Monthly Archives: September 2021

Amgen scores Otezla patent win, protecting its blockbuster from Sandoz and Zydus generics until 2028 – FiercePharma

Posted: September 27, 2021 at 6:11 pm

When Amgen bought marketing rights to psoriasis pill Otezla for $13.4 billion two years ago, the company was likely counting on not having to compete against early generics. And now, thanks to a win in court, Amgen appears poised to enjoy several more years of exclusivity in the key U.S. market.

After facing legal challenges from generics makers Sandoz and Zydus Pharmaceuticals, Amgen's patent portfolio on the blockbuster medicine has held up in court. With the win and pending potential appeals, Amgen's drug should be free from having to face those competitors until early 2028.

Before the trial, Novartis' Sandoz unit admitted that its Otezla generic infringed a range of patents that expire between 2023 and 2034. For its part, Zydus admitted that its copycat infringes some of the same patents but not a key one that expires in 2023.

With that, the trial was centered on the issue of whether Zyduss generic infringes a 2023 patent, Amgen said Tuesday. After reviewing the arguments, the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey upheld four patents but ruled against Amgen on some claims in a 2034 patent.

RELATED: Amgen's psoriasis pill Otezla thrives amid pandemic against injectable rivals

Thats a big win for the branded drugmaker, which picked up Otezla from Celgene before that company sold to Bristol Myers Squibb in 2019s largest biopharma M&A deal.

Still, a Novartis spokesperson said Sandoz is "pleased" with the ruling as it "held as invalid a key 2034-expiring Amgen patent covering specific dosage regimens for treating psoriasis" with the drug. The ruling "enables Sandoz to launch our generic apremilast product in the US in 2028, 6 years prior to the expiry date of the latest-expiring Amgen patent asserted in litigation," Novartis' spokesperson said.

Since taking over Otezla marketing, Amgen has generated some hefty sales with its new med. Thanks to the drugs oral mode of delivery, it has succeeded against injectable rivals during the pandemic. During a conference call last summer, Amgens executive vice president of global commercial operations Murdo Gordon said that more patients started on the medicine during the first few months of the pandemic than those who started on Otezlas psoriasis rivals. That came despite the fact that COVID-19 caused a decline in new patient starts across the treatment class.

Overall for 2020, the drug generated $2.2 billion. In the first half of the 2021, sales declined 5% in part thanks to lower prices, but the drug continued to maintain first-line share leadership in psoriasis, the company said.

RELATED: Under-pressure Amgen insists Otezla can withstand Bristol Myers' forthcoming psoriasis rival

While it appears Amgen won't have to worry about generics right away, the company's key med could face forthcoming competition from Bristol Myers Squibb's TYK2 inhibitor deucravacitinib, an oral med that has outperformed Otezla in head-to-head trials. Even amid that potential competition, Amgen and analysts believe the company can still succeed in mild to moderate patients.

Editor's note: This story was updated with a statement from Novartis.

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Amgen scores Otezla patent win, protecting its blockbuster from Sandoz and Zydus generics until 2028 - FiercePharma

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Biosimilars Market, will grow at 35.2% CAGR, to be valued at US$ 70 Billion by 2027: Impact of COVID – PharmiWeb.com

Posted: at 6:11 pm

A biosimilar is a biologic medical product that is similar to another already approved biological medicine, in terms of quality, safety, and efficacy. Biosimilars are a class of therapeutic drugs that provide additional treatment options and help reduce healthcare costs. Thus, there is an increasing demand for biosimilar drugs due to increasing prevalence of autoimmune diseases, key factor driving the growth of the biosimilars market. According to the National Stem Cell Foundation (NSCF), around 4% of the worlds population is affected by one of more than 80 different autoimmune diseases, the most common of which include multiple sclerosis, type 1 diabetes, scleroderma, Crohns disease, lupus, psoriasis and. rheumatoid arthritis.

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Autoimmune diseases are a family of more than 80 chronic, often debilitating and, in some cases, life-threatening illnesses. Moreover, growth of the biosimilars market is being driven by the increasing research and development and speedy approvals of biosimilars, especially in the North America. For instance, in 2019, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Amgens AVSOLA (infliximab-axxq), for all approved indications of the reference product, Remicade (infliximab), for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, Crohns Disease, and chronic severe plaque psoriasis. However, stringent regulations and manufacturing complications are major factors expected to restrain the biosimilars market growth.

Furthermore, the biosimilar market, in Europe, is witnessing robust growth due to the growing adoption of biosimilars due low price and rapid entry of biosimilars in the region. For instance, in 2018, European Commission (EC) approved Sandozs Zessly, a biosimilar for use in Europe, confirming that Zessly matches safety, efficacy, and quality of reference medicine. Zessly is approved for the treatment of adult and pediatric Crohns disease, adult and pediatric ulcerative colitis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, and plaque psoriasis. However, the adoption rate varies from country to country, always associated with regulatory and market access issues. This in turn is also expected to hamper the biosimilars market growth.

Growth of the biosimilars market can also be attributed to rich pipeline of biosimilar products and expiry/termination of existing drugs. As of June 2020, FDA has approved 27 biosimilars, plus four follow-on biologicals. The pipeline for biosimilars continues to grow, however, of the 27 approved biosimilars, only 17 have been launched so far. Biosimilars on average can cost 30% less than reference biologicals. Thus, pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies are focusing on developing safe and effective biosimilars, because a small variations in the manufacturing process can potentially alter the medicines safety and efficacy.

Major Key Players Include In Biosimilars Market: Novartis AG, Pfizer, Inc., Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Celltrion Healthcare Co., Ltd., Biocon Limited, Amgen, Inc., Dr. Reddys Laboratories, and Sanofi S.A.

Main points in Biosimilars Market Report Table of Content

Chapter 1 Industry Overview1.1 Definition1.2 Assumptions1.3 Research Scope1.4 Market Analysis by Regions1.5 Biosimilars Market Size Analysis from 2021 to 202711.6 COVID-19 Outbreak: Biosimilars Industry Impact

Chapter 2 Global Biosimilars Competition by Types, Applications, and Top Regions and Countries2.1 Global Biosimilars (Volume and Value) by Type2.3 Global Biosimilars (Volume and Value) by Regions

Chapter 3 Production Market Analysis3.1 Global Production Market Analysis3.2 Regional Production Market Analysis

Chapter 4 Global Biosimilars Sales, Consumption, Export, Import by Regions (2016-2021)Chapter 5 North America Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 6 East Asia Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 7 Europe Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 8 South Asia Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 9 Southeast Asia Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 10 Middle East Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 11 Africa Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 12 Oceania Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 13 South America Biosimilars Market AnalysisChapter 14 Company Profiles and Key Figures in Biosimilars BusinessChapter 15 Global Biosimilars Market Forecast (2021-2027)Chapter 16 ConclusionsResearch Methodology

Continued.

