Intensive statin therapy demonstrated to be safe and effective in the elderly
May 1st 2007Intensive statin therapy in elderly patients may be more effective than moderate statin therapy in improving lipid levels and reducing all-cause death, according to a prospective, international, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, parallel-arm trial in elderly patients with documented coronary artery disease (CAD).
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Sorafenib improves progression-free survival in clear-cell renal-cell carcinoma
May 1st 2007Sorafenib significantly improves progression-free survival in patients with advanced clear-cell renal-cell carcinoma, according to results from a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
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Rosuvastatin effective at slowing progression of asymptomatic aortic stenosis
May 1st 2007Prospective treatment with rosuvastatin can slow the hemodynamic progression of asymptomatic aortic stenosis. This was the conclusion of the prospective, open-label Rosuvastatin Affecting Aortic Valve Endothelium (RAAVE) trial.
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Triple therapy for COPD demonstrates benefit, fails to meet end point in randomized study
May 1st 2007In a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group trial, triple therapy with tiotropium plus salmeterol (SAL) and fluticasone failed to reduce the proportion of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experiencing exacerbations requiring treatment with systemic corticosteroids and/or antibiotics (the primary end point) compared with tiotropium plus salmeterol or tiotropium alone.
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Pooled analysis demonstrates regression of coronary atherosclerosis with statins
May 1st 2007A post-hoc analysis invloving 4 prospective, randomized trials demonstrated that treatment of CAD with statins increases HDL-C, and the increases correlate with a positive impact on disease progression.
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Gabapentin monotherapy as effective as gabapentin plus antidepressant in treatment of hot flashes
May 1st 2007A phase 3 study evaluating the use of gabapentin alone and in combination with an antidepressant in women with hot flashes who had an inadequate response with antidepressant monotherapy demonstrated that gabapentin reduced hot flashes by approximately 50%, whereas the combination of an anti-depressant with gabapentin appeared to offer no additional benefit.
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Poor adherence to warfarin therapy significantly affects anticoagulation control
May 1st 2007Patients who fail to adhere to warfarin therapy as prescribed are more likely to experience problems with anticoagulation control, according to the authors of the International Normalized Ratio Adherence and Genetics (IN-RANGE) study.
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The pharmacologic management of pulmonary arterial hypertension
May 1st 2007Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a disease state characterized by vascular narrowing and increased pulmonary vascular resistance. Physical symptoms, which may include fatigue or weakness, exertional dyspnea, and peripheral edema, are often nonspecific and can mimic more common disorders encountered in clinical practice. Healthcare professionals have been limited in which medications could be used to treat this condition because clinical data have been scarce. Recently, multiple new classes of medications, many of which are very costly, have become available; these agents offer physicians more therapeutic options for the treatment of PAH. Managed-care organizations have been challenged with suggesting the appropriate place in therapy for these new agents, as well as ensuring their safe and cost-effective utilization. This review summarizes the data available for the drugs used to treat PAH, with the goal of helping organizations to make appropriate decisions regarding the proper use of these agents.
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Home-monitoring implementation stalled by ongoing logistics
May 1st 2007While new breeds of consumer medical devices-as well as healthcare-oriented variations of existing devices, such as cell phones, computers and televisions-might hold enormous promise, stakeholders across the industry agree that formidable technical, regulatory, security and reimbursement obstacles continue to stand in the way. The current healthcare delivery model is under pressure, which has many anticipating an alternative model of care that places greater emphasis on technologically advanced in-home care and monitoring.
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Outpatient rehabilitation network affects value, bottom line
May 1st 2007Providing quality health care while watching the bottom line is the eternal balancing act for managed care organizations. Outpatient rehabilitation - an often-neglected area - stands to significantly impact quality and the bottom line.
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Plans must be prepared to protect against fraud
May 1st 2007Healthcare organizations are intimately familiar with intense prosecutorial scrutiny resulting from the government's battle against fraud and corruption. There are prominent examples of focused federal fraud investigations, resulting in hefty settlements. Congress has now enlisted the healthcare industry in their campaign against fraud.
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Speech-enabled phone programs can enhance member health, loyalty
May 1st 2007As more health plans turn to automated, speech-enabled calls to reach out to members with welcome programs, preventive health reminders, or with more sensitive information about a specific condition, they must use an appropriate approach. Done correctly, such phone programs can provide a cost-effective way to speak with members.
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IN THE PAST TWO DECADES, the progress of pharmacy benefit management has brought about sophisticated strategies including formularies, utilization management and generic substitution. David B. Snow Jr., CEO of Medco Health Solutions, is bargaining that the next decade of pharmacy benefit management will bring enhanced patient therapy, personalized medicine and dramatic opportunities in the generic market-points all pharmacy benefit teams will have to ponder.
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