New Type Of Drug To Prevent Migraines Heads To Market
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Aimovig, a new kind of migraine drug, is injected once a month. The medicine reduced the number of migraines in clinical studies reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration.
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Aimovig, a new kind of migraine drug, is injected once a month. The medicine reduced the number of migraines in clinical studies reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration.
Amgen/AP
The Food Drug Administration has approved a first-of-its-kind drug that reduces the number of migraines among people prone to these sometimes crippling headaches.
That’s welcome news to some of the millions of Americans who suffer from these potentially debilitating headaches. Much more common in women than men, these throbbing headaches can also come with nausea, visual disturbances and sensitivity to light. People who suffer them frequently sometimes find themselves anxious, depressed and even disabled.
Most of the drugs on the market today are used to control the symptoms of migraine.
The new drug, Aimovig was approved by the FDA Thursday. It’s the first medicine in a new class that’s designed to reduce the number of migraines among people who suffer them frequently. The medicine, known generically as erenumab-aooe, is being sold by Amgen in the U.S.
Aimovig and several other migraine drugs in development are based on research begun in the 1980s. Scientists found people having migraine attacks have high levels of a something called “calcitonin gene–related peptide,” or CGRP, in their blood, as Lauren Gravitz reported for Shots in February.
When the peptide was injected in people prone to migraines, it triggered headaches. People not prone to migraines were unaffected by the peptide injections.
With this insight in hand, drugmakers worked to make antibodies to block the peptide’s activity inside the body as a way to prevent migraines.
In one of the large studies that set the stage for FDA approval of Aimovig, the number of migraines per month dropped from eight to fewer than five, on average. Patients taking dummy “placebo” shots also had fewer migraines.
Patients in Aimovig studies reported generally mild side effects, though any long-term or rarer risks from Aimovig could come to light only over time.
People inject the drug themselves using a pen-like device, like those used for insulin.
Aimovig is an expensive type of medication called a monoclonal antibody. Antibodies are produced in living cells rather than in a chemical laboratory.
Some analysts had expected the initial price of this drug to be set substantially higher – at $10,000 a year or more. But high prices have recently been generating political backlash, and some expensive drugs have fizzled after insurance companies sharply limited which patients they would cover.
With the new migraine drug, those questions will come to the fore quickly, as Amgen says it’s ready to put the drug on the market within a week, and has programs in place to help ease the cost to some patients.
The digital payments firm is buying iZettle, a European startup that sells mobile credit card readers and other payment platforms, for $2.2 billion, it announced Thursday.
PayPal(PYPL) stock jumped nearly 2% when reports of the deal first surfaced.
The acquisition “significantly expands PayPal’s in-store presence, strengthening PayPal’s platform to help millions of small businesses around the world grow,” CEO Dan Schulman said in a statement.
Based in Sweden, iZettle has built a presence in Europe and South America thatwill allow PayPal to bring its platform tonearly 500,000 stores in 11 new countries including France, Germany, Brazil and Mexico.
It will also help PayPal expand offline in the United States, United Kingdom and Australia and step up its battle with Square(SQBK), the mobile payments firm founded by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey.
Silicon Valley giants such as Apple(AAPL), Amazon(AMZN) and Facebook(FB) are also looking to grow in digital payments.
The companies said that iZettle CEO Jacob de Geer will continue to lead the firm he co-founded, reporting to PayPal COO Bill Ready.
The deal is expected to close in the third quarter of 2018.
PayPal’s bumper acquisition comes after EBay(EBAY) announced in February that it would no longer use PayPal as its main payment processing partner, opting to link up with Dutch rival Adyen instead.
EBay, which acquired PayPal in 2002, spun it off in 2015 but had continued to use its services for online transactions.
CNNMoney (New Delhi) First published May 18, 2018: 4:54 AM ET
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Mike Nichols just wanted to make a talking banana. A self-described inventor of “useless” things, his original goal was to create an interactive robot for his Twitch viewers to play with. Whatever they typed into chat, the banana would say—while dancing! Then the trolls showed up.
Nichols learned the hard way what many Twitch streamers who employ text-to-speech technology already knew: assholes really like to try to manipulate programs into saying the n-word. Or even just things that sound like the n-word. As long as there’s a chance they’ll get the banhammer dropped on a streamer’s head, they’re not too picky. And given Twitch’s history of banning channels for saying the n-word, there’s a very good chance indeed.