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Treatment of Connective Tissue Disease-Related Intractable Disease wit | OARRR – Dove Medical Press

Posted: at 6:11 pm

Introduction

Connective tissue disease (CTD) is a histopathological concept proposed by the American pathologist Paul Klemperer in 1942.1 It is used to describe acute or chronic diseases characterized by abnormalities including diffuse denaturation of the connective tissue (dermis, ligament, tendon, bone, cartilage), particularly extracellular components, such as collagen. Currently, six diseases including rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), polyarteritis nodosa, systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic scleroderma and dermatomyositis are termed classic CTDs.2,3 CTD is a clinical diagnosis term for a single disease group with similar histopathological characteristic but not similar etiologies or genetics.46 In the current classification, several CTD-related intractable-disease (CTD-IDs) other than classic CTDs have been proposed including polymyositis, mixed CTD, Sjogrens syndrome, vasculitis syndrome, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, adult Stills disease (ASD), Behcets disease (BD), and anti-phospholipid syndrome.79

Biological therapeutics are commonly used for the treatment of immunological disease and malignancy, because they are high effective compared with conventional treatments using small molecules.10 High polymer preparations, termed biological therapeutics, which block cytokines are used to treat CTD and rheumatic disease whereas molecules targets are required for the treatment of malignant tumor.10 First, rituximab was approved for the treatment of malignant lymphoma, resulting in a breakthrough for blood disorders.11 Infliximab has been used to treat Crohns disease and RA.12 Researchers predicted RA symptoms could be improved by blocking inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-1, because these cytokines were strongly related to the pathophysiology in RA. Then, biological therapeutics for BD, vasculitis, psoriatic arthritis (PsA), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), and systemic lupus erythematosus were developed and recommended by medical treatment guidelines for the treatment of each disease.1316

In the field of medicine, biological therapeutics consist of proteins as well as insulin, immunoglobulin (Ig) preparations, and vaccines. However, in the field of CTD and CTD-ID, biological therapeutics describe drugs that inhibit the production or function of cytokines or kill specific lymphocyte populations. Biological therapeutics include monoclonal antibodies and protein fusion preparation (receptor molecules). In general, monoclonal antibodies destroy cytokine- or antibody-producing cells by the binding to a cell surface receptor or target antigen. Receptor molecules, also called decoy molecules, are fused to a receptor that binds to IgG, which prevents the binding of the target (eg, cytokine) to its receptor.17 The first monoclonal antibody preparations were from mice, but their immunogenicity prevented their long-term use for clinical applications. To reduce immunogenicity, chimeric model antibodies, humanized antibodies, and human antibodies were developed. Human antibodies encoded by human antibody gene contain no mouse molecules (Figure 1). In this review, we discuss the current situation of biological therapeutics for CTD-IDs including BD, PsA, AS, anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-related arthritis, and ASD, as well as the choice of biological therapeutics for clinical practice.

Figure 1 Three types of therapeutic immunoglobulins. (A) Human antibody; (B) Humanized antibody; (C) Chimeric model antibody Immunoglobulins consist of a complementarity determining region, variable site, and constant region.

BD is characterized by inflammation of the skin, mucous membranes, and uvea.18 Uveitis, particularly posterior uveitis, rarely causes altitude inflammation, which leads to blindness.8,18 Intestinal, vascular, and nervous BD often affect the disease prognosis.18 The pathogenesis of BD is related to TNF.19 T cells in BD patients respond to a small amount of staphylococcal exotoxins and produce cytokines.20 Two anti-TNF monoclonal antibodies (infliximab and adalimumab) have been adapted for BD treatment and infliximab has been approved for all types of BD. It is necessary to administer a combination therapy of methotrexate (MTX) and infliximab in RA patients because of the influence of anti-infliximab antibody production. However, this combination with MTX is unnecessary in BD patients. Furthermore, the addition of MTX does not provide benefit compared with infliximab treatment alone. However, when an immunosuppressant was used with adalimumab it was reported that there might be the clearance drop of adalimumab by combination with MTX and uses it together and warns us. The frequency of uveitis is related to blindness. Therefore, for the treatment of BD uveitis, it is important to control eye inflammation. The whole-body dosage of glucocorticoids improves symptoms related to BD, but the long-term control of BD is unknown. Oral immunized suppressants to treat uveitis have been superseded by infliximab. The 2018 EULAR Recommendations for BD indicate infliximab as a first-choice treatment for ophthalmitis although there is concern regarding its functional decline over time.21 Adalimumab is not approved for BD uveitis because no related clinical studies were initiated at the time of development.22,23 However, some studies have reported adalimumab suppressed uveitis in BD.24,25

Intestinal type BD often forms an ulcer in the ileocecum as well as the gastrointestinal tract but rarely causes perforation. It accounts for 1520% of all BD cases and usually requires surgery. Intestinal type BD is treated with GCs and 5-aminosalicylic acid or salazosulfasalazine according to the therapeutic guidelines for inflammatory bowel disease. However, the long-term use GC causes complications including perforation caused by a delay in wound healing. Infliximab and adalimumab are effective in patients who are resistant to GCs and 5-aminosalicylic acid or salazosulfasalazine.2628 In addition, adalimumab and infliximab were highly effective in clinical trials of cases with a typical ulcer 1 cm in diameter in the ileocecum where GCs or immunosuppressants were not effective part.26,29 However, TNF inhibitor treatment is unsuccessful in approximately 20% of patients.

Nervous type BD can be classified as an acute model/ANB (acute neurological attacks in BD) and chronic progressive/CPNB (chronic progressive neurological BD). Both types require treatment because they reduce the quality of life for patients. Infliximab has been used in a model of nervous BD, but evidence is lacking for its use in multi-cases. Conventional treatment consisting of GCs and pulse therapy is used for the induction of remission in ANB. However, the effects of infliximab on attack prevention have only been reported for backward cohorts and cases.30 MTX generally improved convalescence in CPN,31 and infliximab was effective in cases where MTX was ineffective.32

Vascular type BD describes numerous diseases that can develop in a single patient related to lesions of the vein and artery system. Genuine and false aneurysms appear in arteries and clot formation occurs in veins. The symptoms of vascular type BD are likely to be worsened by stimulation, similar to intestinal tract type BD. In addition, in this type BD, false aneurysms occur in blood vessel anastomotic regions after aneurysms are substituted with artificial blood vessels, making it difficult to treat. The use of glucocorticoids or immunosuppressants for vascular lesions in BD has been recommended by EULAR, although robust evidence for their effects is lacking.33,34 Anti-TNF preparations (infliximab and adalimumab) were reported to be effective in cases resistant to glucocorticoids or immunosuppressants.35,36 Anti-TNF preparations are often used in intractable cases and those requiring surgical management, such as those with intestinal tract type BD. Discontinuation studies in RA and the dosage period of biological therapeutics have been reported, but there is no clear evidence for discontinuation in BD. However, remission was maintained without uveitis for one year even when substitute treatments, such as immunosuppressants were used in cases that could not continue infliximab.37

