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Cadence Pharmaceuticals Submits Acetavance New Drug Application For The Treatment Of Acute Pain And Fever
Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: CADX) announced that it has submitted a New Drug Application (NDA) to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its investigational product candidate, Acetavance(TM) (intravenous acetaminophen), for the treatment of acute pain and fever in adults and children. If approved, Acetavance would become the first new intravenous analgesic approved in the United States in more than 20 years and the only approved intravenous agent for the treatment of fever in the United States.
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Research Shows Temptation More Powerful Than Individuals Realize
Whether it"s highlighted in major news headlines about Argentinean affairs and Ponzi schemes, or in personal battles with obesity and drug addiction, individuals regularly succumb to greed, lust and self-destructive behaviors. New research from the Kellogg School of Management examines why this is the case, and demonstrates that individuals believe they have more restraint than they actually possess - ultimately leading to poor decision-making.
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Compliance And Cost: Bitter Pills To Swallow In The Age Of Oral Chemotherapy
Though the growing shift toward oral chemotherapy agents offers cancer patients greater freedom and independence during their treatment, physicians say use of the new medications also poses more chances for patients to skip doses, miss prescription refills, and take their drugs in a dangerous way. An increasing number of cancer patients who receive chemotherapy now do so at home, with the click of a pill bottle each day rather than the drip of an IV medicine that must be delivered in a doctor"s office or hospital.
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Long-Term Medtronic Device Registry First To Show How Implantable Heart Devices Work In Real-World Clinical Practice

The first results from the Medtronic Inc., (NYSE: MDT) OMNI Study were released at Heart Rhythm 2009, the annual congress of the Heart Rhythm Society, revealing that one out of six patients with implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) or cardiac resynchronization therapy-defibrillators (CRT-Ds) to prevent sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), received potentially life-saving medical therapy - either in the form of anti-tachycardia pacing (ATP) or a shock for dangerously fast heart rhythms - within a period of two years following their implant. Further, the study showed that patients received therapy at similar rates, regardless of whether they meet current medical society guidelines. The OMNI Study is the first large-scale, longitudinal registry to follow nearly 3,000 real-world device patients. This analysis includes 1,620 patients who received devices for primary prevention of SCA, 993 of whom meet current guidelines, and 389 patients that do not. Patients among both groups received therapy at roughly the same rate. And among those who received therapy (n=172, guideline group; 69, non-guideline group): - Sixty-six percent of patients among the guideline group, and 71 percent among the non-guideline group received ATP therapy - Thirty-four percent of patients among the guideline group, and 29 percent among the non-guideline group received a shock While OMNI researchers recognize that physicians may interpret the medical guidelines differently to drive individual treatment decisions for their patients, OMNI was not designed to assess why patients who meet or do not meet guidelines received devices from their doctors. "We are pleased to be able to share the first wave of results from the five-year, post-market observational study, which provide a better sense of how Medtronic devices may save lives in real-world clinical settings," said David Steinhaus, M.D., vice president and medical director of Cardiac Rhythm Disease Management at Medtronic. "This study and these insights are a direct result of Medtronic"s commitment to scientific research and clinical outcomes, and specifically, who will benefit most from our therapies," Dr. Steinhaus continued. About the OMNI Study - The purpose of OMNI is to determine how ICDs/CRTs and device-based diagnostics are used to treat and monitor life-threatening arrhythmias in real-world primary and secondary prevention patients. - OMNI began in 2005, the same year in which Medtronic committed two million dollars to support a separate, federally-mandated registry of defibrillator patients that was developed to gather additional evidence to support Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) questions posed by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) regarding a particular subgroup of patients. Additional analysis from OMNI addresses these questions, showing no significant difference between the rate at which CED and non-CED patients received therapy. Insights into which of these patients with a heart condition called non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy received device therapy were observed and warrant further analysis. - OMNI is expected to be complete in 2012; Medtronic will release additional interim results upon availability. Medtronic


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