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BioWorld - Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Home » Keywords » National Institutes of Health

Items Tagged with 'National Institutes of Health'

ARTICLES

AI-generated art for viral infection of the lungs
Infection

In lethal influenza, repair the lung before it’s too late

Nov. 25, 2025
By Coia Dulsat
No Comments
NIH researchers report that in severe influenza, survival improves at late stages only when antivirals are combined with therapies that repair lung damage or limit harmful T-cell responses, explaining why anti-inflammatory treatments alone are often ineffective.
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Cancer

US scientists divulge new superstolide derivatives

Nov. 24, 2025
Researchers from Johns Hopkins University, National Institutes of Health and University of Iowa have synthesized superstolide derivatives reported to be useful for the treatment of cancer and viral infections.
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AI-generated art for viral infection of the lungs
Infection

In lethal influenza, repair the lung before it’s too late

Nov. 24, 2025
By Coia Dulsat
No Comments
NIH researchers report that in severe influenza, survival improves at late stages only when antivirals are combined with therapies that repair lung damage or limit harmful T-cell responses, explaining why anti-inflammatory treatments alone are often ineffective.
Read More
Head and neck anatomy
Immuno-oncology

Novel T-cell activator enhances antitumor response in HNSCC models

Nov. 14, 2025
No Comments
Researchers from the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Marengo Therapeutics Inc. previously developed a first-in-class, bifunctional therapeutic molecule (STAR-0602) that selectively activates V β6 and V β10 T-cell receptor-expressing T cells and boosts antitumor responses in human ex vivo tumor models.
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Dollar sign between hands

One year later: funding and dealmaking in women’s health

Nov. 13, 2025
By Karen Carey
No Comments
A year ago, BioWorld published a special series on the women’s health drug development ecosystem, showing that while women make up half of the population, venture capital investment and life sciences partnerships in the space – specifically those deals supporting innovations for conditions primarily affecting women – pale in comparison to efforts addressing diseases more men experience. That appears to be changing, according to an updated look of BioWorld data, supported by findings in the Silicon Valley Bank 2025 Innovation in Women’s Health Report published in April, and Clarivate’s Nov. 13 release of its latest Companies to Watch 2025 report, Rediscovering women’s health.
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3D rendered medical illustration of the pituitary gland
Cancer

RET antagonist implicated in Ewing sarcoma and delayed puberty

Sep. 10, 2025
No Comments
Secreted gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) acts on the anterior pituitary gland to initiate puberty. Mutations in the protein immunoglobulin superfamily member 10 (IGSF10) have been linked to puberty delay, but the reason has been unclear.
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Skin, tissue layer illustration
Dermatologic

MRS-7787 ameliorates skin lesions in psoriasis

Sep. 2, 2025
No Comments
The addition of photoisomerizable moieties in drugs opens the possibility of rapid and reversible light-dependent switching between an active and inactive form. Researchers from the National Institutes of Health and the University of Barcelona have developed MRS-7787, a photoswitchable adenosine A3 receptor (A3R) agonist that controls A3R through topical skin irradiation.
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Illustration of DNA composing the human body
Endocrine/metabolic

NBEA genetic variation is predictive of weight loss response with GLP-1 receptor agonists

July 31, 2025
No Comments
Researchers from the Cleveland Clinic and National Institutes of Health investigated the role of the neurobeachin (NBEA) gene in predicting weight loss response to glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists.
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Mouse genome/DNA sequencing concept art.
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

NIH initiative to reduce animal use in research

April 30, 2025
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is adopting a new initiative to expand innovative, human-based science while reducing animal use in research. Developing and using alternative nonanimal research models aligns with the FDA’s recent initiative to reduce testing in animals.
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Lisa Ricciardi, CEO, Cognition

BIO CEO 2025: Cognition CEO debates policy while advancing CT-1812

Feb. 11, 2025
By Karen Carey
Cognition Therapeutics Inc. evolved from the work of a neuroscientist and a chemist working in the San Francisco Bay area, seeking out targets to block the effects of Alzheimer’s disease. Since the company’s 2007 inception, it has received close to $200 million in U.S. NIH grant funding. Investors often tell CEO Lisa Ricciardi, who joined the company in 2020: “’That’s because you have a relationship with the FDA.’ Well, no. It’s because it’s competitive” and the company’s research has met the muster. “You have to apply two or three times. … It’s with rigor that these results are generated and that we’re able to get more funding.”
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More Articles Tagged with 'National Institutes of Health'

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