PsA is broadly classified as a form of vertebral pain (spondyloarthritis: SpA). There is often a peripheral phenotype in which patients symptoms mainly comprise synovium inflammation similar to that in RA. However, some cases exhibit body axis characteristics symptoms, and these cases are difficult to identify with AS in X-ray views. In addition, dactylitis that shows enthesitis and swelling in all fingers and toes has various joint symptoms. Body axis-related joint symptom is stronger in inflammation of the ligament than in synovium, and hardening lesions resulting from the ossification of the ligament is the primary problem, rather than bone destruction. Body axis-related joint lesions were reported in 2570% of cases.38 It is important to know which cytokines are related to joint symptoms because the recommended drugs differ for peripheral joint pain, body axis-related joint pain, enthesitis, and dactylitis in PsA.39,40

It was previously reported that cyclosporine was effective for treating skin lesions in patients with psoriasis when psoriasis patient incorporated the examination to check the effectiveness of cyclosporine for RA.41 Another report suggested that T cell-related immunity (T helper (Th)1 reactions) participated in the skin symptom of psoriasis patient. Then, IL-17 and IL-22 were shown to be involved in psoriasis lesions, indicating Th17 cells were also involved.42,43 IL-12 produced by dendritic cells is important for the differentiation of Th1. In addition, IL-23 produced by dendritic cells increases and maintains IL-17 cells. IL-12 and IL-23 form a heterodimer comprising a subunit of p35/p40 and p19/p40, respectively. p40 is the subunit common to IL-12 and IL-23. The expression of p40, but not p35, was increased in the skin lesions of psoriasis patients,44 and IL-17 and IL-22 (Th17-related molecules) in psoriasis skin lesions were related to treatments, such as etanercept and cyclosporine.40,45 In addition, psoriasis-like exanthem and expression of IL-17A occurred when IL-23 was injected to the skin of mice.46 It is thought that Th17 cells contribute more significantly to skin lesion compared with Th1 cells. As for TNF, it turns out that it is involved in the condition of patients dendritic cells, Th17, and epidermal cornification cells, both situations broadly. Although PsA exhibits various joint symptoms, the cytokines involved might vary according to the symptoms. The participation of TNF is strongly suggested in peripheral arthritis, because TNF inhibitors suppressed inflammation in peripheral joint pain in RA and prevent joint destruction. However, local cells in tissues produce IL-23, IL-17 and IL-22, which might participate in enthesitis.47,48 Previous studies reported enthesitis was IL-17A-dependent in animal models.47,49 Enthesitis might have a similar cytokine profile to skin lesions in psoriasis, because T cells in the human vertebral column spinous process produce IL-17A by an IL-23-independent mechanism.50

The priority of biological therapeutics for the treatment of joint symptoms of PsA is shown in Table 1. TNF inhibitors have the best efficacy against peripheral joint pain. The IL-17A inhibitor has a superior effect to the IL-12/23p40 inhibitor, but similar efficacy to TNF inhibitor.5153 However, the effects of brodalumab, an IL-17 receptor A inhibitor, on preventing joint destruction are unclear.54 In addition, guselkumab, an IL-12/23p19 inhibitor, is superior to IL-12/23p40 inhibitors for the improvement of clinical joint, and has similar efficacy to TNF inhibitors and the IL-17 inhibitor.55 Although the benefit of IL-12/23p40 for peripheral joint pain is unclear, improvements in joint pain and joint destruction were significant compared with placebo in a clinical study.56,57 In addition, an IL-12/23p40 inhibitor significantly improved enthesitis compared with a TNF inhibitor,58 and had benefit for dactylitis. In addition, a high percentage of cases continue ustekinumab treatment because it has very low accumulation rate, which reduces the potential for harmful phenomena.58 TNF inhibitors and anti-IL-17 biological therapeutics are considered first choice for the treatment of axis-related joint pain. The EULAR recommendations suggest TNF inhibitors are the first choice for treatment, but IL-17A inhibitors are also recommended as first choice in some cases.59 IL-17A inhibitors were superior regarding the rapidity of effect and reducing disease severity in psoriasis exanthem, similar to TNF inhibitors. However, IL-17A inhibitors should be used with caution for inflammatory bowel disease, because IL-17A is necessary for maintenance of the enterobacterial flora.

Table 1 Priority of Biological Therapeutics for the Treatment of Joint Symptoms of PsA

AS, a chronic inflammatory disease that develops at a young age, is characterized by ankylosis observed in sacroiliac joint by imaging. Furthermore, lesions occur along the vertebral column from the upper part to the lower part, finally causing total ankylosis of the vertebral column. The classification standard (revision New York standard) comprises clinical and X-ray imaging.60 Without a specific spot that meets the criteria of more than grade 3 on one side and more than grade 2 on both sides in sacroiliac joint with X-rays, we cannot make a diagnostic decision. This was the classification standard in 1984 and only non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) were available, which did not alter the disease course.60 Currently, TNF inhibitors are administered, which markedly improve symptoms leading to an early cure. The Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) classified axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) in 2009.61 Although the main disease of this classification is AS, it includes axSpA, which is not present in the revised New York standard of AS. Actually, axSpA, which meets the x-ray standard, almost matches AS according to the revised New York standard.62 However, non-axSpA does not necessary occur in early AS.63,64 AS is characterized by negative CRP, and non-axSpA tends to have negative or low CRP values. Therefore, inflammation assessed by magnetic resonance imaging is likely to be low.65 Because the ASAS standard includes diseases other than AS, we should carefully consider the diagnosis. However, the ASAS standard is very useful for the diagnosis of AS.

TNF, IL-17A and IL-23 are increased in patient with AS.6668 It is thought that TNF is important at the final stage of inflammation, and many studies have reported that TNF inhibitors are effective for AS. It is thought that IL-17A participates in the maintenance of chronic inflammation related to TNF receptor signaling and IL-23 participates in the differentiation and IL-17 production of Th17 cells.69 TNF inhibitors and IL-17 inhibitors are effective in AS. However, when AS was treated with TNF inhibitors, serum IL-17A levels unchanged regardless of the treatment effect.70,71 Therefore, IL-17 inhibitors might be used for patients who derive no benefit from TNF inhibitors.72 In addition, IL-17 inhibitors have similar efficacy to TNF inhibitors in active AS patients without biological therapeutics.73 These results suggest IL-17A participates uniquely in the pathophysiology of AS. Although IL-23/p19 or IL-23/p40 inhibitors did not show a statistically significant improvement, they were effective in patients with AS.74,75 From this, although PsA and As are related diseases, the role of IL23 in enthesitis is different between these diseases.