The banana channel is pretty much what it sounds like: the banana is positioned in front of a camera, and while it moves back and forth to music, people can enter phrases into Twitch chat—which it will then read out loud. One night a couple months ago, Nichols’ channel’s concurrent viewer count suddenly shot up to 600, which is a lot for a relatively small channel. Nichols realized the channel had been raided by the community of a popular streamer, but he didn’t think much of it. “I decided to just leave the stream on and go to sleep,” he said in a video about the banana uploaded to YouTube this week.
That was a mistake.
The streamer in question was Greekgodx, whose “GGX gang” is one of the more notoriously troll-y communities on Twitch. Greekgodx himself pointed his viewers to the channel, but dipped out when things started getting racist. Members of his community stuck around, though, and made the banana sing and dance to a series of increasingly vile tunes. Among other things, they made it spell out the n-word. The next day, Nichols found that his banana had been banned from Twitch.
“It was pretty shocking to me when I woke up in the morning, came over to my computer, and saw the stream was down,” he said in his video about the banana. “I had been banned from Twitch for 24 hours, and I had a permanent strike on the channel.”
Nichols was not so naive as to put his banana on Twitch sans protection. There was a language filter in place, but the GGX gang figured out how to trick it. And while footage of the moment in question got deleted when Twitch banished the banana from the digital airwaves, Nichols had programmed it to log any text people tried to get it to say.
“It was kinda like when there’s a plane accident, and they recover the black box,” he said. “But this time, instead of the pilots saying ‘mayday’ as the plane crashed, they just kept repeating the n-word until the plane exploded.”
He found that Twitch trolls had used accented characters to get around the banana’s filter, using fake words like “knìgár” to defuse the banana’s defenses. While waiting for the ban to end, Nichols tweaked the banana’s code so that it would remove accented characters and added the words the GGX gang had come up with to his filter list. Problem solved?
Of course not. Once the banana was back up, the GGX gang were like Vegas magicians with their use of dehumanizing language: tricks up every sleeve and other crevices besides. Thus began an arms race that spanned days. Nichols says that the trolls switched to another tried-and-true Twitch tactic: spamming the word, except with the first letter at the end instead of the beginning so that—thanks to rapid repetition—it would still sound like the banana was saying it.
A demonstration of one of the ways trolls got around the banana’s language filter.Image: Mike Nichols
Nichols figured out a solution for this, too. “I added an extra step to my bad word checking service,” he said. “Now the banana takes the sentence, removes all the spaces, then searches the sentence for the bad word.”
It didn’t end there, either. Trolls proceeded to spam innocuous words like “Snickers,” which—when repeated ad nauseam—sounds like the n-word. So Nichols added words like that to the filter. But the trolls kept trying to turn the banana into their racist mannequin. Next, they went with combinations of innocuous words like “Disney Gurs” and “Bernie Curs.” Warning: do not trying saying those phrases out loud. The banana did, and Nichols told Kotaku that he was “lucky” that Twitch admins didn’t notice, or he’d have probably gotten banned again.
“Now, at this point I realized that I can’t account for every bad word combination everybody in the world can possibly come up with,” said Nichols. “I had to do something a bit more drastic.”
He wrote a phonetic filter for the banana that converts his list of bad words into their basic phonetic components. It would then do the same thing to every phrase people entered into the banana, scanning them for telltale sounds. Just to be safe, phrases also automatically go through the filter a second time with all spaces removed so as to snuff out sneaky tactics.
“So now not only does my banana not say bad words, but it also won’t say anything that sounds like a bad word,” said Nichols. “At this point I realized I had the best bad word filter I could possibly make. It might even be the best one on Twitch. I don’t know.”
As a last-ditch effort, trolls started coordinating, individually entering letters to spell out the n-word. So Nichols added code to block that, too.
Ever since the end of March, Nichols says the GGX gang hasn’t been able to bust through the new filter, no matter how much they’ve beaten their multifarious, hydra-like heads against it.
