Here are some of the latest health and medical news
developments, compiled by the editors of
HealthDay:
Pfizer Suspends Osteoarthritis Drug Trials
Trials testing the pain drug tanezumab in osteoarthritis
patients have been suspended after the condition of some patients
worsened to the point that they required joint surgery, Pfizer Inc.
said Thursday.
The company made the decision following a request by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration, the
Wall Street Journal reported.
The suspension of drug testing is limited to patients with
osteoarthritis, but Pfizer will meet later this week with FDA
officials to discuss possible implications for other clinical
trials of tanezumab.
Pfizer is testing the drug in patients with chronic low back
pain, cancer pain, nerve damage caused by diabetes, and a painful
bladder disorder, the
Wall Street Journal reported.
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CT Scans Pose Growing Health Threat: Experts
CT scans pose a growing threat to public health, and tighter
rules for the imaging tests are needed to improve their safety,
experts write in articles published Thursday in the
New England Journal of Medicine.
CT scans use far more radiation than ordinary X-rays, and
potential threats include radiation overdoses and long-term cancer
risks. Each year in the United States, about 10 percent of the
population undergoes a CT scan, and the use of this type of imaging
test is growing by more than 10 percent a year, the
Associated Press reported.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates medical imaging
equipment but can't tell doctors how to use it or what tests are
appropriate. No federal standards exist for how much radiation a CT
scan can use. One study found a 13-fold variation in the CT
radiation dose received by patients at four California
hospitals.
"The doses are much higher and much more variable than people realize," said Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman, a radiologist at the University of California at San Francisco, who led the study.
"It's time to make it safer," said Smith-Bindman, who wrote one of the articles in the New England Journal of Medicine.
She said manufacturers' efforts to reduce CT overuse and lower
radiation doses have had little effect, the
AP reported.
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Safety Concerns Prompt Recall of Millions of Cribs
A recall of more than two million cribs from seven companies was
announced Thursday by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Most of the cribs, which pose a suffocation, entrapment or fall
hazard, are drop-sides -- they have a side rail that moves up and
down to make it easier for parents to lift their baby from the
crib. But these drop-sides can malfunction or detach from the crib,
leaving a gap where an infant's head can get trapped, leading to
suffocation or strangulation, the
Associated Press reported.
The CPSC hasn't received any reports of deaths associated with
the cribs, but knows of at least 16 reported entrapments of
infants, including one child who was found unconscious and had to
be hospitalized.
The brands of the recalled cribs include Evenflo, Delta
Enterprises Corp., Jardine Enterprises, Child Craft, Simmons
Juvenile Products Inc., LaJobi, and Million Dollar Baby, the
AP reported.
Delta and Child Craft also admit there are problems with
fixed-side cribs, the CPSC said.
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California Declares Whooping Cough Epidemic
A whooping cough epidemic has been declared in California after
the deaths of five infants.
State health authorities are urging residents, particularly
those of Latino background, to get vaccinated against the highly
contagious disease, which is often mistaken for a cold or the flu,
The New York Times reported.
So far, 910 cases of whooping cough (pertussis) have been
confirmed, and several hundred more cases are under investigation,
says the California Department of Public Health. If the outbreak
continues at the current pace, it could be the largest in the state
in 50 years.
Compared with 2009, there has been a four-fold increase in the
number of whooping cough cases so far this year, said Dr. Gilberto
Chavex, deputy director of the public health department's Center
for Infectious Disease. The worse may be yet to come, he added.
"The peak season starts in summer. And we expect to see a much larger number of cases if we don't intervene quickly," he told The Times.