MTX has not been confirmed for sacroiliac joint and the vertebral column, the central lesions in AS and non-axSpA. Salazosulfasalazine is validated only for peripheral joints when accompanied by peripheral joint pain.76 Therefore, TNF inhibitors or IL-17 inhibitors are used when NSAIDs can be used and BASDAI score is greater than 4. Recommendations by ACR, Spondylitis Association of America (SAA) and Spondyloarthritis Research and Treatment Network (SPARTAN) were updated in 2019.77 The first-line drug is usually a TNF inhibitor. Uveitis in the front of the eye is detected in about 1/3 of AS cases. Therefore, in such cases, TNF inhibitors should be given priority. TNF and IL-17 inhibitors are highly effective when lesions are evaluated clinically by BASDAI, but their effects on suppressing bone lesion progress are unclear. This is because no system to evaluate bone lesions in AS patients has been established compared with RA and PsA patients. However, the possibility has been suggested that TNF inhibitor and IL-17 inhibitor allow for gentle and quiet long-term incorruptibility.78 In addition, one report indicated the possibility that bone deterioration was inhibited after 2 years of secukinumab treatment.79 Therefore, we anticipate the results of analyses of other examples of this treatment over longer periods. At present, it is not recommended to discontinue or reduce TNF inhibitors or IL-17 inhibitor use, even if disease activity has slowed according to evaluations such as BASDAI.

Vasculitis syndrome is classified according to the size of affected blood vessel by the Chapel Hill Consensus Conference (CHCC) classification (CHCC, 2012).80 The classification of small vasculitis in CHCC 2012 are an immune complex type and an ANCA-related vasculitis type. The former type comprises anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody disease, IgA vasculitis, and cryoglobulinemia-related vasculitis. ANCA-related vasculitis includes microscopic polyangiitis (MPA), polyangiitis-related granulation tissue class symptom (granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) or Wegener granulomatosis), and eosinophil- and polyangiitis-related granulation tissue class symptom (eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA), Churg-Strauss syndrome, or allergic granulomatous vasculitis).80 MPA and GPA require similar therapeutic strategies although they are different diseases.

The pathogenesis of MPA and GPA is thought to involve neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) released from ANCA-activating neutrophil, which affect endothelial cells via inflammatory cytokines.81,82 EGPA is different from MPA and GPA because it is an eosinophil-related tissue disorder. In EGPA, Th1/17 cells participate in granuloma formation, TRh2 produce IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13, and B cells secrete IgE and ANCA. IL-5 activates eosinophil, which causes the tissue disorder. Anti-IL-5 biological therapeutics is used for the treatment of EGPA and anti-B-cell therapy is used for MPA and GPA.

Rituximab is a monoclonal antibody that recognizes CD20 expressed on the surface of B-cells. After binding to CD20, rituximab kills B-cells by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Rituximab is covered by health insurance for the treatment of MPA and GPA in Europe and the USA.8385 However, GCs plus rituximab is positioned as an alternative to GCs plus cyclophosphamide treatment for MPA and GPA. In MPA and GPA, rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis is often complicated as an organ disorder, and clinicians often hesitate to use GCs plus rituximab because cyclophosphamide used in standard regimen can affect liver function test outcomes. However, because there is no need for weight loss, and rituximab used in limited quantities does not cause renal failure, there are many clinical situations where its use is appropriate.

Mepolizumab, a monoclonal antibody that recognizes IL-5, is covered by health insurance for the treatment of severe bronchial asthma. This drug has a strong eosinophilic suppressive effect mediated by IL-5 inhibition and is covered by health insurance for the treatment of EGPA.86 GCs are a first-line drug for the treatment of EGPA, but not MPA and GPA, because not many cases require immunosuppression in the early stages of disease. Mepolizumab can achieve rapid drug weight loss of GCs compared with placebo and can achieve longer-term remission maintenance.86 The use of mepolizumab is considered in cases where the use of GCs or immunosuppressants is difficult because of the occurrence of side effects.

ASD is not an autoimmune disease because it lacks autoreactive T-cells and autoantibodies. Its pathogenesis involves the activation of monocytes/macrophages and the production of inflammatory cytokines. Therefore, ASD is classified as a CTD-ID, but it is considered an autoinflammatory disease.87 IL-6, IL-18, and TNF are present at high levels in patients with ASD, although many cytokines have been reported.87,88 The characteristics of ASD include high levels of ferritin and IL-18. In ASD, increased IL-18 is related to fever, joint pain, and skin symptoms, which are normalized by GC treatment.89 In addition, IL-6 located downstream to IL-18 might be increased or decreased in ASD.90

Regarding biological therapeutics for ASD, TNF, IL-1, and IL-6 inhibitors have shown benefit. A meta-analysis of clinical studies reported the IL-1 inhibitor, anakinra, improved the remission rate and GC-induced weight loss.91 In addition, another IL-1 inhibitor, canakinumab, improved juvenile idiopathic arthritis similar to ASD in a clinical trial.92 A TNF inhibitor was also effective for ASD in a forward open clinical study.93 Furthermore, Kaneko et al94 reported that tocilizumab had a high remission rate for ASD compared with placebo in a double-blind study. Based on these studies, tocilizumab was approved for ASD.

The condition of patients requiring a prescription of life convalescence of ASD includes macrophage activation syndrome (MAS). MAS defines the prognosis of ASD. Although there is no specific treatment for ASD, an adaptation of tocilizumab treatment can cause MAS. It is assumed that MAS develops in patients where ASD that the effect is insufficient by existing treatment, which is an adaptation of tocilizumab. Therefore, it is necessary to consider MAS development after tocilizumab treatment or the use of TNF or IL-1 inhibitors.9597 However, it is reported that a clear cause-effect between the tocilizumab dosage and MAS onset could not be found from the results of analyzed cases which MAS developed after administration of tocilizumab for juvenile idiopathic arthritis resembling ASD.98 Pathology resembling cytokine storm might cause MAS. Therefore, biological therapeutics might cause changes in the cytokine cascade and trigger MAS onset. Therefore, it is necessary to consider the usefulness of tocilizumab against ASD patient developing MAS.

The cost of biological therapeutics per patient with RA is approximately 100 times the costs of treatment with a combination of conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD). Graudal et al99 reported a meta-analysis of randomized trials of combination therapy with and without TNF inhibitors in RA. They concluded the RA guidelines should recommend combination treatment before the initiation of TNF inhibitors. The effect of combination therapy including biological therapeutics was also reported in patients with CTD-ID.100,101

AS is a chronic and inflammatory disease, and the management of this disease consists of pharmacological and nonpharmacological modalities. Until recently, pharmacological treatment options have been very limited. However, as mentioned earlier, the development of novel biological therapeutics has revolutionized the management of this disease. In addition, the usefulness of combination therapy with TNF inhibitor and NSAID and DMARD was also reported.102104

Skin and joint manifestations associated with psoriasis and PsA can significantly impact a patients quality of life. Successful treatment is imperative to improve the signs and symptoms of disease. For patients with moderate to severe active PsA, combination therapy with methotrexate and TNF inhibitors is considered first-line treatment.105 These new therapeutic concepts for PsA include a high efficacy of combination therapy in those unable to tolerate or who have failed TNF inhibitor treatment.106

Relapsing ocular involvement is a major manifestations of BD and occurs in 6080% of patients, resulting in retinal vasculitis, neuropathy or panuveitis.107 TNF inhibitors are effective and safe in these patients, especially regarding its corticosteroid- and immunosuppressive drug-sparing effects.108

Biological therapeutics are more expensive compared with small molecule drugs, such as JAK inhibitors. Drug costs are more likely to be reduced if generics, such as JAK inhibitors are available.109111 Depending on the disease, this approach is likely to become more mainstream. However, autoimmune or self-inflammatory disease have an abnormal cytokine production indicating the potential benefit of biological therapeutics. The recent marketed recycling antibodies are the preparation which was developed so that antibody preparation binds to the antigen repeatedly in vivo.112 It is thought that even if it leads to such a technique reducing the dosage number of times of biological therapeutics, it becomes useful in economic aspect.

