Latest news with #FDA‑approved


New York Post
a day ago
- Health
- New York Post
Breakthrough as two FDA-approved drugs are found to reverse Alzheimer's — including restoring memory
In a stunning scientific discovery, researchers have found that a pair of drugs can not only slow down Alzheimer's disease but actually reverse it and restore memory in mice. And the best part of all? Both are already FDA-approved — albeit for cancer. Researchers first pinpointed how Alzheimer's disease scrambles gene activity in individual brain cells. 3 Researchers have found that a pair of drugs can not only slow down Alzheimer's disease but actually reverse it and restore memory in mice. Pixel-Shot – Using the Connectivity Map database of 1,300 FDA‑approved drugs, the researchers looked for medications that reverse Alzheimer's‑associated gene expression — landing on a shortlist of five, and zeroing in on two cancer drugs. In what one researcher called a 'mock clinical trial,' they then mined 1.4 million patients' medical records, finding that those who had taken letrozole or irinotecan for cancer were significantly less likely to develop Alzheimer's. When given together in an aggressive Alzheimer's mouse model, letrozole — used to treat certain types of breast cancer in postmenopausal women — and irinotecan — an anti-cancer medication used to treat colon cancer and small cell lung cancer — reversed disease‑related gene expression signatures, dissolved toxic tau protein clumps and prevented brain degeneration. Most importantly, they restored memory and learning in mice that had already developed severe symptoms. It's an exciting development for an illness that's notoriously tricky. 3 Letrozole — used to treat certain types of breast cancer in postmenopausal women — and irinotecan — an anti-cancer medication used to treat colon cancer and small cell lung cancer — reversed disease‑related gene expression signatures, dissolved toxic tau protein clumps and prevented brain degeneration. Eric Hood – 'Alzheimer's disease comes with complex changes to the brain, which has made it tough to study and treat, but our computational tools opened up the possibility of tackling the complexity directly,' Marina Sirota, the interim director of the UCSF Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, said in a statement. 'We're excited that our computational approach led us to a potential combination therapy for Alzheimer's based on existing FDA-approved medications.' 'Alzheimer's is likely the result of numerous alterations in many genes and proteins that, together, disrupt brain health,' said Yadong Huang, a professor of neurology and pathology at UCSF. 'This makes it very challenging for drug development — which traditionally produces one drug for a single gene or protein that drives disease.' 3 'Alzheimer's is likely the result of numerous alterations in many genes and proteins that, together, disrupt brain health,' said Yadong Huang, a professor of neurology and pathology at UCSF. yurakrasil – The findings were published in the journal Cell. Both drugs are already FDA‑approved for other uses, which could dramatically speed up the path to human trials. However, because they are cancer drugs, repurposing them may be complex and risky. This finding adds to a growing number of potential Alzheimer's treatments. A compound found in rosemary and sage — carnosic acid — has been shown to reverse memory loss and reduce brain inflammation in mice with Alzheimer's, bringing their cognitive function back to near-normal levels. A study from Stanford Medicine found that seniors who received the shingles vaccine were 20% less likely to develop dementia over seven years. And researchers at Penn State and Stanford University discovered that a certain cancer drug could restore memory and brain function in early stage Alzheimer's models.


Business Wire
6 days ago
- Business
- Business Wire
Aurinia Pharmaceuticals to Release Second Quarter 2025 Financial and Operational Results on July 31, 2025
ROCKVILLE, Md. & EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aurinia Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: AUPH) (Aurinia or the Company) today announced that it will release second quarter 2025 financial and operational results before markets open on July 31, 2025. Aurinia's management team will host a conference call and webcast on July 31, 2025, at 8:30 a.m. ET. The link to the webcast is available here. To join the conference call, please dial 877-407-9170 / +1 201-493-6756. A replay of the webcast will be available on Aurinia's website. About Aurinia Aurinia is a biopharmaceutical company focused on delivering therapies to people living with autoimmune diseases with high unmet medical needs. In January 2021, the Company introduced LUPKYNIS ® (voclosporin), the first FDA‑approved oral therapy for the treatment of adult patients with active lupus nephritis. Aurinia is also developing aritinercept (AUR200), a dual inhibitor of B cell-activating factor (BAFF) and a proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL) for the potential treatment of autoimmune diseases.


