Alzheimer’s News
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June 20, 2023
Is a Revolution in Cancer Treatment Within Reach?
In June 2022, researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and the department of pathology at Yale University School of Medicine unveiled the results of a rectal cancer study that used immunotherapy and put every participating patient into full remission, a staggering outcome.
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June 15, 2023
In Key Study, Servier Drug Delays Brain Cancer in Patients With Few Treatment Options
A Servier drug candidate acquired as part of a $1.8 billion deal kept a particular type of brain cancer from progressing in a Phase 3 clinical trial. The study results were presented during the 2023 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
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May 11, 2023
Pancreatic Cancer Vaccine Shows Promise in Small Trial
Using mRNA tailored to each patient’s tumor, the vaccine may have staved off the return of one of the deadliest forms of cancer in half of those who received it.
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May 2, 2023
Researchers Identify Possible New Risk for Breast Cancer
Scientists have long known that dense breast tissue is linked to an increased risk of breast cancer in women. A new study finds that while breast density declines with age, a slower rate of decline in one breast often precedes a cancer diagnosis in that breast.
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March 21, 2023
Can a Neuroscientist Fight Cancer With Mere Thought?
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March 16, 2023
How ‘Forever Chemicals’ Are All Around Us, From Winter Coats to Fast-Food Wrappers
The EPA is proposing limits in drinking water on some PFAS, which are found in the blood of nearly everyone in the U.S.
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March 16, 2023
EPA Proposes Limits for ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Drinking Water
Concern is growing over PFAS, which have contaminated water in hundreds of communities.
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March 8, 2023
Watch Dr. Larry Norton (MSKCC) on CNN interview discussing how A.I. detected woman’s breast cancer 4 years before it developed
CNN's Poppy Harlow speaks with Dr. Larry Norton, the medical director of the Lauder Breast Center at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, about the use of artificial intelligence in breast cancer detection.
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September 1, 2022
Sloan Kettering Institute Scientist, Scott Lowe, Chairman of the Geoffrey Beene Cancer Research Center, Helps Solve 30-Year-Old Mystery About p53 Protein — Dubbed ‘Guardian of the Genome’
Cancer biologist Scott Lowe says the p53 discovery came as a complete surprise and suggests a new way to think about treating cancer. More than half of all cancers have mutations in a gene called p53. The protein made from this gene is what’s called a tumor suppressor: When working properly, it guards against cancer development — in part, by detecting damaged DNA and alerting cells to repair it. Cells without working p53 are unable to properly repair damaged DNA, leading to a buildup of mutations, including large chromosomal alterations. Because of its important role in maintaining DNA integrity, scientists long ago dubbed p53 the “guardian of the genome.”
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October 6, 2021
Fashion Unites in Tribute to Alber Elbaz
Dozens of designers put on a show to honor and celebrate the man and his work.
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September 8, 2021
2021 CFDA DESIGN SCHOLAR AWARDS Celebrating 25 Years of Growing Exemplary Talent
In 2021, the Council of Fashion Designers of America will celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the CFDA Scholarship Program. Commemorating its commitment to education, $250,000 will be awarded through the 2021 CFDA Design Scholar Awards, Suntchi Image Maker Award, Liz Claiborne Design for Impactful Futures Award, and the Geoffrey Beene Designer Masters Scholar Award.
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September 2, 2021
CFDA ANNOUNCES THE 2021 CFDA SCHOLAR AWARD RECIPIENTS
NEW YORK, September 2nd, 2021 – Celebrating the 25th anniversary of the CFDA Scholarship Program, the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) is proud to announce the recipients of 2021 CFDA Scholar Awards.
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June 3, 2021
A Promising New therapy for Advanced Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer treatment stands on the brink of a major advance with the development of a new treatment that zeros in on cancer cells to destroy them.
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March 12, 2021
The Colorectal Cancer Symptoms You Need to Know, Even If You’re Young Colon and rectal cancer rates are spiking in Millennials and Generation X
Colon and rectal cancer rates have declined in older adults in recent years, but researchers have uncovered an alarming trend: Diagnoses in Millennials and Generation X are actually on the rise, according to a 2017 research published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
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January 13, 2021
Alzheimer’s Drug Shows Promise in Small Trial
Participants with the disease still declined, but much more slowly than those receiving a placebo, investigators say. In a small clinical trial, an experimental Alzheimer’s drug slowed the rate at which patients lost the ability to think and care for themselves, the drug maker Eli Lilly announced on Monday.
