Conference Stories That Captivated AJMC® Readers in 2016
A glimpse at the top 5 articles from The American Journal of Managed Care's® conference coverage that caught reader attention in 2016.
Conferences around healthcare policy, managed care, diabetes, oncology, cardiology, and rheumatology—The American Journal of Managed Care® covers them all. A virtual source of information for those who cannot attend the meetings in person or an additional source of information for those who may have missed sessions of interest, our
5. CAR-T cell treatment in liquid tumors. An innovative approach in cancer, immune-based treatments have proven successful for numerous other diseases. While immune checkpoint inhibitors, which target specific proteins in the immune response pathway, have seen tremendous success, significant hope is also being pinned on chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells. During a session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology this year, Cameron John Turtle, MBBS, PhD, from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
4. Important role for pharmacists in ACOs. An accountable care organization (ACO) is a care delivery model that has emerged out of the movement toward value-based care delivery, and according to Tina Joseph, PharmD, BCACP, and Reena Jones, PharmD, CPh, pharmacists can play a vital role in ACOs. Speaking at the AMCP Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy Annual Meeting 2016, Joseph
3. PBM excitement about new drugs. At the beginning of 2016, Aimee Tharaldson, PharmD, senior clinical consultant of emerging therapies at Express Scripts,
The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) date for ocrelizumab has been extended from December 2016 to March 28, 2017. The PDUFA date for dupilumab is March 29, 2017.
2. Insulin combination with GLP-1 agonist. At the 76th Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association (ADA), results for a new insulin from Novo Nordisk, and those for competing insulin/glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) combination therapies from Novo and Sanofi
1. Liraglutide significantly reduced CV death. Results from another trial that were presented at the ADA—the LEADER trial—showed that T2D therapy liraglutide (Victoza), also a GLP-1 inhibitor, reduces the risk of cardiovascular (CV) death by 22%, cuts the risk of death from any cause by 15%, and reduces major CV events by 13%. “The reduction of CV mortality is clearly the major benefit identified in the study, beyond liraglutide’s primary purpose of lowering blood sugar and providing modest weight loss benefits,”
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