Tag Archives: injected

Man’s Cancer Vanished After He Was Injected With Weakened Herpes Virus

  • A new cancer therapy makes use of the herpes virus to fight harmful cells.
  • The modified virus infects cancer cells, causing them to explode, while alerting the immune system.
  • The therapy is in early trial stages but shows great promise, according to cancer researchers.

A new cancer therapy that uses a modified herpes virus to attack tumor cells showed promise in early clinical trials abroad.

The drug, called RP2, completely obliterated one patient’s oral cancer. The 39-year-old told the BBC that he had cancer of the salivary glands, which continued to grow despite attempts at treatment.

He was preparing for the end of his life when he learned about the experimental drug, which was available through a phase one safety trial at the Institute of Cancer Research in the UK.

After a short course of the drug, the patient — Krzysztof Wojkowski of west London — has been cancer-free for two years and counting, he told the BBC.

Other patients in the trial saw their tumors shrink, although the majority did not have a significant change: three out of nine patients who were given the trial drug alone, and seven of 30 who received a combined treatment, appeared to benefit from the experimental therapy.

While more research needs to be done to see how RP2 compares to known therapies, the drug seemed to help some patients and only caused mild side effects, such as tiredness. These early results are promising, said Jonathan Zager of the Moffitt Cancer Center, who was not involved in the trial.

“We’ll see some more studies done in the very near future, and I’m excited — certainly not disheartened or skeptical,” Zager told Insider.

A modified virus delivers a ‘one-two punch’ to cancer cells

The experimental therapy involves a weakened form of herpes simplex — the virus that causes cold sores — that has been modified to only infect tumors.

According to results presented at a medical conference in Paris, the viral therapy is engineered to selectively enter cancer cells while leaving normal cells alone. It’s injected directly into a tumor, while most other cancer drugs work systemically.

Once it has infiltrated, the virus replicates itself until the cancer cell explodes. What’s unique about RP2 is that it delivers a “one-two punch” against tumors, not only destroying the cells but rallying the immune system to attack what’s left, lead researcher Kevin Harrington said in a news release.

The drug works similarly to T-Vec, a viral therapy that was approved to treat advanced skin cancer in 2015. T-Vec was also engineered based on a herpes simplex virus and modified to include a gene that stimulates the production of immune cells, essentially preparing the immune system to attack.

These viral therapies hold great promise for treating multiple forms of cancer, with “truly impressive” treatment responses observed in patients with advanced esophageal cancer and a rare type of eye cancer, Harrington told the BBC.

The results are even more impressive considering that the patients recruited for clinical trials typically have tried several other treatments and surgeries to remove their cancers. Many, like Wojkowski, were out of options when they heard about RP2.

“When we have tumors that are heavily pretreated and they respond favorably — to RP2 or T-Vec — that’s even more food for thought, in the sense that now we have tumors that were resistant to treatment and are responding,” said Vager, who has treated hundreds of patients with T-Vec since it was approved.

According to Harrington, RP2 may work even better than T-Vec, if the early results are any indication.

“It’s had other modifications to the virus so that when it gets into cancer cells it effectively signs their death warrant,” Harrington told the BBC.

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A man’s cancer vanished after he was injected with a weakened herpes virus in a promising clinical trial

FILE PHOTO: A patient undergoes a positron emission tomography scan.Photo by Vladimir SmirnovTASS via Getty Images

  • A new cancer therapy makes use of the herpes virus to fight harmful cells.

  • The modified virus infects cancer cells, causing them to explode, while alerting the immune system.

  • The therapy is in early trial stages but shows great promise, according to cancer researchers.

A new cancer therapy that uses a modified herpes virus to attack tumor cells showed promise in early clinical trials abroad.

The drug, called RP2, completely obliterated one patient’s oral cancer. The 39-year-old told the BBC that he had cancer of the salivary glands, which continued to grow despite attempts at treatment.

He was preparing for the end of his life when he learned about the experimental drug, which was available through a phase one safety trial at the Institute of Cancer Research in the UK.

After a short course of the drug, the patient — Krzysztof Wojkowski of west London — has been cancer-free for two years and counting, he told the BBC.

Other patients in the trial saw their tumors shrink, although the majority did not have a significant change: three out of nine patients who were given the trial drug alone, and seven of 30 who received a combined treatment, appeared to benefit from the experimental therapy.

