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Eric Small's Research Suggests a Cancer Protein Could Be at the Heart of Cardiac Scarring and Disease

The associate professor of Medicine and his colleagues found that the tumor suppressor protein p53 might play an important role in both. Supported in part by the CTSI, the research shows that too much p53 may speed progression of a heart rhythm disease, while too little p53 could lead to scarring after cardiac injury.

Kirsi Jarvinen-Seppo Co-authors Study that Finds Evidence of COVID Antibodies in Moms' Breast Milk

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Kirsi Jarvinen-Seppo, MD, PhD, associate professor of Pediatrics and Medicine and Chief of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, and Bridget Young, PhD, assistant professor of Pediatrics, found that moms with disease-acquired immunity produced high levels of Immunoglobulin A antibodies against the virus in breast milk, while vaccine-acquired immunity produced robust Immunoglobulin G antibodies—the first time such evidence has been discovered. Their study appears in JAMA Pediatrics.

Read more about the study.

Ann Falsey, M.D. Recognized for Leadership in RSV Research

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Ann Falsey, M.D., was recognized for her contribution to research on the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) during IDWeek, the largest annual gathering of infectious disease researchers in the U.S.  Falsey delivered the named John F. Ender Lecture and also presented new clinical trial results on an RSV vaccine being developed by Janssen.

Read More: Ann Falsey, M.D. Recognized for Leadership in RSV Research

Christopher Ritchlin Receives NPF Lifetime Achievement Award

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Christopher Ritchlin, M.D., M.P.H., professor of Medicine, has received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Psoriasis Foundation (NPF). The celebration was part of the 2021 Commit to Cure Gala hosted in New York City on September 9, where Ritchlin’s long history of research and clinical care was honored.

Ritchlin is director of the Clinical Immunology Research Unit and is a member of the Center for Musculoskeletal Research. He has served as division chief of AIR for the past eight years, growing the division in both size and funding. Ritchlin is a founding member of the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis (GRAPPA). Through the NPF, he is co-chair of the COVID-19 Task Force and a member of their scientific advisory committee.

From the Commit to Cure Gala: “It is with great honor that NPF recognizes the lifetime achievements of Dr. Ritchlin with this prestigious award. His efforts for the foundation and his larger contributions to the understanding and advancement of treatment for psoriatic arthritis will resonate for generations to come. His work has had a profound impact on those impacted by psoriatic disease as well as on the NPF community throughout the country.”

Read the NPF press release: NPF Presents Alexa B. Kimball, M.D., MPH and Christopher Ritchlin, M.D., MPH with Lifetime Achievement Award.

Read More: Christopher Ritchlin Receives NPF Lifetime Achievement Award

Brian McGarry Leads National Study of Nursing Home COVID-19 Vaccination Rates

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Brian McGarry, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Division of Geriatrics and Aging, Department of Medicine, was quoted in a New York Times article about the findings of a study which showed that, on average, just 60% of nursing home staff have been fully vaccinated. The study, published in the September 16th issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, provides important context as the nursing home industry prepares for a new federal staff vaccination mandate.

Study in JAMA Intern Medicine: Association of Nursing Home Characteristics with Staff and Resident COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage

Article in NY Times: Aides in U.S. Nursing Homes Were Least Likely to be Vaccinated, a Study Shows

Brian McGarry and Ryan Gilmartin Publish Study of State Responses to COVID-19 in Nursing Homes

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Brian McGarry, Ph.D., assistant professor of medicine and public health sciences, and Ryan Gilmartin, MHA, Senior Program Administrator for the UR Medicine Geriatrics Group, have collaborated with other researchers across the nation in an article published in the Journal of Long-term Care entitled, "State Policy Responses to COVID-19 in Nursing Homes." The aim of the research was to assess state specific responses to the coronavirus pandemic related to nursing homes in the first half of 2020. The research involved an in-depth examination of 12 states’ responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in nursing homes through June 2020, using publicly reported information such as government decrees, health department guidance, and news reports. The results of the research suggest that the states that handle the ongoing pandemic in nursing homes best will be those that find ways to make sure nursing homes have the resources to follow best practices for testing, PPE, separation, and staffing.

 

Lessons from COVID: URMC, RGH Launch Clinical Trials to Test mRNA Flu Vaccine

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Researchers at University of Rochester Medical Center and Rochester General Hospital are joining a phase 1 clinical trial today to test a new Pfizer/BioNTech mRNA flu vaccine that mimics the technology used in their highly effective, FDA-approved COVID vaccine. URMC and RGH are two of 12 sites testing the new vaccine. Visit Flu.urmc.edu to sign up to participate in the flu vaccine trial.

Read the full story.

URMC-Tested, FDA-Approved: Pfizer Vaccine is First to Move Beyond Emergency Use Authorizations

Monday, August 23, 2021

Our researchers led some of the nation's earliest trials of the COVID vaccine, which traces its roots back to decades of research done at URMC. "Millions of Americans have already received the Pfizer vaccine and the data shows that it is safe and highly effective in preventing severe illness, and even provides protection against known variants," says Ann Falsey, M.D., co-director of the Vaccine Treatment & Evaluation Unit. "At the same time, we recognize that this is an important step and that FDA approval may provide the additional confidence necessary for people overcome their hesitancy and get vaccinated."

Read the full story

Daniel Lachant Awarded Research Grant to Study New Way to Monitor Pulmonary Hypertension

Monday, June 14, 2021

Daniel Lachant, DOPulmonary arterial hypertension is a rare, life-threatening disorder characterized by high blood pressure in the arteries of the lungs. Current methods for diagnosing this condition can be cumbersome, expensive and not entirely reliable. Daniel Lachant, DO, Associate Director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program at Mary Parkes Center for Asthma, Allergy and Pulmonary Care, has been awarded a grant (URMC KL2 Scholars Award) to study whether cardiac effort (the number of heart beats required for a person to walk a given distance) is a more sensitive and reliable measure to monitor patients. Dr. Lachant will also develop a remote, mask-free assessment of cardiac effort and heart rate expenditure that patients can perform in the comfort of their own homes.