“As we speak, there are users adding racist GGX-related comments to my YouTube video about the banana,” he said to Kotaku in an email this week. “They still try to troll my Twitch stream from time to time, but they get bored after they realize they can’t get past the filter. Even with such a good filter I still have to listen to the banana just in case. I don’t want to risk getting another channel strike, as after three I will be removed from Twitch.”
Nichols says his next step will be to share his powerful filter with other Twitch broadcasters. “I have been receiving a lot of direct messages on Twitter asking for the filter code, I plan to release it after I do some final updates,” he told Kotaku. “I hope some streamers are able to get good use out of it!”
In the meantime, he feels like Twitch’s policy toward channels getting assailed by obvious trolls could use some tweaking. If nothing else, it’s clear that portions of Twitch’s community have a pretty serious problem. “The content I was banned for was never produced by me,” Nichols said. “It was taken directly from the Twitch chat. The banana was a sort of mirror that showed how toxic the Twitch community can be, and it turned out it was just too much for the [Twitch] admins to handle.”
This week, Microsoft revealed the Xbox Adaptive Controller, a new peripheral to help make gaming more accessible. It includes two large, programmable buttons and works in conjunction with a mix of joysticks and other devices like the Quadstick, a controller designed specifically for people living with different forms of paralysis. It’s just the latest in a number of unusual but really neat Xbox One-related projects that are helping the console evolve far beyond what originally launched in 2013.
It’s no secret Microsoft has been struggling in some important areas this generation. The company stopped releasing Xbox One sales data in October of last year, but estimates relayed during a recent EA earnings call put them far behind the PlayStation 4‘s. It’s also had a hard time bringing big exclusives to its platform. Long after the release of Halo 5: Guardians and Gears of War 4, Scalebound was canceled and Crackdown 3remains MIA. But while Xbox One might not have Horizon: Zero Dawn or God of War, Microsoft has continued to roll out interesting new features for the console over the last year that have showed the company is still hungry for areas it can continue to innovate in—UI overhauls, backward compatibility, and more.
Take Mixer, for instance. The streaming video service was called Beam before Microsoft bought it in 2016 and rebranded it the following year. It’s nowhere near as widely used as Twitch or YouTube, but its smaller audience has also afforded it certain unique opportunities. Back when Twitch outlined a vague new dress code (something it has since backpedaled on), many streamers pointed to Mixer’s much more transparent guidelines as a refreshing alternative. Even if they didn’t always agree with them, people knew exactly where the boundaries were.. Microsoft’s platform also offers some unique features like co-streaming, where multiple people can combine their feeds on a single channel. Overall the smaller audience and investment by Microsoft has led to a more curated and less trolly atmosphere according to some streamers who use it.
Microsoft has also made a big show of its investment in backward compatibility. A far cry from the “digital-only” future it was talking about prior to the Xbox One’s launch, you can now play many Xbox 360 and original Xbox discs on the system. And as new games are continually added to the library, it’s helped unify the entire ecosystem unlike the fractured ones Nintendo and Sony have tried to mend with PlayStation 2 classics, streaming services like PS Now, and the Virtual Console. The technology runs so deep that lots of older gamers can even take advantage of the Xbox One X to run at better frame rates with sharper graphics.
Game Pass has been another big deal for the console. It’s the closest thing to a Netflix for games out of all the current subscription services available on console, and has been helped by supporting big games right when they launch, including Sea of Thieves in March and now State of Decay 2 when it releases next week. It was nice when it started in early 2017, but a year later it’s grown into one of the biggest reasons for turning my Xbox One on.
The Xbox One UI has also continued to evolve, mostly for the better. While I still wouldn’t call it pretty, it’s become way more functional and feature complete than what the console launched with. Almost everything from games to apps and friend lists are one click away from the home screen while the home button on the controller now first pulls up a shortcut menu that makes messaging, accessing the store, or digging through video game capture on the fly much faster. Microsoft also recently added the ability to gift games to other players, something Xbox One is currently the only console to allow.
Today, Discord was also half-integrated with Xbox One so that your friends list from the app can be shared across both platforms and show you who’s playing what even when you’re not on your PC. It’s a small move that makes a lot of sense given how Discord has become the central meeting place for people looking to play online together or just exchange info and news.