Cytokines, such as IL-6, have pleiotropic effects and promote various effects in numerous cell types. Cytokines also have overlapping and sometimes redundant effects. Therefore, even if the effects of a specific cytokine are completely blocked, similar effects can be mediated by another cytokine. This might explain why some cases treated with biological therapeutics show no beneficial effect and the blocking a specific cytokine does not always cause serious side effect.

When disease activity is controlled by biological therapeutics, autoimmune diseases can sometimes occur. For example, psoriasis exanthema develops during treatment for RA or BD, a phenomenon termed paradoxical reaction, which is thought to be caused by the overlapping functions of cytokines. When the activity of a disease is inhibited by blocking a specific cytokine, levels of another cytokine are thought to be increased in vivo leading to the induction of autoimmune disease. An example is the onset of MAS by tocilizumab treatment for ASD.

The biological therapeutics contributes to greatly improving convalescence around RA. Other CTD are also experiencing the calming of the disease activity by the development of new biological therapeutics and adaptation expansion of such drugs. In this review, we addressed the current situation of biological therapeutics for CTD-ID including Behcet's disease, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-related arthritis, and adult Stills disease, as well as the choice of biological therapeutics in the clinical practice. Further developing biological therapeutics is expected in the scleroderma and the inflammation of muscle-related disease that there remained it.

This review was supported in part by grants (15K08657 and 19K07948 to S.N.) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Science and Technology of Japan. We thank Edanz (https://jp.edanz.com/ac) for editing a draft of this manuscript.

The authors declare no conflicts of interests regarding the publication of this article.

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2. Mosca M, Tani C, Vagnani S, et al. The diagnosis and classification of undifferentiated connective tissue diseases. J Autoimmun. 2014;4849:5052. doi:10.1016/j.jaut.2014.01.019

3. Fernandez AP. Connective tissue disease: current concepts. Dermatol Clin. 2019;37(1):3748. doi:10.1016/j.det.2018.07.006

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45. Haider AS, Lowes MA, Surez-Farias M, et al. Identification of cellular pathways of type 1, Th17 T cells, and TNF- and inducible nitric oxide synthase-producing dendritic cells in autoimmune inflammation through pharmacogenomic study of cyclosporine A in psoriasis. J Immunol. 2008;180:19131920. doi:10.4049/jimmunol.180.3.1913

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49. Benham H, Rehaume LM, Hasnain SZ, et al. Interleukin-23 mediates the intestinal response to microbial -1,3-glucan and the development of spondyloarthritis pathology in SKG mice. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2014;66:17551767. doi:10.1002/art.38638

50. Cuthbert RJ, Watad A, Fragkakis EM, et al. Evidence that tissue resident human enthesis T-cells can produce IL-17A independently of IL-23R transcript expression. Ann Rheum Dis. 2019;78:15591565. doi:10.1136/annrheumdis-2019-215210

51. Mease P, van der Heijde D, Landew R, et al. Secukinumab improves active psoriatic arthritis symptoms and inhibits radiographic progression: primary results from the randomised, double-blind, phase III FUTURE 5 study. Ann Rheum Dis. 2018;77:890897. doi:10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212687

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The Orioles are showing progress in the seasons final month – Camden Chat

Posted: at 6:10 pm

In the depths of a massive rebuild, Orioles fans know its unwise to look to the win-loss record for signs of progress. Thats fortunate, because the Orioles dont have many wins to speak of. But of course there have been positives, particularly down the seasons final stretch, where the Orioles have looked, for the most part, like a competent baseball team ever since ending that miserable 19-game losing streak in August.

The performance of the teams starting staff as of late has been highly encouraging. The unit owns a 4.89 ERA in the month of September, their best mark for any single month this season. Whats even better is the fact that most of the starts have been made by players that the organization is hoping to keep around past 2021.

Staff ace John Means has rediscovered his mojo, sporting a 2.76 ERA in September to go with .609 OPS against in the month. Zac Lowther had the best start of his major league career just last week (5.0 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 2 BB, 7 SO vs. TEX). Alexander Wells has tossed five innings in back-to-back starts. Keegan Akin has allowed one or fewer runs in three starts of 5+ innings since August 26. Not to mention Chris Ellis looking good just about every time hes gone to the mound for the Os since being claimed off of waivers last month.

If the Orioles are going to climb their way out of the big league cellar in 2022, its going to require the pitching to be much more effective. That will probably necessitate at least some level of outside talent being added, but getting more out of the players they already have is a massive boost.

On the offensive side of things, it has been reassuring to see some of the teams top hitters finish off the year strong.

Everyone has been waiting for Cedric Mullins to cool off, but it just hasnt happened. The Orioles center fielder just crossed the 30 home run/30 stolen base threshold and has a .917 OPS in September, not far off the .932 OPS he featured back in April.

Ryan Mountcastle has scuffled a bit in the years final month, producing a .712 OPS, but he has kept hitting home runs (six in September), and looks every bit like a run-producing bat in the middle of this teams lineup for years to come.

But perhaps the most encouraging development has been the output of Austin Hays. The talented outfielder has been able to stay healthy while smacking eight home runs and posting a .977 OPS. Its a small sample size, but this was the sort of production that seemed possible when the Jacksonville University product was rocketing through the Os minor league system a few years ago.

The club has even gotten some good news in the dugout. It was reported last week that manager Brandon Hyde will return to his position with the Orioles in 2022. The secrecy with which the extension was handed out is quite odd, but the outcome is that the front office does not need to dedicate any resources to finding a skipper in what is sure to be a unique offseason with ongoing CBA negotiations and (hopefully) some level of free agent talks for the Orioles.

Opinions on Hydes performance are split. Clearly, the team has not won many games under his watch. But the rosters he has been handed have also been rather bereft of talent. And he has overseen some substantial breakouts from Means and Mullins while Mountcastle has acclimated himself well to the major leagues. At the very least, its fair to give Hyde another season at the helm.

Clearly, there will still be plenty of holes on this roster when 2022 begins, but GM Mike Elias recently said that top prospects Grayson Rodriguez and Adley Rutschman will both have a shot to make the teams Opening Day roster next year. Now, is that actually going to happen? The odds feel long, but the pair will be in Baltimore at some point in 2022 along with other notable prospects, and their presence alone should give the team a handful of wins.

Expectations for the Orioles next season will remain low. Making a playoff push or something similar is unlikely. But that doesnt mean there wont be pressure. The rebuild is nearing the point where some level of big league success is going to be required by both fans and the media. What success looks like is up for interpretation, but some of the positives signs down the stretch make whatever it is seem more attainable.