CNBC
09-06-2025
- Business
- CNBC
Best Stocks: Three healthcare names to ponder including a biotech back to levels not seen in a decade
(This is The Best Stocks in the Market , brought to you by Josh Brown and Sean Russo of Ritholtz Wealth Management.) Josh here — The healthcare sector has entered the chat. There are 12 healthcare names now on our Best Stocks list as of the end of last week. I'll show you a few of these set-ups below and then Sean's going to share some fundamentals for these healthcare firms. Sector Leaderboard As of 6/9/2025 morning, there are 114 names on The Best Stocks in the Market list Top Sector Ranking: Top Industries: Top 5 Best Stocks by Relative Strength: Sector Spotlight: Healthcare Josh — Alnylam Pharma (ALNY) just broke out above prior resistance at $300. There was company-specific news about new indications for one of their most important drugs that led to multiple price target raises on The Street. Alnylam is named for Alnilam, the brightest star in the Belt of Orion constellation, which ancient mariners used for navigation. The founders of the company believed their trailblazing work in the field of RNA interference (RNAi) would chart a brand new course of drug discovery and development by which the next generation of scientists would be guided. So far, so good as ALNY grew revenue to $2.25 billion in revenue last year and the company's market cap swelled to a respectable $40 billion. Wall Street's median price target is ten percent higher than today's price while the most bullish analyst, H.C. Wainwright, just published a target of $500 this past week. In Q1 2025, revenue surged by over 28% year-over-year to approximately $594 million, driven largely by the strength of the TTR franchise. Looking ahead, analysts project revenue growth of 24–33% through 2025–2026, supported by improving EPS and an expected annual revenue of $2.9 billion. The company also maintains a strong balance sheet, with around $223 million in free cash flow, a quick ratio of approximately 2.7×, and increasing support from major institutional investors who are adding to their positions. (data via Reuters) Sean — AMVUTTRA (vutrisiran) was recently FDA‑approved for cardiomyopathy, expanding its market from neuropathy, which is a major catalyst for the stock — it significantly expands its addressable market beyond its original use for polyneuropathy. This approval allows Alnylam to target patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM), a much larger population than those with ATTR polyneuropathy. The drug's unique RNA interference mechanism and dosing schedule (quarterly or biannual injections) give it a competitive edge over existing therapies like Pfizer's Vyndaqel. This dual-indication approval not only boosts Alnylam's revenue potential but also strengthens its path toward profitability, making AMVUTTRA a key growth driver for the company and a pivotal reason for recent momentum. Josh — Allow for short-term consolidation in the $300 area, await the next catalyst. 50-day crossing over 200-day important signal that a new uptrend could be forming. Cardinal Health Josh — All three major Pharmaceutical Wholesalers made the list - McKesson (MCK) , Cencora (COR) and Cardinal Health (CAH) , only Cardinal looks good technically right now: CAH held its 50-day on a weekly closing basis during the April bloodbath, I'd use that area as a stop and update it each week. If the uptrend breaks, there's no reason to be long. Sean — CAH is a $37 billion wholesaler, sourcing and distributing branded, generic, and specialty pharmaceutical products to pharmacies, hospitals, and healthcare providers. All three names on our list, Cardinal, Cencora, and McKesson, hold well over 90% of the US pharmaceutical wholesale industry. CAH trades at an 18x forward PE and a 15x P/FCF - this thing is generating cash for investors. It has a 1.3% dividend yield and is growing earnings 8% this year, and is expected to grow its earnings 12% next year. Gilead Sciences Josh — Gilead (GILD) , as you can see in the chart above, is not done going up. This name has been on the list for most of the year so far. At the market lows this spring, it never violated its upward-sloping 200-day moving average — didn't even pay it a visit. And just for fun, below is the "forever" chart back to the company's IPO. I am a believer that price has memory, but I'm not sure there are still a lot of shareholders hanging around here from the last time it traded near the $120 level a decade ago. That said, I wouldn't be surprised to see a battle at that old high as new shareholders buy from sellers who are just thrilled to be getting out break-even. That's what makes a market. Sean — Gilead Sciences (GILD) has been on a run. Its experimental HIV prevention shot, lenacapavir, showed near-complete effectiveness in trials and is expected to generate $2–4 billion in peak annual sales—potentially transforming the HIV prevention market. The company has also posted solid financial results, with 2024 revenue and earnings rising due to strong performance in its HIV, liver disease, and oncology franchises. Analysts have raised price targets across the board, reflecting increased confidence in the company's pipeline and execution. GILD has a meaningful run rate of free cash flow (~$9.6B) and a growing pipeline of drugs for the future. 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