At this year’s DICE Summit, head of Xbox Phil Spencer gave a keynote address in which he stressed the importance of diversity and inclusivity in gaming, and the need for companies like Microsoft to take responsibility for the community around their games. It was a nice speech but didn’t come with many particulars. The Xbox Adaptive Controller, a grassroots project within the company, is one of the more visible signs that the sentiment was more than just words. None of these initiatives are likely to work as a substitute for a player-base anxiously awaiting word of the next Halo, but it shows that, off to the side, Xbox One has only been getting better with age.
Mosquito spit primes your body for disease—so scientists want to make an anti-saliva vaccine
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Every time a mosquito bites you, she injects a bunch of goodies into your bloodstream. These ingredients help her to slurp up a meal by stopping your blood from clotting and keeping your blood vessels dilated. However, mosquito spit serves a more nefarious purpose as well. Scientists reported today that mosquito saliva causes far-reaching changes in the immune system that last for a least a week in mice after they’ve been bitten. This may explain how saliva from mosquitoes and other pests such as ticks and sand flies primes our bodies to be more vulnerable to diseases like malaria and dengue fever.
It’s concerning that mosquito spit has such a strong effect on the immune system. But there is a way we can fight back. Scientists are developing vaccines that will combat mosquito saliva itself rather than a single virus, bacteria, or parasite.
“You can try to protect against many, many different pathogens in one fell swoop, with one vaccine,” says Rebecca Rico-Hesse, a virologist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and coauthor of the new paper. “That way we could actually have some weapons against emerging viruses.”
To make such a weapon possible, we’ll need to learn more about how our immune systems react to mosquito saliva. One strength of the new study is that the mice in question were engrafted with human stem cells, giving them an immune system that more closely resembles our own, says Jessica Manning, an infectious diseases physician at the National Institutes of Health’s Malaria and Vector Research Laboratory in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. This gives us a clue as to what a human response to mosquito saliva might look like without having to dissect people’s bone marrow and spleens.
Previously, Rico-Hesse and her colleagues have seen that this type of mouse develops more severe symptoms of dengue fever after being bitten by mosquitoes than when the researchers injected the virus with a needle. This happens because our bodies have an allergic reaction to mosquito saliva (the reason we get those itchy red bumps).
“The virus present in that mosquito’s saliva, it’s like a Trojan horse,” Manning says. “Your body is distracted by the saliva [and] having an allergic reaction when really it should be having an antiviral reaction and fighting against the virus.” Thus, the immune system does not attack the virus as fiercely as it needs to. On top of this, the saliva attracts immune cells that are susceptible to the germ. “Your body is unwittingly helping the virus establish infection because your immune system is sending in new waves of cells that this virus is able to infect,” Manning says.
This time around, Rico-Hesse and her team exposed mice to mosquito spit without any trace of dengue. They discovered that the immune response to mosquito saliva lasts longer and ropes in more different types of cells than had previously been suspected, including ones from the bone marrow. Seven days after the mice had encountered mosquitoes, the team detected these immune cells traveling to the site of the bite. Since immune cells also migrate back to the marrow, it may become a reservoir for any viruses that happen to be lurking in mosquito saliva, Rico-Hesse speculates.
“We had no idea that saliva was doing all these things to make [the body] a better replication ground for the viruses or parasites,” she says. “Mosquito saliva has evolved to modify our entire immune system and it’s basically setting it up for pathogens to replicate easier and to cause more disease.”
It’s also possible that being constantly bitten by mosquitoes could have negative consequences for our immune systems even when the bugs aren’t carrying any viruses.
“There must be other effects that we haven’t even begun to measure,” says Rico-Hesse, who published the findings in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. “It opens up a whole can of worms in terms of what people are being exposed to when we’re being bitten by mosquitoes.”
Vaccines to stymie spit
So the sooner we can make a vaccine against mosquito spit, the better. As a first step, both Rico-Hesse and Manning are trying to figure out which proteins in mosquito saliva are responsible for helping pathogens infect us more easily. Other scientists are doing the same for sand fly and tick spit.
Their hope is to prevent bug saliva from messing with our immune system so our bodies will attack any germs carried along with it more effectively. “Perhaps your body is going to maintain that fighting stance… as opposed to launching into an allergic response,” Manning says.
Scientists would also add ingredients to the vaccine that would encourage the body to mount an even more intense response to destroy the pathogen. This strategy is used in many of today’s vaccines, including those for tetanus, hepatitis, and human papillomavirus, Manning says.
