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Old chemistry unlocks safer and stronger mRNA delivery

As millions of people know firsthand, the most common side effect of mRNA vaccines like the COVID-19 shot is inflammation: soreness, redness and a day or two of malaise. But what if mRNA vaccines could be redesigned to sidestep that response altogether? In a new paper in Nature Biomedical Engineering, researchers at the University of [...]

By |2025-07-20T09:36:45+00:00July 20th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

New mRNA vaccine strategy awakens immune system to fight cancer

An experimental mRNA vaccine boosted the tumor-fighting effects of immunotherapy in a mouse-model study, bringing researchers one step closer to their goal of developing a universal vaccine to "wake up" the immune system against cancer. Published today in Nature Biomedical Engineering, the University of Florida study showed that like a one-two punch, pairing the [...]

By |2025-07-19T15:36:31+00:00July 19th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Specially engineered antibody delivers RNA therapy to treatment-resistant tumors

Elias Quijano, PhD; Diana Martinez-Saucedo, PhD; Zaira Ianniello, PhD; and Natasha Pinto-Medici, PhD, there are 25 other contributors, most from Yale's Department of Therapeutic Radiology and from the departments of genetics, molecular biophysics and biochemistry, biomedical engineering, pathology, and medical oncology and three from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Specifically, animal models of three [...]

By |2025-07-18T10:07:40+00:00July 18th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Vaccinated women face fewer cervical cancer risks

New data from Denmark shows the HPV vaccine’s powerful long-term impact, while also revealing why cervical cancer screening is still essential. A Danish study published in the journal Eurosurveillance reports that women who received the human papillomavirus vaccine in their adolescence are significantly less likely to develop human papillomavirus infections later in life. Background Prolonged infection [...]

By |2025-07-18T09:46:11+00:00July 18th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

3D-printed implant offers a potential new route to repair spinal cord injuries

A research team at RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences has developed a 3-D printed implant to deliver electrical stimulation to injured areas of the spinal cord, offering a potential new route to repair nerve damage. Details of the 3-D printed implant and how it performs in lab experiments have been published in [...]

By |2025-07-16T14:53:00+00:00July 16th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Nanocrystals Carrying Radioisotopes Offer New Hope for Cancer Treatment

The Science Scientists have developed tiny nanocrystal particles made up of isotopes of the elements lanthanum, vanadium, and oxygen for use in treating cancer. These crystals are smaller than many microbes and can carry isotopes of elements such as actinium and radium. These isotopes undergo radioactive decay, emitting alpha particles (helium nuclei) that destroy cancer cells in [...]

By |2025-07-15T13:18:18+00:00July 15th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

New Once-a-Week Shot Promises Life-Changing Relief for Parkinson’s Patients

A once-a-week shot from Australian scientists could spare people with Parkinson’s the grind of taking pills several times a day. The tiny, biodegradable gel sits under the skin and releases steady doses of two key medicines all week long, aiming for steadier symptom control, fewer side effects, and a much simpler routine. Early lab [...]

By |2025-07-14T14:23:47+00:00July 14th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Weekly injectable drug offers hope for Parkinson’s patients

A new weekly injectable drug could transform the lives of more than eight million people living with Parkinson's disease, potentially replacing the need for multiple daily tablets. Scientists from the University of South Australia (UniSA) have developed a long-acting injectable formulation that delivers a steady dose of levodopa and carbidopa – two key medications [...]

By |2025-07-13T14:17:51+00:00July 13th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Most Plastic in the Ocean Is Invisible—And Deadly

Nanoplastics—particles smaller than a human hair—can pass through cell walls and enter the food web. New research suggest 27 million metric tons of nanoplastics are spread across just the top layer of the North Atlantic By Katharine Sanderson & Nature magazine Pollution Marine plastic litter tends to grab headlines, with images of suffocating seabirds [...]

By |2025-07-12T10:00:14+00:00July 12th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments

Repurposed drugs could calm the immune system’s response to nanomedicine

An international study led by researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus has identified a promising strategy to enhance the safety of nanomedicines, advanced therapies often used in cancer and vaccine treatments, by using drugs already approved by the FDA for unrelated conditions. Their research suggests that repurposing existing medications can reduce [...]

By |2025-07-10T13:04:07+00:00July 10th, 2025|Categories: News|0 Comments
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