Latest News from: Georgetown University Medical Center

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13-Jun-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Increasing Use and Awareness of Oral Nicotine Pouches Detailed
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

A rigorous, comprehensive synthesis of evidence from 62 studies related to the use of oral nicotine pouches by Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center scientists and colleagues provides a much-needed assessment of how these products could lead to potential harmful consequences if used by young people.

Released: 14-Jun-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Addressing Cancer Screening Behaviors in the Muslim Community in Washington
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

An important study has revealed crucial insights into the cancer screening behaviors of Muslims in the Washington, D.C., area, highlighting the influence of cultural and religious beliefs on health practices.

7-Jun-2024 10:05 AM EDT
Case study reveals important new details about rare second cancers related to CAR-T therapy
Georgetown University Medical Center

A new detailed analysis of a patient’s second cancer after receiving CAR-T therapy for the initial cancer provides rare but important insights intended to offer helpful guidance for oncologists and pathologists about the clinical presentation and pathologic features involved in a CAR-T related second cancer.

30-May-2024 12:05 PM EDT
Experimental Therapy Shows Promise in Pancreatic Cancer Clinical Trial
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

Clinicians at Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center reported promising preliminary findings based on outcomes in the first six patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer enrolled in a phase 2 clinical trial of the experimental drug BXCL701 in combination with the immunotherapy drug pembrolizumab (Keytruda).

Released: 31-May-2024 1:05 PM EDT
Cognitive Declines Preceding Alzheimer’s Diagnosis Lead to Credit Card, Mortgage Delinquency
Georgetown University Medical Center

Media Contact Karen Teber, [email protected] (May 31, 2024) — In the years prior to an Alzheimer’s disease or other memory disorder diagnosis, credit scores begin to weaken and payment delinquency begins to increase, concludes new research led by Georgetown University. The findings show consistent deterioration in these financial outcomes over the quarters leading up to diagnosis.

29-May-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Structural Inequities Amplify Homelessness Challenges for Pregnant People in Washington DC
Georgetown University Medical Center

New research conducted with Washington, DC, residents who experienced homelessness during pregnancy sheds light on the intersection of homelessness, pregnancy, and racial inequities. The findings underscore the urgent need for policy and practice changes to support vulnerable populations.

26-Apr-2024 9:05 AM EDT
The Aspirin Conundrum: Navigating Negative Results, Age, Aging Dynamics and Equity
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

A new study examining the role of aspirin in breast cancer treatment reveals critical issues related to health equity and aging that have broad implications for cancer and other disease intervention trials, say researchers from Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center.

21-Apr-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Perinatal Transmission of HIV Can Lead to Cognitive Deficits
Georgetown University Medical Center

Perinatal transmission of HIV to newborns is associated with serious cognitive deficits as children grow older, according to a detailed analysis of 35 studies conducted by Georgetown University Medical Center neuroscientists. The finding helps pinpoint the geographic regions and factors that may be important for brain development outcomes related to perinatal HIV infection: mother-to-child HIV transmission during pregnancy, labor and delivery, or breastfeeding.

11-Apr-2024 7:05 AM EDT
Antibiotics Aren’t Effective for Most Lower Tract Respiratory Infections
Georgetown University Medical Center

Use of antibiotics provided no measurable impact on the severity or duration of coughs even if a bacterial infection was present, finds a large, prospective study of people who sought treatment in U.S. primary or urgent care settings for lower-respiratory tract infections.

Released: 12-Apr-2024 7:05 AM EDT
A Third of Women Experience Migraines Associated with Menstruation, Most Commonly When Premenopausal
Georgetown University Medical Center

A third of the nearly 20 million women who participated in a national health survey reports migraines during menstruation, and of them, 11.8 million, or 52.5%, were premenopausal.

10-Jan-2024 9:05 PM EST
Amnesia Caused by Head Injury Reversed in Early Mouse Study
Georgetown University Medical Center

A mouse study designed to shed light on memory loss in people who experience repeated head impacts, such as athletes, suggests the condition could potentially be reversed. The research in mice finds that amnesia and poor memory following head injury is due to inadequate reactivation of neurons involved in forming memories.

   
18-Nov-2023 9:05 PM EST
Researchers Pinpoint Brain Area Where People Who Are Blind Recognize Faces Identified by Sound
Georgetown University Medical Center

Using a specialized device that translates images into sound, Georgetown University Medical Center neuroscientists and colleagues showed that people who are blind recognized basic faces using the part of the brain known as the fusiform face area , a region that is crucial for the processing of faces in sighted people.

Released: 15-Nov-2023 12:05 AM EST
Georgetown Global Health Center Launches First Open-Access Wildlife Disease Database
Georgetown University Medical Center

Georgetown University Medical Center’s Center for Global Health Science and Security (GHSS) today announces the launch of a first-of-its-kind wildlife disease database -- a system for collecting records of viruses, bacteria, fungi, parasites, etc. -- designed to support an early warning system for potential viral emergence.

5-Nov-2023 6:05 AM EST
Computer Models Fill Critical Knowledge Gaps to Help Reduce Cancer Disparities
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

Reducing health disparities in incidence and mortality for major types of cancers can be aided by sophisticated computer modeling efforts, according to new, wide-ranging perspectives from researchers at Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center and colleagues around the country.

16-Oct-2023 11:05 AM EDT
From One Nightmare to Another. Anthony Fauci’s New Concern
Georgetown University Medical Center

“What keeps you up at night?” It’s a question Anthony Fauci, MD, heard repeatedly over the course of his nearly four decades as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Today, as the COVID-19 pandemic wanes, Fauci describes a new nemesis – lack of “corporate memory.”

Released: 10-Apr-2023 7:00 AM EDT
Georgetown Announces New Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Prevention To Address Health Disparities in Washington, D.C.
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

Center to provide comprehensive patient navigation services and educational programming to southeast Washington, D.C., where these services have been historically lacking.

15-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Study Finds Relationship Between Discrimination and Frailty in Black Cancer Survivors
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University

Discrimination experienced by Black people can affect their health and increase their frailty, which can be particularly impactful for cancer survivors, according to a new study by researchers at Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center and colleagues at the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit. The researchers assessed frailty by a number of factors, including whether a participant had several chronic diseases, poor muscle strength and difficulty performing activities of daily living.

Released: 4-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EST
Black People in Rural Areas Have Greater Mental Health Resiliency Than White People
Georgetown University Medical Center

Black people living in rural areas of North Carolina were found to have better mental health than white people despite their exposure to various forms of racism and discrimination. This paradoxical finding was reported by researchers at Georgetown University and their colleagues in the journal Social Science & Medicine: Mental Health in March 2023.

10-Feb-2023 2:05 PM EST
Climate Change Portends Wider Malaria Risk as Mosquitos Spread South and to Higher Elevations in Africa
Georgetown University Medical Center

Based on data that span the past 120 years, scientists at Georgetown University Medical Center have found that the mosquitoes responsible for transmitting malaria in Africa are spreading deeper into southern Africa and to higher elevations than previously recorded. The researchers estimate that Anopheles mosquito populations in sub-Saharan Africa have gained an average of 6.5 meters (21 feet) of elevation per year, and the southern limits of their ranges moved south of the equator by 4.7 kilometers (nearly 3 miles) per year.

   
3-Feb-2023 8:05 AM EST
Study Finds Adverse Impact of Climate on Mental Health in Bangladesh
Georgetown University Medical Center

Extreme heat and humidity and other climate-related events have an alarming impact on mental health outcomes in terms of depression and anxiety in Bangladesh, the world’s seventh most vulnerable country to climate change.

   


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