She and her colleagues have also been working with SEEK, a pharmaceutical company in the United Kingdom, to develop a vaccine against a handful proteins in spit from a mosquito that transmits malaria, Anopheles gambiae. They have begun testing the vaccine in people, and hope that it may be effective against spit from other kinds of mosquitoes as well.
“It would be a feat if there was a universal vaccine—one single vaccine for all mosquito-borne disease,” Manning says. However, creating a vaccine against one type of mosquito saliva is a more realistic goal for the next decade, she says.
Meanwhile, Rico-Hesse is focusing on spit from Aedes aeygpti, the mosquitoes that transmit dengue and a host of other ailments. “If we can get something to work against the Aedes aeygpti salivary proteins, not only could we be impacting the transmission of dengue but Zika, yellow fever, [and] all the other viruses,” she says.
One potential problem with saliva-based vaccines is that they may wear off quickly. There’s some evidence that people may be slightly less likely to get infected with malaria if they are constantly bitten by Anopheles mosquitoes. However, when these people leave town for a few months, the antibodies they have made against the mosquito spit disappear. So the immunity bestowed by a spit vaccine may not last very long on its own. On the other hand, for people who live in areas swarming with these mosquitoes, being bitten all the time may act as a kind of booster shot.
Ideally, we’d receive spit vaccines along with those designed to target particular diseases. But vaccines against mosquito saliva would come especially in handy to fight emerging viruses that we haven’t developed vaccines for yet. Typically, we can’t create new vaccines fast enough to halt an epidemic, Manning says. Scientists developed Zika vaccines at breakneck speed, but they still were not ready by the time the recent epidemic had waned. If we had saliva vaccines on hand, it could potentially help stem future epidemics, Manning says.
Rico-Hesse expects it will take at least 10 years to figure out which mosquito saliva proteins have the biggest impact on our immune system and see if immunizing against them does in fact prevent disease transmission. “We’re just at the beginning of understanding how saliva works in mosquito-borne diseases,” she says.
Still, mosquitoes kill about 1,700 people a day around the world, Manning says. And, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported, the number of cases of mosquito-borne diseases has only been rising in recent years in the United States. “Any dent that we can make in those numbers would be meaningful,” Manning says.
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This $30 Toy Is Like Bridge Constructor Playground IRL
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This awesome looking construction set is basically a bridge constructor video game, but in real life. It includes 285 interchangeable building pieces and instructions for 20 different models (including some skyscrapers!) to teach you about force and physics. Not bad for $30, within a couple bucks of an all-time low.
A banned CFC is destroying the ozone and nobody can find its source
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Scientists spent years campaigning for a ban on the ozone-damaging chemical CFC-11, but 30 years after it was phased out in the 1987 Montreal Protocol, someone somewhere is breaking the rules. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, emissions of the banned chemical are on the rise, climbing 25 percent since 2012. By now, production of CFC-11 is supposed to be at or near zero.
Scientists don’t know who is creating the emissions, nor where they’re coming from. Findings suggest they might be coming from somewhere in eastern Asia, but this can’t be pinpointed any further. “Somebody’s cheating,” Duwood Zaelke, an expert on the Montreal Protocol, told The Washington Post. “There’s some slight possibility there’s an unintentional release, but … they make it clear there’s strong evidence this is actually being produced.”
The researchers have considered a range of alternative explanations for the rise, including an increase in the demolition of buildings containing residue of the gas, but have concluded this could not explain the significant increase. Furthermore, there are now many effective alternatives to the chemical, which makes it hard to understand why it’s being produced, and what the market for it could be.
CFC-11 was mainly used in foams, and can last for up to 50 years in the atmosphere. According to the UN Environment Program, if the emissions continue unchecked they have the potential to slow down the ozone layer’s recovery rate by 22 percent, while leaving it vulnerable to other threats — a damning blow to one of the planets greatest environmental success stories.
Zaelke added that the Montreal Protocol has a well-established history of enforcing its rules, and that it can’t afford to risk its compliance record over the startling discovery. “They’re going to find the culprits,” he said. “This insults everybody who’s worked on this for the last 30 years. That’s a tough group of people.”