Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Report. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 October 2013

First Windpipe Transplant Holding Up Over Time: Report

News Picture: First Windpipe Transplant Holding Up Over Time: Report

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 23 (HealthDay News) -- Five years ago, researchers performed the first successful transplant of a tissue-engineered airway on a 30-year-old Colombian woman. Today, she's still doing well, according to a new follow-up report on the surgery.

The woman who received the engineered section of windpipe has not experienced a rejection of the implanted airway, the researchers said.

The mother of two received the transplant after part of her own windpipe had collapsed due to complications from tuberculosis. An international team of researchers led by Dr. Paolo Macchiarini implanted a tissue-engineered trachea.

Along with his team, Macchiarini, who was at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, in Spain, at the time, created the airway using cells from a human donor trachea combined with the products of the patient's own stem cells, as well as epithelial cells taken from a healthy part of the woman's windpipe.

After receiving the transplant, the woman had no complications and was discharged from the hospital 10 days after surgery. Four months later, she still had no antidonor antibodies and did not need to take drugs to suppress her immune system to prevent her from rejecting the new airway. At that time, researchers cautioned that a longer follow-up would be needed to measure the success of the transplant.

Six months after surgery, the patient began to experience persistent coughing, according to the report. Scarring in the area of the transplant had caused a narrowing of her airway. A stent placed to hold her airway open was effective and she no longer experiences any symptoms, the researchers reported, although the stent requires regular monitoring.

Now, five years later, the woman who underwent the pioneering procedure is enjoying a normal social and working life. The follow-up findings, published Oct. 23 in the journal The Lancet, noted that regular tests of her lung function and other key indicators show that she has good lung function and has not had any complications involving her immune system.

"These results confirm what we and many patients hoped at the time of the original operation: that tissue-engineered transplants are safe and effective in the long term," Macchiarini said in a journal news release. "However, the scarring that occurred in this patient shows that long-term biomechanical stability can be improved -- something which is currently under active preclinical investigation."

"The results of a first-in-man active clinical trial will soon provide the definitive evidence that is needed before this stem-cell-based tissue-engineering technology can be translated into routine clinical practice," said Macchiarini, who currently is with the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

Alan Russell, of the Disruptive Health Technology Institute at Carnegie Mellon University and the Allegheny Health Network, in Pittsburgh, wrote in an accompanying journal editorial that this is "the end of the beginning for tissue engineering; the groundwork has been laid for clinical implementation in other specialties."

-- Mary Elizabeth Dallas MedicalNews
Copyright © 2013 HealthDay. All rights reserved. SOURCE: The Lancet, news release, Oct. 22, 2013



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Friday, 5 July 2013

Report Details Data Breaches in California

The personal information of 2.5 million Californians was compromised by 131 electronic data breaches in 2012, according to a report released Monday by the office of Attorney General Kamala Harris.

In 56 percent of the cases, customers' Social Security numbers were exposed. The retail industry reported the largest number of breaches with 34 while finance and insurance companies trailed close behind with 30.

California law requires state agencies and businesses to alert customers when their personal information is exposed. And starting in 2012, those agencies and businesses were forced to start notifying the attorney general's office as well.

The notoriety surrounding data breaches and thefts has led to a boom in sales of so-called cyberinsurance, which offers protection beyond a company's typical theft coverage, said Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman partner Vincent Morgan.

With potentially enormous costs associated with investigating and stopping a breach, notifying customers and settling third-party liability issues, cyberinsurance "is no longer a niche product," Morgan said.

Valve Corp., an online game software corporation, reported one of the biggest intrusions last year. Online hackers gained access to the Social Security numbers and payment card information of 509,000 people, according to the AG's office.

Not every breach was caused by a hacker or resulted in identity theft. And many of the protection failures were unintentional — someone misdirected an email or lost a computer storage device, according to the report.

Whatever the cause of the data intrusions, more than half of the 2.5 million consumers could have been protected if their information had been encrypted, the attorney general said.

"It is my strong recommendation that companies and agencies implement encryption as a basic protection and reasonable security measure to help them meet their obligation to safeguard personal information entrusted to them," Harris said in a prepared statement.

This article originally appeared in The Recorder.

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Tuesday, 25 June 2013