While more research needs to be done to see how RP2 compares to known therapies, the drug seemed to help some patients and only caused mild side effects, such as tiredness. These early results are promising, said Jonathan Zager of the Moffitt Cancer Center, who was not involved in the trial.

“We’ll see some more studies done in the very near future, and I’m excited — certainly not disheartened or skeptical,” Zager told Insider.

A modified virus delivers a ‘one-two punch’ to cancer cells

The experimental therapy involves a weakened form of herpes simplex — the virus that causes cold sores — that has been modified to only infect tumors.

According to results presented at a medical conference in Paris, the viral therapy is engineered to selectively enter cancer cells while leaving normal cells alone. It’s injected directly into a tumor, while most other cancer drugs work systemically.

Once it has infiltrated, the virus replicates itself until the cancer cell explodes. What’s unique about RP2 is that it delivers a “one-two punch” against tumors, not only destroying the cells but rallying the immune system to attack what’s left, lead researcher Kevin Harrington said in a news release.

The drug works similarly to T-Vec, a viral therapy that was approved to treat advanced skin cancer in 2015. T-Vec was also engineered based on a herpes simplex virus and modified to include a gene that stimulates the production of immune cells, essentially preparing the immune system to attack.

These viral therapies hold great promise for treating multiple forms of cancer, with “truly impressive” treatment responses observed in patients with advanced esophageal cancer and a rare type of eye cancer, Harrington told the BBC.

The results are even more impressive considering that the patients recruited for clinical trials typically have tried several other treatments and surgeries to remove their cancers. Many, like Wojkowski, were out of options when they heard about RP2.

“When we have tumors that are heavily pretreated and they respond favorably — to RP2 or T-Vec — that’s even more food for thought, in the sense that now we have tumors that were resistant to treatment and are responding,” said Vager, who has treated hundreds of patients with T-Vec since it was approved.

According to Harrington, RP2 may work even better than T-Vec, if the early results are any indication.

“It’s had other modifications to the virus so that when it gets into cancer cells it effectively signs their death warrant,” Harrington told the BBC.

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In Tragic Medical Case, a Man’s Penis Turned Black From Injecting Cocaine

A man’s penis turned black after he injected it with cocaine, according to a report by the American Journal of Case Reports.

The 35-year-old Hispanic man went to the ER with “excruciating” pain in his penis and scrotum three days after injecting the drug into a penile vein, doctors working in the Bronx, New York, said in the report.

 

On examining him, the doctor said his penis was swollen, black, ulcerated, and oozed a foul-smelling discharge.

The man had a long history of intravenous drug use, they said.

Cocaine is one of the “most dangerous drugs available,” the doctors said. This is because it’s highly addictive.

The drug, which is illegal, can be snorted, smoked, or dissolved and injected into a vein. When injected, it can trigger blood vessel inflammation, which can cause gangrene – the death of body tissue. The doctors said that cocaine in the US can be cut with a de-worming drug called levamisole, which causes blood vessel inflammation too.

The man told the doctors that he’d previously injected cocaine in the same vein at least twice in the past two weeks “without any complications.” The dorsal penile vein the man used runs the length of the shaft.

The dorsal vein is an unusual place to inject but it’s not uncommon for drug users to use new injection sites once others, such as arm veins, become damaged, the doctors said. 

CT scan with blue arrow indicating ulceration. (Ghazanfar et al., Am J Case Rep, 2022)

The man refused any surgery to cut away the dying tissue. He was treated with a cocktail of strong intravenous antibiotics for five days and then a further five days with oral ones, alongside wound care, according to the report.

His “clinical condition” slowly improved but unfortunately, the man refused drug rehabilitation treatment and was later “lost to follow-up”, the doctors said.

 

“Intravenous drug users should be counseled to seek help and should be advised to enroll in drug rehabilitation programs, as cocaine cessation is the only definitive treatment,” the doctors said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 5 million Americans reported “current cocaine use” in 2020, which is almost 2 percent of the population. Cocaine was involved in nearly 1 in 5 overdose deaths in 2019, it said.

This article was originally published by Business Insider.

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Man’s penis turns black and rots after he injected it with cocaine

A man watched his penis turn black and rot after he injected it with cocaine.

The horrifying tale was reported by doctors in New York.

They said the 35-year-old unnamed man turned up at the emergency room at BronxCare Hospital Center in agony.

He had spent the past three days in “excruciating” and worsening pain in the penis, scrotum, groin area and right foot.

