20140103

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print
ISSUE 1 – JAN. 3, 2014PDF

Who Makes This Drug?Secretive Contract Manufacturing Arrangements Complicate Solutions to Shortages of Generics

By Rena M. ContiThe closing of Ben Venue Laboratories, a company that produces a large share of generic drugs used by America’s oncologists, brings into focus a little-understood business practice that exacerbates the problem of drug shortages and shows why the industry and federal regulators have been unable to resolve them.
photoReport to the Nation: Death Rates Continue To Decline Across All Major Disease SitesDeath rates continued to decline for all cancers combined for men and women of all major racial and ethnic groups and for most major cancer sites, according to the Annual Report to the Nation on the Status of Cancer. Rates for both sexes combined decreased by 1.5 percent per year from 2001 through 2010.
photoAn Appreciation: Janet Rowley, “Translational Research Pioneer”Janet Rowley, a pioneer in connecting the development of cancer with genetic abnormalities, died from complications of ovarian cancer on Dec. 17 at her home. She was 88.
photoIn Brief
  • Julie Vose Elected President of ASCO
  • 2014 Breakthrough Prize Winners Announced
  • Andrea Sloan, Prominent Ovarian Cancer Patient Dies

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

The Trump administration did exactly what it said it would do to disorient anyone involved in making policy or touched by it. The president and his crew have “flooded the zone”—the term and the image are theirs, as is the strategy of dropping a flurry of executive orders and memoranda that shake the foundations of the American system of government, raising questions of legality and constitutionality, and, above all, making it a challenge for anyone to see the entire picture and think strategically.
In two raucous back-to-back hearings on Jan. 29 and Jan. 30, anti-vaccine crusader Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was grilled by members of the United States Senate Finance Committee and the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee as the Trump administration seeks his confirmation as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. 
Over the past century, groundbreaking cancer research in the U.S. has led to life-saving medical advances that benefit patients worldwide. Scientists often devote their lives to making discoveries, putting their scientific endeavors ahead of status, income, or lifestyle. Investigators work tirelessly, often seven days a week, to solve complex medical problems. These efforts often lead to game-changing outcomes that help us understand difficult medical challenges, advance technologies and develop new therapies. 

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login