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August 13, 2020
The Treatment That Could Crush Covid
Early trials show signaling cells eliminate the virus, calm the immune response and repair tissue damage
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August 7, 2020
Francis Collins Relies on Science and Faith
Amid the coronavirus pandemic,the head of the National Institutes of Health finds hope in his
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evangelical beliefs and the altruism of medicalresearchers -
July 29, 2020
A Blood Test for Alzheimer’s? It’s Coming, Scientists Report
A test that measures beta amyloid protein in the blood is more accurate than a brain scan and may indicate trouble years earlier.
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July 22, 2020
Cancer Screening Leaps Forward Innovation sneaks up on us: There’s a new DNA test that detects more illnesses, earlier
So often the future shows up when you’re looking for something else. In 2013, DNA sequencing company Illumina bought Verinata Health and began offering noninvasive prenatal testing. Using a pregnant woman’s blood, a now-$500 DNA test can spot Down syndrome and other chromosomal conditions. Since then, the use of very invasive needleto-the-womb amniocentesis testing has dropped.
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November 15, 2019
Hindman Auctions: Property From the Geoffrey Beene Archive: Cloths that Care
Geoffrey Beene (1924-2004) was one of the greatest American fashion designers of the 20th century and an iconic figure in the emergence of the American fashion industry after WWII.
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November 15, 2019
CFDA: Archival Geoffrey Beene Designs Go On Auction To Aid Cancer Research
Geoffrey Beene was one of America’s fashion greats who will be remembered for pioneering a newfound freedom for women breaking through career barriers – with a wardrobe that required unrestricted movement and speed.
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November 15, 2019
Art Daliy: Hindman announces Geoffrey Beene Archive Auction
CHICAGO, IL.- Hindman today unveiled details for the upcoming auction, Property From The Geoffrey Beene Archive: Clothes That Care©, featuring significant designs from iconic fashion designer Geoffrey Beene’s personal collection that have been carefully preserved for the past 15 years.
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July 22, 2019
Every Cancer Patient Is One in a Billion
The disease’s endless variety is reminiscent of Tolstoy’s observation about unhappy families.
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May 2, 2019
Bob Mackie Receives Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award
Think Bob Mackie, and chances are you will remember that amazing moment Cher stepped on the 1986 Oscars red carpet in a naked-yet-dressed look replete with a raven-black feather headpiece for the ages (and ageless).
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May 2, 2019
Bob Mackie Will Receive the Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award From the CFDA
With the announcement that Bob Mackie will receive the Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement honor this year, the bar for this CFDA Award has just been raised.
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January 28, 2019
Study Offers Hint of Hope for Saving Office Dementia in Some People
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January 24, 2019
John Mendelshon
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December 18, 2018
Is Aerobic Exercise the Key to Successful Aging?
Aerobic activities like jogging and interval training can make our cells biologically younger; weight training did not have the same effect.
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December 17, 2018
The Brain Fog of Menopause
‘Menopause-related cognitive impairment happens to women in their 40s and 50s, women in the prime of life who suddenly have the rug pulled out from under them,’ an expert says.
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December 14, 2018
Is Eating Deli Meats Really That Bad for You?
Even small amounts of processed meat increase the risk of colorectal cancer.
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April 29, 2018
CRISPR: The gene-editing tool revolutionizing biomedical research
A new tool could be the key to treating genetic diseases and may be the most consequential discovery in biomedicine this century
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July 25, 2017
Overwhelming Majority Of Americans Say Discussions About Clinical Trials Should Be A Part Of Standard Of Care
An overwhelming majority of Americans (86%) agree that health care professionals should discuss clinical trials with patients diagnosed with a disease as part of their standard of care, according to a new national public opinion survey commissioned by Research!America.
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June 20, 2017
Gene variant protecting against Alzheimer’s disease decreases plasma beta-amyloid levels
The APP gene variant protecting against Alzheimer’s disease significantly decreases plasma beta-amyloid levels in a population cohort. This is a very significant discovery, as many on-going drug trials in the field of Alzheimer's disease focus on decreasing beta-amyloid levels in the brain tissue. According to the study, a 30% life-long decrease in beta-amyloid levels is not associated with detrimental effects on lipid or glucose metabolism, or on any other metabolic factors.