The pain started almost immediately after he injected the class A drug cocaine into the dorsal vein of the penis, which runs the full length of the shaft.

It wasn’t the first time he had chosen the mind-boggling method of delivering his high.

The man admitted to having injected cocaine into the dorsal vein at least twice in the past fortnight, although without any obvious problems.

He said he had a long history of intravenous drug use, and with most other injection sites damaged, he had turned to one of the only places left – his penis.

Upon examination, medics discovered swelling, ulcers, a “foul-smelling serious discharge”, and necrosis, the medical term for rotting tissue.

The unidentified man had a significant history of drug use but no STIs were discovered.

Doctors quickly started him on an IV of antibiotics and his condition “improved slowly”.

The patient refused to have surgery to cut away at the dying tissue of his penis, which was receiving standard wound care.

After spending five days hooked up to antibiotics, the man was given a 10-day course of pills.

The pain started immediately after the man injected cocaine into his penis.
ShutterStock

The case report said: “His clinical condition improved, but he refused to go for drug rehabilitation treatment and was later lost to follow-up.”

It’s not clear how well the man recovered from the ordeal.

Cocaine is “one of the most dangerous drugs”, the medics stated in the American Journal of Case Reports.

While it is typically snorted as a powder, it may also be rubbed into the gums or dissolved in water and injected straight into the bloodstream through a vein.

“Crack” is the street name for a form of cocaine that has been processed into a rock, which, when heated, can be smoked.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse says: “Dissolving cocaine in water and injecting it (intravenous use) releases the drug directly into the bloodstream and heightens the intensity of its effects.

“Any route of administration can potentially lead to absorption of toxic amounts of cocaine, causing heart attacks, strokes, or seizures—all of which can result in sudden death.”

The mechanism behind how the cocaine rotted the patient’s flesh was unclear.

But the doctors noted around 80 per cent of cocaine seized in the US is cut with levamisole, a parasitic worming treatment for animals.

Doctors started the patient on an IV of antibiotics and his condition improved.
Shutterstock

Around two thirds of cocaine smuggled into Britain contains the chemical.

In very rare cases, cocaine with levamisole can cause the skin to rot. Users have seen parts of their face, limbs, genitals and stomach blacken and die.

Unfortunately, the New York medics were unable to test for levamisole in their patient.

They concluded: “Our case highlights the importance of taking a thorough history from i.v. drug users, as they are at risk of injecting drugs into unusual sites, such as the dorsal penile vein.

“It is important for the physician to counsel active i.v. drug users regarding possible complications of injecting drugs in atypical and dangerous injection sites.”

This story originally appeared on The Sun and has been reproduced here with permission.

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Indiana parents say Walgreens mistakenly injected them and their two kids with the Covid-19 vaccine instead of flu shot

The Prices took their 4- and 5-year-olds to the Walgreens in Evansville, Indiana, on October 4 for their yearly shots. About 90 minutes later the pharmacist called saying they had made a mistake. The entire family had been injected with adult doses of the Covid-19 vaccine.

“When they called us and told us that they had made a mistake and had given us the wrong shot, I was just in shock,” Alexandra Price said. “All I could say to them was, ‘What does this mean for my kids?'”

Although Alexandra and Joshua, already fully vaccinated since last April, were concerned for themselves, they were more worried about Sophia, 5 and Lukas, 4.

“Lukas started feeling sick before we even got home from Walgreens,” Alexandra said.

“He was feeling yucky, lethargic, and already had begun a fever,” Joshua added.

The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is approved for people age 16 and older and has an emergency use authorization for people ages 12 to 15. Pfizer said in a tweet on October 7 that it had submitted a formal request for emergency use authorization for a smaller dosage of vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 to the Food and Drug Administration.

“They will probably do OK,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. “The difference is they got a three times higher dose of a vaccine than is being tested in clinical trials.”

“It is concerning they got a higher dose, and they have to be monitored, but they should do really well,” Hotez said. “There is a lot of data out there now in 5-year-olds and older.”

He added that Alexandra and Joshua’s extra dose of the vaccine is similar to receiving a booster shot.

After requesting that Walgreens give them proof of vaccination so that the family could show medical professionals what they were given in the case of an emergency, the Prices say Walgreens hesitated. “They wanted to get their legal department involved and did not want to give us those cards, so we got our own attorney,” Alexandra said.