New Study Mismatches Vaccine Doses to Boost Immunity to COVID and Variants

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

The University of Rochester Medical Center is participating in a new clinical trial that will mix-and-match the initial regime of an approved vaccine with a booster dose from a different manufacturer. The research will help inform public health decisions around re-vaccination schedules and the deployment of boosters that target COVID variants. The study is being led by Ann Regina Falsey, MD, Angela Branche, MD, co-directors of the URMC Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit (VTEU), and David M Dobrzynski, MD, an assistant professor of Medicine, Infectious Diseases.

Read more: New Study Mismatches Vaccine Doses to Boost Immunity to COVID and Variants

URMC Researchers to Engage in Pediatric Trials for Pfizer's COVID Vaccine

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Our faculty will test the Pfizer/BioNTech SE vaccine on 200 to 300 children ages six months to 11 years. URMC previously announced its participation in pediatric trials for the Moderna vaccine (March 18). Jennifer Nayak, M.D., associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics and the Division of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology and Immunology, and Mary Caserta, M.D., professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, will be monitoring progress of the study.

Read the full story.

New Study Examines Immune Responses of New Moms

Monday, May 17, 2021

The Medical Center is joining a national clinical trial to study the immune responses of women who get their COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy or shortly after giving birth. Led locally by Angela Branche, MD, Co-director of the Vaccine Trials and Evaluation Unit, the study will determine the safety and efficacy of the vaccines during pregnancy, as well as investigate whether moms can pass COVID-19 protection onto their babies—either in the womb or via breast milk after they're born.

Read More: New Study Examines Immune Responses of New Moms

Medical Center Tests New COVID-19 Vaccine against South African Variant

Monday, May 3, 2021

The Medical Center and Rochester Regional Health have joined national studies to test a vaccine for a new South African variant of the coronavirus. The new vaccine, produced by Pfizer and BioNTech, is a slight twist on the companies' existing COVID-19 vaccine. The studies are led by Edward Walsh, MD, Professor of Medicine, and Ann Falsey, MD, Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases and Codirector of the Medical Center's Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit.

Read the full story.

New Coronavirus Vaccine Study Seeks to “Boost” Immune Response

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

The University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) and Rochester Regional Health (RRH) have begun a new clinical trial that will evaluate the safety and efficacy of a third dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccine is currently approved for a two dose regimen. This study represents an important step in the development of long-term vaccination strategies, including the creation of booster doses that target coronavirus variants.

"While widespread vaccination is the key to moving past the current health crisis, COVID-19 has the potential to become a seasonal and mutating virus," said Ed Walsh, M.D., and infectious disease specialist at URMC. "This study will help us understand important questions about the safety and immunogenicity of multiple doses of an mRNA vaccine, information that could ultimately enable us to extend the protection of vaccines and develop tailor-made, variant-specific boosters."

URMC and RRH have been involved in the development of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine since the launch of phase 1 clinical trials in May 2020 when volunteers in Rochester were among the first in the nation to receive the then experimental vaccine. Rochester was also a site for the phase 2/3 clinical trials that ultimately led to the vaccine's emergency use authorization (EUA) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last December. Since then, tens of millions of people across the globe have received at least one dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

The new study will involve individuals who participated in the phase 1 trials last spring, all of whom were fully vaccinated more than 6 months ago. Over the next several weeks, researchers will dose 144 volunteers, including 35 in Rochester, with a booster dose of the EUA-approved Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. Rochester is one of four sites in the U.S. involved in the study.

The local studies are led by Walsh and Ann Falsey, M.D.; both hold faculty appointments in the URMC Department of Medicine, Infectious Diseases and are members of the Infectious Disease Unit at RRH. Pfizer contracted with URMC to conduct the clinical trial in Rochester and the recruitment of study volunteers and testing of the vaccine will occur at Rochester General Hospital.

While the duration of protection provided by the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is unknown, it is assumed that immunity wanes over time, a phenomenon common in vaccines for other infectious diseases. The trial will measure the boost to the immune system and evaluate in the lab whether antibodies and other immune cells generated after the third dose provide protection against coronavirus variants. The study will also seek to answer is how well a third dose of the vaccine is tolerated in healthy volunteers and researchers will closely monitor participants for side effects.

The findings of the study will also be important as vaccine developers have turned their focus to the development of vaccines that can be tailored to meet the threat of emerging strains of the virus. Pfizer and BioNTech announced today that the companies had begun discussions with regulatory agencies regarding an early stage clinical study to evaluate a modified version of approved vaccine.

"While we have not seen any evidence that the circulating variants result in a loss of protection provided by our vaccine, we are taking multiple steps to act decisively and be ready in case a strain becomes resistant to the protection afforded by the vaccine. This booster study is critical to understanding the safety of a third dose and efficacy against circulating strains," said Albert Bourla, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Pfizer. "At the same time, we are making the right investments and engaging in the appropriate conversations with regulators to help position us to potentially develop and seek authorization for an updated mRNA vaccine or booster if needed."

Angela Branche Describes Efforts to Ensure Diversity in COVID-19 Vaccine Trials in Reuters

Thursday, January 28, 2021

Angela Branche, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases), knocked on doors in Rochester neighborhoods to talk about coronavirus and her research to ensure diverse participation in COVID-19 vaccine trials. Her efforts to combat mistrust in the Black community were highlighted in Reuters.