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Bevacizumab (drug) news, photos and video - latimes.com
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A collection of news and information related to Bevacizumab (drug) published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 19, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Strategies for cutting the cost of prescription drugs

    When Maggie Heim had a recurrence of ovarian cancer about a year after her initial treatment, her oncologist suggested that she take what he believed could be a lifesaving drug. There was just one problem: Her insurer wouldn't pay for it.
    When Maggie Heim had a recurrence of ovarian cancer about a year after her initial treatment, her oncologist suggested that she take what he believed could be a lifesaving drug. There was just one problem: Her insurer wouldn't pay for it. The 59-year-...

    Tags: Trials, Herceptin (drug), Oncology, Plavix (drug), Science and Technology

  2. Apr 23, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Cancer drug may double as fat-busting treatment for obesity

    Way back in 2002, Dr. Judah Folkman hit upon a tantalizing weight-loss strategy for obese mice. When given daily injections of a drug designed to fight cancer, their fat melted away. The higer the dose they got, the more fat they lost. Some of the obese mice shed so much weight that they wound up at &ldquo;near normal body weights,&rdquo; Folkman and his colleagues reported <a href="http://www.pnas.org/content/99/16/10730.full.pdf">in this article</a> in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
    Way back in 2002, Dr. Judah Folkman hit upon a tantalizing weight-loss strategy for obese mice. When given daily injections of a drug designed to fight cancer, their fat melted away. The higer the dose they got, the more fat they lost. Some of the obese...

    Tags: Science and Technology, University of Mississippi, Medical Research, Obesity, Research

  4. Mar 29, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Remove Medicare's straitjacket

    Now that the budget "sequester" is in effect, Congress is shifting its attention to entitlement reform. There's simply no way to achieve long-term reductions in federal spending without touching the big health programs, particularly Medicare. Although raising the age of Medicare eligibility from 65 to 67 appears off the table, at least for now, the budget plan that Rep. Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) is proposing would shift a greater share of the program's growing costs to beneficiaries in the years to come.
    Now that the budget "sequester" is in effect, Congress is shifting its attention to entitlement reform. There's simply no way to achieve long-term reductions in federal spending without touching the big health programs, particularly Medicare. Although...

    Tags: U.S. Congress, Science and Technology, Drugs and Medicines, Fiscal Cliff, Genentech Inc.

  6. Oct 27, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. For the record

    Medical study results: In the Oct. 24 Section A, an article about medical studies said that follow-up studies of the drug Avastin showed that it did not help breast cancer patients live longer with their disease without getting worse. Those studies did...

    Tags: Football, Breast Cancer, Sports

  8. Jun 20, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. The New War on Cancer

    &nbsp;It used to be that the cancer doctor&rsquo;s toolbox contained three essential tools <span>&mdash;</span> a scalpel to cut out the disease, chemo to poison it and radiation to zap it.
     It used to be that the cancer doctor’s toolbox contained three essential tools — a scalpel to cut out the disease, chemo to poison it and radiation to zap it. But today that toolbox is bulging with new and better weapons. “We’re...

    Tags: Oncology, Hospitals and Clinics, Lymphatic System, Healthcare Provider, Medical Specialization

  10. Jan 30, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. New Avastin tests add to confusion over use in breast cancer

    In November, following an emotional public hearing some months earlier, the Food and Drug Administration withdrew approval for the cancer drug Avastin for patients with metastatic breast cancer &mdash; the late-stage, incurable form of the disease. The reason: emerging evidence that the drug does not prolong life and also that it's been linked to serious side effects.
    In November, following an emotional public hearing some months earlier, the Food and Drug Administration withdrew approval for the cancer drug Avastin for patients with metastatic breast cancer — the late-stage, incurable form of the disease. The...

    Tags: Biotechnology, Oncology, Heart Attack, Lymphatic System, Medical Research

  12. Nov 18, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  13. Caughlin fire: 20 structures destroyed, thousands evacuated in Reno

    Nation Now
    Caughlin Fire: The out-of-control Caughlin Fire in Reno has destroyed 20 homes and forced 9,500 people to evacuate....
  14. Nov 18, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  15. New drilling could bring highway money, GOP leaders say

    Nation Now
    Congressional Republican leaders are drafting legislation that would steer money from new offshore energy production into highway construction....
  16. Nov 18, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  17. Killer Paul Rhoades executed by lethal injection in Idaho

    Nation Now
    Convicted killer Paul Ezra Rhoades executed in Idaho...
  18. Jun 28, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  19. Avastin: There's the truth and then there's the politics behind the cancer drug [The conversation]

    Opinion L.A.
    Avastin: The FDA goes up against drug manufacturer Genentech with regards to the late-stage cancer drug....
  20. Jul 23, 2010 |Resource Link| Los Angeles Times
  21. Oct 16, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  22. Fake medicine poses growing threat to consumers

    Consumers shopping for medicine on the Internet often are getting convenience, a good price and the cloak of privacy, but they may not be getting the real thing.
    Consumers shopping for medicine on the Internet often are getting convenience, a good price and the cloak of privacy, but they may not be getting the real thing. A burgeoning multibillion-dollar industry of counterfeit drugs — ranging from AIDS...

    Tags: Medicines, Hospitals and Clinics, Science and Technology, Computer Networking and Internet, Health and Medical Professionals

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Bevacizumab (drug) Photos
A sign is displayed in front of the Genentech headquart...
(December 13, 2012)
A sign is displayed in front of the Genentech headquarters July 14, 2008 in South San Francisco, California. This company relied on the popularity of its cancer drug Avastin to boost profits.
FDA withdraws approval of Avastin for breast cancer pat...
(November 18, 2011)
the cancer drug avastin
, saying studies have failed to prove the drug's effect...
(July 1, 2011)
FDA panel rejects Avastin for breast cancer, but Medicare will still pay for it -- and Provenge