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The Orioles are showing progress in the seasons final month - Camden Chat

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Dallas schools were on the rise, praised for progress and reform. And then the pandemic hit – The Dallas Morning News

Posted: at 6:10 pm

Lashunta Wafford watched as her third grade son lost gains in the months spent learning from their Dallas home, away from a real classroom and the extra supports the school provided for his ADHD and autism.

He was really struggling in certain areas that he had already went over and we had done drilled in, she said.

Jayce returned to school at Paul L. Dunbar Learning Center as soon as the campus reopened last fall. But weeks into this more normal year, Wafford is waiting to see whether teachers can fill the chasms that COVID-19 created.

The Wafford family is among thousands across Dallas grappling with the fallout from the pandemic and its disruptions to education. State officials estimate COVID-19 erased a decade of academic gains in math and five years of progress in reading.

In Dallas, which was often praised for its swift academic rise in recent years, those losses are especially painful. DISD serves some of the citys most vulnerable children kids who need school to be a refuge and to set them up with their best chance at success.

Unfortunately, were still a tale of two cities and if we lose this generation, this whole city is going to go backwards, Superintendent Michael Hinojosa said. Weve made a lot of progress in the last few years, but weve still got a long ways to go and this gave us a setback. And so I think everybody oughta care.

Altogether, more than 55,000 Dallas ISD students did not pass or take at least one of their state tests last year. Thats more than one-third of the total student body.

Before the pandemic, Dallas had made marked improvements in recent years, particularly helping the kids most in need and raising up failing schools. Nonprofits and industry banded together with area school districts, charters and others to address pressing needs, such as expanding early childhood education. But challenges have been persistent as Dallas ISD generally lags behind other major urban districts across the country, including those in Houston and Miami.

DISD is the center of the citys complex educational universe that also includes charter networks, neighboring suburban districts and private schools. Some see it as a pioneer, willing and able to try new things and disseminate what works to others across Texas. The district has championed reforms such as a pay-for-performance compensation structure, which informs its work to funnel the best teachers into the neediest schools.

Officials are proud of the results. In recent years, the number of failing DISD schools has plummeted. In the 2013-14 school year, more than 31,000 students were enrolled at campuses that missed state academic standards. Five years later, that dropped to about 4,200 children. And now, more students than ever are earning college credit and even associates degrees while still in high school.

But to some, the district appears burdened with bureaucratic bloat and facing socioeconomic challenges that it alone cannot rectify. They see DISD and its lagging student performance holding the city back.

The challenges DISD faces are massive and complex, many of them linked to the citys historically racist policies.

Dallas ISD as an institution has been trying to deal with that sort of quandary of being susceptible to housing segregation and what that means for putting kids who are racially segregated in a community into a school district thats not supposed to be racially segregated, said Jerry Hawkins, executive director of the nonprofit Dallas Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation. Dallas ISD is trying to do its best in that system.

Dallas was deliberate in slowing any efforts for school desegregation, a process that took four decades of legal wrangling and was never fully realized. Once Black students were allowed onto previously all-white campuses, many white families fled to the suburbs, with the district losing as many as 50,000 white students in the decade after a court ordered desegregation in the 1970s.

Today, a little more than 5% of the districts students are white, compared with nearly 60% in 1970. By comparison, roughly 29% of Dallas residents are white.

Immigrants, many of them from Mexico and Central America, moved in throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Now, 47% of the districts students are learning English and 86% are from poor families.

These are the students hit hardest by the pandemic and its ripple effects. DISD kids saw their parents lose jobs and mourned for loved ones taken by COVID-19.

District administrators know how vital it will be to help students recover academically and emotionally from the pandemic disruptions, not only for their futures but for the citys.

The kids were educating today in Dallas are Dallas of the five,10, 15, 20, 25, 50 years in the future, DISD board President Ben Mackey said.

The pandemic exacerbated Dallas academic challenges but they arent new.

When Toyota picked Plano over Dallas as the location for its new national headquarters in 2014, then-Mayor Mike Rawlings pointed to the citys school system as the reason for the loss.

We dont get Toyota in Dallas because of the school system, he said in a radio interview.

Then just four years and many school system reforms later, Amazon passed on the city when choosing the site of its second headquarters. The decision meant Dallas would not receive thousands of high-paying jobs.

Some speculated that the mammoth company passed over the city because of its relative lack of home-grown science, engineering and technical talent. Pundits saw it as a rebuke of the areas pre-K to college educational ecosystem.

While the number of Dallas campuses deemed failing by the state dropped tremendously in the past decade, a look at the Nations Report Card shows student performance still lags when compared with urban districts across the country.

The National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, offers a standardized look at how students are performing across decades.

Results from 2019 show that 15% of DISD eighth graders were proficient on the NAEP math exam and roughly 13% of eighth graders met the same standard on the reading test. In math, almost two times the percentage of eighth graders met that standard in Miami-Dade public schools, a significantly larger school system with similar demographics.

And even compared to Houston, the only Texas district with a larger enrollment, Dallas eighth graders lagged in math by roughly 10 percentage points.

Hinojosa has said that just looking at raw NAEP scores doesnt take into account how many students DISD serves who are learning English and from poor families.

When you break it down for the level of poverty, we do pretty well, Hinojosa said after the latest tranche of results was released. But NAEP just puts scores out in larger comparisons, without disaggregating.

His point is backed up by an analysis from the Urban Institute, a Washington think tank that looked at 2017 scores in a subset of urban districts and attempted to level the playing field by controlling for student characteristics like poverty.

After researchers adjusted Dallas scores, the districts performance jumped closer to the top of the chart for urban school achievement.

When comparing scores, you have to realize that not all students start from the same place, Urban Institute expert Kristin Blagg said.

Without a strong foundation built in grade school, students can struggle after graduating, both in pursuing a degree or earning a living wage.

Inside the boundaries of Dallas ISD, about 1 in 3 people older than 25 have a bachelors degree. Only 19.6% of DISD graduates score high enough on exams or earn postsecondary credit in high school to be considered college ready, lagging just behind the state average of 21.1%.

The median income in the district is a little more than $55,000, although wealth is concentrated in small pockets.

To put more students on track for livable wages, DISD has partnered with Dallas College and businesses to offer early college and P-TECH programs where students can earn postsecondary credit in high school.

Through P-TECH, 18 high schools offer career-focused pathways ranging from computer science to health to engineering to education in which students can receive more hands-on experience in an industry through campus partnerships with businesses.

On a more micro-level, some parents are voting with their feet and enrolling their children in schools outside of DISD.

Nearly one-quarter of students inside the districts limits dont attend a Dallas ISD campus, instead opting for other options. Last school year, the district lost nearly 40,000 kids to neighboring districts and charter schools.

What we see is that people will move to Dallas, then theyll have a family, and then theyll move to the suburbs, Mackey said. No one should feel like they need to leave because of an education system. In fact, I think it would be a real feather in the cap to say, Actually, Im going to move to Dallas for Dallas ISD.

