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BioWorld - Sunday, May 10, 2026
Home » Topics » Infection, Medical technology

Infection, Medical technology
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Natural killer cell
Drugs

The next pandemic: Firebreaks and host-directed therapies

April 9, 2020
By Anette Breindl
Specific therapies against a new disease take time to develop. But there are methods that can speed up that development – and in the meantime, there are ways to make do with what’s already in the cupboard.
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SARS-CoV-2 molecular diagnostic
Diagnostics

The next pandemic: Excess testing capacity essential, but cost question not yet answered

April 8, 2020
By Mark McCarty
There will be lessons learned aplenty when the COVID-19 pandemic finally breaks, including how serological and molecular testing can be used to maximum effect to corral a future pandemic. Carmen Wiley, president of the American Association of Clinical Chemistry, told BioWorld that the existing instrument types are up to the job, but that surge capacity is needed, and that it is not clear how the cost of that capacity will be handled.
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1918-19 Spanish flu patient, paramedics, ambulance
Surveillance

The next pandemic: Death, taxes and zoonotic spillover

April 7, 2020
By Anette Breindl
“In any crisis, leaders have two equally important responsibilities: solve the immediate problem and keep it from happening again... The first point is more pressing, but the second has crucial long-term consequences.” So wrote Bill Gates in a February editorial in The New England Journal of Medicine about COVID-19, which “has started behaving a lot like the once-in-a-century pathogen we’ve been worried about.”
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Blood cells and bacteria

Sepsis study may yield new treatment strategies

April 1, 2020
By John Fox
Indian scientists have discovered a previously unknown mechanism underlying life-threatening sepsis and proposed a new treatment strategy centered upon cell-free chromatin (cfCh), they reported in the March 4, 2020, edition of PLOS ONE. Notably, they showed that sepsis could be caused by cfCh released from dying host cells following microbial infection.
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Map illustrating origin and spread of coronavirus

Undetected cases are major source of pandemic spread

March 16, 2020
By Anette Breindl
Undetected cases were a major driver of the early spread of SARS-CoV-2 in Wuhan, China, despite being less infectious on a case-by-case basis, according to a modeling study published in the March 16, 2020, online issue of Science.
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DNA, dollars illustration

Liquid biopsy startup Karius raises $165M to enable more accurate, faster diagnosis

March 12, 2020
By Stacy Lawrence
Liquid biopsy has long been seen as key to the future of cancer diagnostics, treatment and even potentially prevention. But now, startup Karius Inc. has staked out its claim as the first to bring cell-free DNA analysis, which is often used in oncology and prenatal liquid biopsy applications, into the clinic for infectious disease detection, identification and treatment guidance.
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Earth infected with pandemic

Officially a pandemic, but COVID-19 fight far from over, says WHO director general

March 11, 2020
By Nuala Moran
LONDON – The World Health Organization (WHO) has officially declared COVID-19 a pandemic, but is pushing back strongly against countries giving up on stringent control measures.
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Postponed stamp on calendar

Preparing for COVID-19, FDA shuts down inspections, postpones meetings

March 10, 2020
By Mari Serebrov
Despite the growing concerns about the potential for the community spread of COVID-19 in the U.S., the FDA-FTC public workshop on competition in the biologics marketplace went ahead as scheduled March 9, playing to a full house with some audience members sitting in an overflow room. And all the invited speakers and people registered to speak during the open public hearing session showed up.
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Coronavirus test tube, microscope, gloved hand

WHO releases COVID-19 roadmap; funding efforts in progress

March 9, 2020
By Nuala Moran
LONDON – The World Health Organization (WHO) has released its COVID-19 R&D roadmap, highlighting the gaps in knowledge about the virus and setting out priorities for research. The organization is now calling on groups around the world to use the document – drawn up by 400 experts – to coordinate their efforts.
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Empty prescription drug bottles

COVID-19 a fulcrum to push MEDS Act through Congress

March 2, 2020
By Mari Serebrov
COVID-19 is bringing more pressure to bear on Congress to pass S. 2723, the Mitigating Emergency Drug Shortages (MEDS) Act, which has been sitting in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee since Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) introduced it in October 2019 – a few months before the novel coronavirus emerged.
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