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January 12, 2017
Researchers find a potential target for anti-Alzheimer treatments
The USP9 gene has an indirect influence on the so-called tau protein, which is believed to play a significant role in the onset of Alzheimer’s disease.
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July 26, 2016
Health-eBrain study offers Alzheimer’s caregivers a “mobile mirror” of their own cognitive vitality
A study focused on the impact that caring for an individual with Alzheimer's has on the caregiver's own brain and behavioral health has now moved into Phase II. This next phase of the Health-eBrain Study, done in collaboration with BrightFocus Foundation, Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Intitiative, AnthroTronix and Mindoula, will be announced at the Global Alliance for Women’s Brain Health during the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference today in Toronto.
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October 12, 2014
Breakthrough Replicates Human Brain Cells for Use in Alzheimer’s Research
For the first time, and to the astonishment of many of their colleagues, researchers created what they call Alzheimer’s in a Dish — a petri dish with human brain cells that develop the telltale structures of Alzheimer’s disease.
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May 5, 2014
Deaths from Alzheimer’s more than reported, study says
USA Today (March 5, 2014): Alzheimer's disease accounts for many more deaths than we've realized, a new study concludes, making it nearly as lethal as the nation's two biggest killers, heart disease and cancer.
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November 8, 2013
FNIH, Geoffrey Beene Foundation Name Winner of Alzheimer’s Challenge
GEN News (November 8, 2013): To advance the study of male/female differences in Alzheimer's disease (AD), the organizers of a neurodiscovery challenge have announced the winner of the $50,000 grand prize. The organizers-the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (FNIH) and the Geoffrey Beene Foundation-had narrowed the field of potential winners to just three. Ultimately, in a voting process that included public participation, the winner emerged: Enrico Glaab, Ph.D., a research associate at the Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg.
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October 29, 2013
FNIH And Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Initiative Open Online Voting To The Public For The 2013 Geoffrey Beene Global NeuroDiscovery Challenge
Bethesda, MD (October 29, 2013): The Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, in association with the Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Initiative, today announced the top four winners of the preliminary round of the first-ever cha...
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April 30, 2013
Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Initiative Announces $100,000 Innovation Challenge
Washington, DC (April 30, 2013): The Geoffrey Beene Foundation Alzheimer’s Initiative last night launched the 2013 Geoffrey Beene Global NeuroDiscovery Challenge at the April 29 Society for Women’s Health Research Gala at the Mandarin Hot...
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June 1, 2012
Turning the Light on Alzheimer’s PET-CT Solution Ushers in Brighter Future for Patients and Caregivers
Imaging Life: Cognitive decline and the many forms of dementia affect almost every community across the globe, and according to the World Health Organization (WHO), of the 35.6 million people currently diagnosed with dementia, the vast majority have ...
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February 29, 2012
Reinvention: Caring for Loved Ones with Alzheimer’s
MORE: In the early 1990s, Meryl Comer and Harvey Gralnick lived the life of Washington, D.C., glitterati. Comer anchored the television show It’s Your Business, a nationally syndicated debate program. Gralnick, a doctor, headed hematology and ...
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February 1, 2012
Path Is Found for the Spread of Alzheimer’s
The New York Times: Alzheimer’s disease seems to spread like an infection from brain cell to brain cell, two new studies in mice have found. But instead of viruses or bacteria, what is being spread is a distorted protein known as tau. ...
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December 15, 2010
Would You Want to Know If You’re at Risk for Alzheimer’s?
Big Think: Genetic testing is advancing rapidly, and we can now find out our risk factor for developing Alzheimer's. But without a cure or treatment available, what's the point?
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December 3, 2010
Michael Weiner, MD, named “Rock Star of Science”
Scientific Data Sharing Project: Michael Weiner, MD, Director of the Center for Imaging of Neurodegenerative Diseases (CIND) at the San Francisco VA Medical Center, is among a prestigious group of 17 scientists named 2010 Rock Stars of Science by the Geoffrey Beene Foundation.