Joshua explained that the cards were important proof for the doctors if the children continued to get sick. He said Walgreens gave them their cards the next day.

Walgreens’ spokesperson Kris Lathan released a statement to CNN saying tht due to privacy laws, it could not comment on a specific event.

“Generally speaking, know that such instances are rare and Walgreens takes these matters very seriously,” the statement said. “In the event of any error, our first concern is always our patients’ well-being. Our multi-step vaccination procedure includes several safety checks to minimize the chance of human error and we have reviewed this process with our pharmacy staff in order to prevent such occurrences.”

Walgreens did not comment on how a vaccine mix-up could have occurred.

Symptoms did worsen for Sophia and Lukas, and the Prices took their children to see a cardiologist.

“The children have experienced a number of adverse effects since receiving the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. Fever, body aches, cough, headaches, and nausea are among the symptoms the children are experiencing,” according to a statement released by the Prices’ attorney, Dan Tuley. “The 4- and 5-year-old are also under treatment of a pediatric cardiologist for tachycardia and elevated blood pressure, respectively.”

After a follow-up appointment Tuesday, Alexandra said that Lucas has improved but Sophia has worsened. “Her blood pressure is in the 98th percentile and she continues to have no energy.”

Alexandra and Joshua themselves continue to slowly recover from symptoms that set in shortly after the vaccination. Those symptoms include high blood pressure, fevers, chest pain, and headaches.

“It’s been well over a week and I still have high blood pressure and chest pain,” Joshua said. He said that he is being monitored by his doctor for the blood pressure and chest pains.

CNN tried contacting Pfizer for comment but did not hear back.



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Man arrested after food injected with needles at supermarkets

Metropolitan Police officers were called at around 7.40 p.m. local time (2.40 p.m. ET) Wednesday following reports of a man shouting abuse at people in the street, according to a statement from the force Thursday.

The man reportedly injected foodstuffs at three supermarkets on Fulham Palace Road, southwest London, with a number of needles, police said.

He was arrested “on suspicion of contamination of goods with intention of causing public harm or anxiety,” continued the statement.

The affected supermarkets have been closed and crime scenes are in place, said police.

Anyone who bought food from the three affected supermarkets on Wednesday evening has been advised to throw it away as a precaution.

Police believe that processed meat and microwaveable products were affected.

“It is currently unknown as to how many items have been contaminated, or what with,” reads the statement.

“Investigations are on-going to establish if other businesses in the area are involved in the incident.”

Environmental health experts are working with the affected supermarkets, which police named as Little Waitrose, Tesco Express and Sainsbury’s Local.

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Two Australians injected incorrectly with vaccine

As Australia entered the third day of its vaccination drive its health minister told local media on Wednesday that two people had received incorrect coronavirus vaccine doses.

The two patients, aged 88 and 94, were given four times the recommended dose of the Pfizer vaccine.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said the human error was a reminder of safeguards during the rollout:

“I think it’s very important that we are upfront. The safeguards that were put in place immediately kicked into action, a nurse on the scene identified the fact that a higher than prescribed amount of the dose was given to two patients.”

“Both patients are being monitored and both patients are showing no signs, at all, of an adverse reaction.”

Meanwhile, after several weeks of zero COVID-19 cases, two Australian states will loosen their restrictions this week.

In New South Wales, up to 30 people can kick up their heels on dance floors at indoor venues, and households can host 50 guests, up from 30.

Australia has recorded around 29,000 COVID-19 cases and just over 900 deaths since the pandemic began.

Video Transcript

As Australia entered the third day of its vaccination drive, its health minister told local media on Wednesday that two people had received incorrect coronavirus vaccine doses. The two patients, aged 88 and 94, were given four times the recommended dose of the Pfizer vaccine. Health Minister Greg Hunt said the human error was a reminder of safeguards during the rollout.

GREG HUNT: I think it’s very important that we’re up front. The safeguards that were put in place immediately kicked into action. A nurse on the scene identified the fact that a higher than the prescribed amount of the dose was given.

Both patients are being monitored and both patients are showing no signs at all of an adverse reaction.

Meanwhile, after several weeks of zero COVID-19 cases, two Australian states will loosen their restrictions this week. In New South Wales up to 30 people can kick up their heels on dance floors at indoor venues. And households can host 50 guests, up from 30. Australia has recorded just under 29,000 COVID-19 cases and just over 900 deaths since the pandemic began.

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