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Novartis to Pay $390 Million in U.S. Settlement over Pharmacy Kickbacks

Sarah N. Lynch  |  November 24, 2015

WASHINGTON (Reuters)—Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. will pay $390 million to settle U.S. charges that it paid specialty pharmacies illegal kickbacks in exchange for inducing patients to refill certain medications, according to an accord announced Friday. The settlement between a U.S. unit of Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG, the federal government and more than 40 states concerns payments…

SLE—It’s in the Genes

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  November 23, 2015

In a large-scale genome-wide association study, researchers mapped 10 new SLE-associated loci and found aberrantly regulated gene expression networks may be behind SLE development…

U.S. Public Health Funding on the Decline

Lisa Rapaport  |  November 20, 2015

(Reuters Health)—U.S. public health funding, which covers such things as disease prevention, cancer screenings, contraceptives and vaccines, has been steadily falling in recent years and is expected to keep going down, a recent study projects. Real, inflation-adjusted public health expenditures surged from $39 per capita in 1960 to $281 per capita in 2008, then fell…

How to Stay on Top of the Science

Richard Quinn  |  November 20, 2015

For rheumatologists with busy schedules, staying up to date on the latest research can be difficult. Here are a few tips to help you review and prioritize the literature that could affect your practice…

Drug Makers Inconsistent in Sharing Clinical Trial Data

Lisa Rapaport  |  November 19, 2015

(Reuters Health)—Drug companies are inconsistent about disclosing data related to clinical trials of new medicines, a new report says. Researchers examined publicly available data on clinical trials for 15 new medicines from 10 companies that were cleared for sale by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2012. Two of the companies disclosed all trials…

U.S. Doctor Group Calls for Ban on Drug Advertising to Consumers

Susan Kelly  |  November 19, 2015

(Reuters)—The American Medical Association on Tuesday called for a ban on advertising prescription drugs and medical devices directly to consumers, saying the ads drive patients to demand expensive treatments over less costly ones that are also effective. The influential doctors’ group said the new policy reflects physicians’ concerns that marketing spending on a proliferation of…

Autoimmune Diseases Common in Patients with Vitiligo

Will Boggs, MD  |  November 19, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Patients with vitiligo commonly have other autoimmune diseases, according to a cross-sectional study. “Vitiligo is a systemic disease with multiple comorbidities,” Dr. Iltefat Hamzavi from Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Mich., told Reuters Health by email. “The number of patients with neurologic diseases and inflammatory disease was much higher than we anticipated.”…

Advocate for Rheumatology with the ACR

From the College  |  November 18, 2015

Your voice is an essential part of the ACR’s advocacy efforts, and our new Legislative Action Center makes contacting your legislator easier than ever before…

FDA Approves 2 Pain Drugs & New Gout Treatment on Road to Approval

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  November 18, 2015

The FDA has approved two drugs designed to manage pain: buprenorphine for chronic pain and meloxicam capsules for OA pain. Lesurinad is also closer to FDA approval for treating gout…

Obama Nominee to Lead FDA Defends Drug Industry Ties

Toni Clarke  |  November 17, 2015

(Reuters)—President Barack Obama’s nominee to head the U.S. Food and Drug Administration defended his ties to the pharmaceutical industry on Tuesday during a Senate committee hearing that included questions on soaring drug prices. Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders was among the Democrats who grilled Dr. Robert Califf (64), who joined the FDA in January as a…

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