Posts tagged with "Stanford Medicine"

Pfizer’s Paxlovid flunks ‘long COVID’ study as researchers uncover the condition’s deep toll

July 8, 2024

For a while, Pfizer’s flailing blockbuster Paxlovid seemed like a promising option for patients with long COVID. Now, that hope has been once again dashed, reports PharmaVoice.

After a 15-day course of Paxlovid in 155 patients, researchers from Stanford Medicine reported this month that the drug was no more effective than a placebo at reducing long COVID’s six “core” symptoms.

In theory, the antiviral should be a good candidate for treating the condition’s constellation of woes that can include brain fog, shortness of breath, body aches, fatigue, gastrointestinal distress, and more. In acute COVID-19, Paxlovid’s antiviral punch has been shown to slash the likelihood of hospitalization and death by 89% in high-risk adults.

Evidence has pointed to persistent antiviral replication or molecular debris from the virus as potential culprits, which would lend itself to an effective antiviral approach.

But studies have shown otherwise, and the latest trial follows other disappointing results from researchers attempting to thwart long COVID with Paxlovid. One study published earlier this year found that the antiviral failed to prevent long COVID in vaccinated patients experiencing their first bout of the illness.

As these studies come up short in the clinic, other researchers have built mounting evidence on long COVID’s deep toll.

About 7% of U.S. adults have grappled with the condition, according to a report released this month from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine—a group of nonprofits that provides policy advice and guidance.

The report noted that long COVID has now been linked to over 200 symptoms impacting “nearly every organ system.” Although patients with a severe bout of the infection are more likely to develop long COVID, it can also be triggered by mild cases.

With no FDA-approved treatments on the market for long COVID, the report noted patients are left with therapies targeting specific symptoms, which generally “improve over time.” But even though 18% to 22% of patients with symptoms at the six-month mark recovered after a year, the condition worsens for many others and often mirrors chronic and complex multisystem illnesses such as fibromyalgia.

The data supports recent findings by the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component that also estimated that 7% of Americans have had long COVID. The survey indicated women are more commonly affected than men (8.5% of all females surveyed compared to 5.1% of males), and that it was more prevalent among white and Hispanic Americans.

The rates of long COVID were similar among Americans who’d been vaccinated (8.4%) and those who hadn’t (8.7%), but were markedly lower in those who’d gotten a booster (5.8%). Adults with chronic bronchitis, emphysema, asthma, and obesity were more likely to report dealing with long COVID.

While researchers zero in on the prevalence of long COVID, the quest to find an effective therapy could be a long way from paying off.

There are fewer than 20 late-stage studies listed on clinicaltrials.gov assessing various treatments for long COVID. In addition to other studies for Paxlovid, researchers are trialing the SSRI Luvox, aspirin and an FDA-approved heart failure drug called Ivabradine.

Research contact: @PharmaVoice

Tinder survey reveals that most users are already in a relationship

July 18, 2023

Tinder, one of most popular dating apps in the world, isn’t exactly known for being the hub of serious relationships. Now, a new study published last month seems to reinforce just how seedy its dating pool really is, reports Futurism.

The researchers surveyed nearly 1,400 Tinder users between the ages of 18 to 74 who were recruited online. The answers were grim. Nearly two-thirds of those respondents revealed that they were already in a relationship, some even married. Half said they weren’t interested in dating at all.

We absolutely have to ask: In that case, why are they hanging around on a dating app?

To that end, the researchers dug deeper and asked participants questions about their motivations, as well as measuring self-reported psychological qualities like satisfaction, impulsivity, and loneliness.

According to their findings, many of the participants get a kick out of Tinder for the same reasons as other forms of social media. It’s a way to kill time, interact with random people, and get the instant gratification of likes and matching with other people.

Of course, that doesn’t make for an ideal crowd for those looking for a serious relationship. Germano Vera Cruz, coauthor of the study and a professor of psychology at the University of Picarde Jules Verne in France, said that this dynamic results in a “game of deception.”

“Some people feel deceived with the use of dating apps, because each time you have a new platform, people think they might really find someone,” Vera Cruz said, as quoted by NBC News. “And then people go from platform to platform, but each time they are there, they are not satisfied.”

You can see this sort of gamification of the dating app on other social media sites, where it’s popular to share ridiculous pick-up lines sent to matches—or more nefariously, to ridicule the person on the other end.

Meanwhile, those that use Tinder as a way to distract themselves and cope with negative emotions reported the least satisfaction, the study found.

“There was the sense that they were spending too much time using them as entertainment or to distract themselves from other things,” said fellow co-author Elias Aboujaoude, a clinical psychiatrist at Stanford Medicine, as quoted by NBC.

“It can be overwhelming, and in some cases, it can lead people to this notion that the grass is always greener on the other side; like there … [are] always better options out there.”

In the long run, however, those lonely romantics looking for dates are actually the most likely to get something out of the app.

“We can’t deny the fact, though, that a big percentage of successful relationships now start online, as well,” Aboujaoude added.

Research contact: @futurism