of AD cases in the United States is projected to reach an estimated 14 million by the year 2050, there is a pressing need for effective prevention therapies. Currently, there are limitations in diagnostic testing methods for Alzheimer’s disease; to date, the diagnosis of AD has been largely based on amyloid plaques and tau tangles identified in the brain postmortem.

Emerging evidence from Lund University evaluated the potential profound impact on Alzheimer’s research and care an inexpensive and accessible diagnostic test for the presence of plaques and tangles would have. In the recent study, researchers demonstrate the great promise of a novel blood test in discriminating between persons with and without AD as well as identifying the disease in individuals at known genetic risk as early as 20 years before onset.

The large international study was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and reveals that measurements of phospho-tau217 (p-tau217) could help medical professionals accurately identify symptoms of Alzheimer’s in living patients.

Identifying Alzheimer’s Disease 

Researchers in Arizona, Sweden, and Colombia investigated the discriminative accuracy of plasma phospho-tau217 at differentiating Alzheimer’s disease from other neurodegenerative disorders. To do so, the study’s authors evaluated a new p-tau217 blood test administered in 1,402 cognitively impaired and unimpaired participants. Subjects included 81 participants from Arizona’s Banner Sun Health Research Institute Brain Donation program, 699 patients from the Swedish BioFINDER Study, and 522 Colombian autosomal dominant AD-causing mutation carriers and non-carriers.

P-tau217 Accurately Distinguishes Risk

The cross-sectional study found that plasma p-tau217 discriminated Alzheimer’s disease from other neurodegenerative diseases with significantly more accuracy than established AD plasma- and MRI-based biomarkers.

In the Arizona cohort, the novel blood test successfully discriminated between brain donors with and without the subsequent diagnosis of “intermediate or high likelihood of Alzheimer’s” with 89% accuracy. Meanwhile, in participants with and without a diagnosis of “high likelihood” the assay was 98% accurate. Higher p-tau217 measures were associated with increased brain tangle counts only in participants with present amyloid plaques.

Within the Swedish cohort, the assay discriminated between persons with clinically diagnosed Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases with 96% accuracy, similar to tau PET scans and CSF biomarkers and better than several other blood tests and MRI measurements. Further, it distinguished between patients with and without an abnormal tau PET scan with up to 93% accuracy.

Finally, in the Colombian cohort, the blood test was able to distinguish between mutation carriers and non-carriers 20 years before their estimated age of onset of mild cognitive impairment. For all of the analyses performed, p-tau217 was found to outperform p-tau181 – a similar component of tau tangles and blood test – as well as several other studied assays; its performance did not differ significantly from that of key CSF- or PET-based measures.

In recent years, much progress has been made in the development of blood tests for Alzheimer’s disease. Although the plasma p-tau217 was found to discriminate AD from other neurodegenerative disease, additional research is needed to validate these findings in larger and more diverse cohorts in order to both optimize the blood test and determine its potential role in the clinical setting.

”The p-tau217 blood test has great promise in the diagnosis, early detection, and study of Alzheimer’s,” lead author Oskar Hansson, MD, PhD, told Science Daily.“While more work is needed to optimize the assay and test it in other people before it becomes available in the clinic, the blood test might become especially useful to improve the recognition, diagnosis, and care of people in the primary care setting.”

The Long-Term Impact of Hormone Therapy on Breast Cancer Risk 

For several decades, hormone therapy and its risk-to-benefit ratio have been a controversial topic within the scientific community. First published in 2002, reports from the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) presented data on the complicated benefits and potential adverse events associated with menopausal hormone therapy. Prior to this, estrogen therapy was put into question due to its association with an increased risk of endometrial hyperplasia and cancer, however, it subsequently rose to popularity again following the discovery that the addition of progesterone was able to minimize the associated risks

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