The school that has attracted the largest number of Dallas ISD defectors about 10,000 in total last school year is Uplift Education, which now has 11 campuses across the city.

The network, which was part of Texas first generation of charter schools, has expanded throughout the area in the past 2 decades. Its most recent add in Dallas was in 2016 at Uplift Wisdom Preparatory in South Dallas.

Five years ago, South Dallas still had a lot of challenges in terms of having high-quality schools for that community, Uplift CEO Yasmin Bhatia said. Families were open to more choice options and the philanthropic community [was] also paying more attention to South Dallas.

Uplift has no immediate plans for more growth here, the CEO noted. Charters, Bhatia said, are a political football in Dallas and the network faced uphill battles in front of the City Council. Proposed charters receive pushback from city leaders when attempting to open a school.

A decade ago, DISD was losing about 25,000 students to nearby charters. That number has increased to nearly 36,000. Fewer students translate into less funding for the district because state formulas are tied to attendance.

DISD leaders have fought back against charter expansion. Last summer, Hinojosa and trustee Maxie Johnson stood near a proposed new campus for KIPP and accused the network of trying to bully its way into South Dallas.

Charters have long drawn from students in South Dallas, where families historically have had few alternatives to their neighborhood campuses. Most of the students whove left DISD for charters live south of Interstate 30.

But Hinojosa has conceded that charters forced the district to act. Talking about KIPPs expansion, he said: We saw what they did, and it shocked us. But instead of whining about it, we dusted ourselves off and did something about it.

To stem the tide, Dallas ISD embraced innovative new programs and reforms in a bid to improve student performance and keep kids enrolled. For example, the district replicated one of its most lauded school models from Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts at Martin Luther King Jr. Learning Center, south of downtown.

Competition in any industry makes us all better, Bhatia said. DISD getting stronger makes Uplift better and vice versa.

Decades before charters began expanding in Dallas and enrollment dropped, the district gained a reputation as a system willing to try new things.

Fifty years ago, to aid with desegregation efforts, DISD opened Skyline High School as the nations first magnet school. The district has since embraced all kinds of choice schools.

Students can attend one of 26 early college programs, new career institutes or a number of other innovative school models, including Montessori and arts-focused programs.

Dallas is somewhat an example for the rest of the country, Hawkins said, noting that some of its recent changes to its discipline policies became national news.

DISD was one of the first in the country to develop a racial equity department. Its focus on eliminating racial disparities in school suspensions led the district to be among the first in Texas to ban discretionary out-of-school suspensions for students in second grade and younger, a concept that later became state law. Recently, the district expanded that idea across all grade levels, the first large district in the nation to do so.

State leaders often hold up Dallas as a district the rest of the state can emulate. The historic 2019 school finance overhaul drew from the districts signature school turnaround model and pay-for-performance system. The district credits the program Accelerating Campus Excellence, or ACE with helping to bring a steep drop in the number of failing campuses.

ACE-like programs have been replicated in districts across Texas, including Fort Worth, Richardson and Garland.

Ahead of the 2019 legislative session, Gov. Greg Abbott said lawmakers needed to hear about proven strategies before allocating funding. Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath a former Dallas schools trustee and other influential leaders stood firmly behind DISDs approaches.

Under House Bill 3, Texas awards eligible districts ranging bonuses up to $32,000 for high-performing teachers who elect to work on campuses in impoverished or rural communities.

This law codified Dallas ACE program statewide and created a sustainable funding source so the model can continue for years to come.

Dallas ISD leaders say they must throw everything they have at catching up struggling students.

Theyll have a huge infusion of resources to help them do it. The federal coronavirus relief package allocated more than $700 million to DISD, which officials plan to use to give students more time in the classroom.

Roughly 1 in 5 campuses extended their academic calendars by several weeks. District leaders hoped more schools would adopt a longer year but remain optimistic about how the thousands of additional minutes in front of a teacher will impact youngsters. Hinojosa predicted those schools would see a big difference in their data by the end of the year.

We almost have a quasi-treatment group and a quasi-control group with the five schools that had complete school day redesign, Hinojosa said. Well have 41 schools that have data on [intersession calendars] and then well be able to compare them to everybody else who stayed on the traditional calendar.

Even more campuses are adding after-school programming with the district prioritizing chronically low-performing schools for the expansion. Roughly 60 schools will offer three hours of after-school programming every weekday, with time set aside for tutoring, athletics and arts.

Tutoring also plays an essential role in the districts recovery plans. DISD is planning to spend millions to ensure students get one-on-one time and accelerate their learning.

Too often, educators know, private tutoring is accessible only for students whose families have the means to pay for it.

Wafford hopes her son Jayce will be one of the kids matched with a tutor, one who specializes in helping children with autism.

Thats the key, she said.

But shes also still searching for schools that are focused on serving students with special needs and accessible from her South Dallas home, which could lure her family outside of DISD.

Were just trying to see whats the best option at this point, she said.

Note: This article is part of ourState of the City project, in whichThe Dallas Morning Newsexplores the most critical issues facing our communities. Find more topics in coming days as we examine the issue of public education.

Stay connected to the latest in education by signing up for our weekly newsletter.

The DMN Education Lab deepens the coverage and conversation about urgent education issues critical to the future of North Texas.

The DMN Education Lab is a community-funded journalism initiative, with support from The Beck Group, Bobby and Lottye Lyle, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, The Meadows Foundation, Solutions Journalism Network, Southern Methodist University and Todd A. Williams Family Foundation. The Dallas Morning News retains full editorial control of the Education Labs journalism.

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Progress made on California fire that displaced thousands – ABC News

Posted: at 6:10 pm

Firefighters are gaining the upper hand on a forest fire that displaced thousands of people near Shasta Lake in Northern California

By Associated Press

September 26, 2021, 5:39 PM

3 min read

REDDING, Calif. -- Firefighters were gaining the upper hand Sunday on a forest fire that displaced thousands of people and destroyed more than 100 buildings near Shasta Lake in Northern California.

Lighter winds and cooler temperatures slowed the Fawn Fire as it moves toward the shores of California's largest man-made lake and away from populated areas north of the city of Redding, allowing crews to increase containment to 35%, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said in a statement.

The fire at one point threatened 9,000 buildings, but the number dropped to 2,340 on Sunday.

Light rain was in the forecast for Monday. Fire officials said crews will begin taking advantage of the calmer weather to conduct back burns near the lake to expand the control lines, the Record Searchlight reported.

Were going to hold it. Its going to be done this week, Bret Gouvea, chief of CalFire's Shasta-Trinity unit, said at a community meeting Saturday night.

Initial assessments found that 131 homes and other buildings had burned, CalFire said. That number was likely to change as teams go street by street surveying the destruction.

Authorities have arrested a 30-year-old woman on suspicion of starting the blaze that erupted Wednesday and grew explosively in hot and gusty weather in the region about 200 miles (322 kilometers) northeast of San Francisco.

Alexandra Souverneva, of Palo Alto, was charged Friday with felony arson to wildland with an enhancement because of a declared state of emergency in California, Shasta County District Attorney Stephanie Bridgett said.