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November 17, 2010
Stanford Neurologist Rocks Out for Science
Scope Blog: It's not every day that a Stanford physician gets to spend several hours on set with a rock star.
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November 16, 2010
Why It’s Time to Rock Alzheimer’s
Huffington Post: Tomorrow, a glitzy 6 page public service campaign goes public in GQ magazine, featuring a band of 19 leading biomedical research scientists paired up with 8 famous rock stars. ...
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September 25, 2009
Prevention and cure of Alzheimer’s disease important to Americans
News-Medical.Net: A new voter survey sponsored by the ACT-AD Coalition (Accelerate Cure/Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease) finds that three-quarters of Americans nationwide and across party lines say it is personally important to them to find a cure or to prevent Alzheimer's disease, while a similar proportion of the national electorate say they look to Congress to make it "a national priority" to speed up the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) review process in specific ways for therapies that slow, halt or reverse the disease.
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May 29, 2009
Dude looks like a … scientist?
Boston.com: Noted Alzheimer's disease researcher Rudolph Tanzi, known for unraveling genetic clues to the devastating disorder in his lab at Massachusetts General Hospital, shows his hipper, rock-and-roll side in a magazine spread promoting science.
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May 11, 2009
The Alzheimer’s Project
Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative is a marquee sponcsor of HBO’s “The Alzheimer’s Project.” ...
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April 28, 2009
Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative Co-Sponsors Pioneering New HBO Alzheimer’s Project
GeoffreyBeene.com: Designer menswear brand’s unique retail-driven philanthropy backs HBO’s efforts to reveal the hidden truth and reason for hope behind America’s next health crisis. ...
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April 17, 2009
20-year Study Determines How Personal Genomics Affects Behavior
Esther Landhuis: With initiative and a few bucks, consumers nowadays can send tubes of saliva to a company that will analyze their DNA and offer personalized risk assessments for a host of common conditions including diabetes, heart attack, and Alzhe...
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March 26, 2009
Video: ABC Nightline Report on Alzheimer’s Disease (Part 2)
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March 26, 2009
Video: ABC Nightline Report on Alzheimer’s Disease (Part 1)
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January 1, 2009
French lessons: Leadership in Alzheimer’s disease
The Alzheimer’s Association: Published by Meryl Comer, President of the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative. ...
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October 1, 2008
Early Alzheimer’s disease diagnostics: Wait! Wait! Don’t tell me!
Published by Meryl Comer, President of the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative. ...
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July 8, 2008
The “tipping point” in the Alzheimer’s dialogue: It’s all about the messenger
Published by Meryl Comer, President of the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative. ...
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July 1, 2008
National Leaders to Discuss Challenges in Diagnosing Early-Stage Alzheimer Disease
The Alzheimer Research Forum, the Web’s foremost community of AD researchers, in collaboration with the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative and Alzheimer Study Group, has assembled a panel of thought leaders to address the ...
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December 6, 2007
Alzheimer’s Researcher and Geoffrey Beene Foundation Exec Honored with the 2007 Senator Proxmire Award
Dale B. Schenk, Ph.D, Executive Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer for Elan Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a celebrated scientist who has made fundamental breakthroughs in basic and clinical Alzheimer’s research over the past twenty years, and...
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November 29, 2007
Members of Bipartisan Alzheimer’s Study Group Announced; Political and Community Leaders Underscore Strong Support
WASHINGTON, DC – Today former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich and former U.S. Senator Bob Kerrey, co-chairs of the Alzheimer’s Study Group (ASG), announced the full membership of the taskforce they have assembled to develop and advance str...
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February 22, 2006
From the bedside: “A terrified witness to the future.”
Published by Meryl Comer, President of the Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® Alzheimer’s Initiative. ...
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Geoffrey Beene Foundation
In Its Fight
Against Cancer
To Save Lives
Geoffreybeenefoundation.com
Our most brilliant scientific minds are dedicated to finding cures for the diseases that threaten our future, and America's most celebrated Rock Stars stand behind them. Join in celebrating the Rock Stars of Science.
GQ Connects Loves Geoffrey Beene!
GBGB Geoffrey Beene Gives Back® also proudly supports the in-store promotion for the American Heart Association's "Go Red For Women Movement."