Souverneva pleaded not guilty. She is also suspected of starting other fires in Shasta County and throughout the state, Bridgett said. It wasnt immediately known if she has an attorney who could speak on her behalf.

The Fawn Fire has charred more than 13 square miles (34 square kilometers) of heavy timber.

Its the latest destructive blaze to send Californians fleeing this year. Fires have burned more than 3,750 square miles (9,712 square kilometers) so far in 2021, destroying more than 3,200 homes, commercial properties and other structures.

Those fires include a pair of big forest blazes burning for more than two weeks in the heart of giant sequoia country on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. More than 1,700 firefighters battled the KNP Complex Fires, which covered 70 square miles (181 square kilometers) by Sunday.

Nearby, the Windy Fire grew significantly Saturday as it made uphill runs and winds blew embers that ignited spot fires. The blaze ignited by lightning on Sept. 9 has scorched 122 square miles (317 square kilometers) of trees and brush on the Tule River Indian Reservation and in Sequoia National Forest. Containment shrunk from 5% to 2% Sunday.

A historic drought in the American West tied to climate change is making wildfires harder to fight. It has killed millions of trees in California alone. Scientists say climate change has made the West much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive.

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Progress made on fire that displaced thousands | News | avpress.com – Antelope Valley Press

Posted: at 6:10 pm

REDDING Firefighters were gaining the upper hand Sunday on a forest fire that displaced thousands of people and destroyed more than 100 buildings near Shasta Lake in Northern California.

Lighter winds and cooler temperatures slowed the Fawn Fire as it moves toward the shores of Californias largest man-made lake and away from populated areas north of the city of Redding, allowing crews to increase containment to 35%, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said in a statement.

The fire at one point threatened 9,000 buildings, but the number dropped to 2,340 on Sunday.

Light rain was in the forecast for Monday. Fire officials said crews will begin taking advantage of the calmer weather to conduct back burns near the lake to expand the control lines, the Record Searchlight reported.

Were going to hold it. Its going to be done this week, Bret Gouvea, chief of CalFires Shasta-Trinity unit, said at a community meeting Saturday night.

Initial assessments found that 131 homes and other buildings had burned, CalFire said. That number was likely to change as teams go street by street surveying the destruction.

Authorities have arrested a 30-year-old woman on suspicion of starting the blaze that erupted Wednesday and grew explosively in hot and gusty weather in the region about 200 miles northeast of San Francisco.

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Making progress with Thompson Free Library – Bangor Daily News

Posted: at 6:10 pm

By Kim Brawn

Technology is a form of progress and a double-edged sword, a perpetual one step forward, two steps back. For all that we can do with a smartphone, tablet, or laptop for all the convenience, information, and connectedness it gives us it has created inequities and incredible challenges, like the ability to spread misinformation at startling speed.

Those of us at the Thompson Free Library in Dover-Foxcroft do our best every month to level that playing field by offering free public access computers and Wi-Fi. Printing, copying, faxing, and scanning services are also available. Our website features many great resources including a Wakelet collection that Librarian Michelle Fagan compiled early in the pandemic, to help recognize and combat misinformation. Sinan Arals (MIT data scientist and entrepreneur) Ted Talk is especially eye-opening, leaving the audience with this powerful warning: We have to be vigilant in defending the truth against misinformation with our individual responsibilities, decisions, behaviors and actions.

Progress is generally forward moving and takes many forms which makes it an engaging topic for TFLs Philosophy Circle on Friday, Oct. 1 at 3:30 p.m. under the tent. Library Director Jon Knepp says the focus will be on, What actually is progress? How do we measure it? What is its end goal? I thought it might be a good way to tie some of our other discussions together.

Time to trade in your Thinker pose for the ultimate in head banger moves! Heavy metal fans and those who dare to explore are invited to Exit Light: Metallicas Black Album at 30 with author Ben Apatoff online via Zoom on Thursday, Oct. 7 at 6 p.m. Apatoff will discuss his new book Metallica: The $24.95 Book (a playful nod to The $5.98 Metallica EP!).

Metal Life calls it, an incredibly well written history of the band, told in chapters dedicated to each album, each band member and influences. Each chapter tells a story instead of just rehashing dates and events like a calendar this book allows you, fan or not, to understand and appreciate who Metallica is and more importantly, WHAT Metallica is. While working on his book during the pandemic, Apatoff found comfort and inspiration in watching the Metallica Mondays shows (concerts the band released on YouTube), It kept me grounded and helped me. Contact TFL for the Zoom link or find it in our Facebook event.

A sharp turn finds us back under the tent on Thursday, Oct. 14 at 6 p.m. for TFLs Reading Group. This months featured selection is Thunder Dog: The True Story of a Blind Man, His Guide Dog & the Triumph of Trust at Ground Zero by Michael Hingson with Susy Flory. From Kirkus Reviews: The chilling account of how the two (Hingson and his guide dog Roselle) worked in tandem to safely descend 78 stories and 1,463 steps, while simultaneously helping others remain calm is truly-awe-inspiring. . . a tragic, inspirational and enlightening memoir. Copies available at TFL.

Switching gears again, lets have some ghostly and bewitching fall fun as TFL Under the Tent presents a classic movie about getting slimed and chasing paranormal entities with Bill, Dan, Harold, and Ernie on Friday, Oct. 22 at 6 p.m.

Next up: what if The Rose, Carrie Bradshaw, and Sister Mary Patrick made a Halloween-themed movie together? Abracadabra, they did! And you can watch it on Thursday, Oct. 29 at 6 p.m. under the tent. Both films are free, open to the public, and family friendly. Michelle told me, There will be snacks (possibly hot cocoa). Be sure to check the forecast and dress accordingly. We do have blankets though.

Random acts of kindness are awesome but lets start an intentional acts of kindness movement with the focus on what we can do to keep each other safe and healthy while recognizing each others humanity. Please get vaccinated, mask up where required and when recommended, and be mindful of others. Many of us who work with the public have been thrust into an unenviable yet necessary public health role during the pandemic. Thank you to our patrons and visitors the vast majority of whom follow our protocols and policies and appreciate us (and dont even get mad when we remind them to put their mask over their nose!).

TFL is open to the public Tuesday to Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. We currently require masks indoors. For information on events, visit our website (https://www.thompson.lib.me.us), Facebook page, or contact us at thompsonfreelibrary@gmail.com or 207-564-3350. Find us on Instagram @tf_library.

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John Oliver lays out the GOP’s in-progress racist voter suppression blitz – The A.V. Club

Posted: at 6:10 pm

John OliverScreenshot: Last Week Tonight

You know how one political party (out of two) is systematically setting the stage to undemocratically destroy voting rights, specifically the rights of those people (the not-white ones) who overwhelmingly sent Donald Trump packing in 2020? John Oliver sure does, as his Sunday main story saw the Last Week Tonight host delving into the Republican war on voting rights. Honestly, as Oliver proved in acidly funny lockstep, it really isnt necessary to do any delving, as GOP hypocrisy, fringe conspiracy logic, and outright racial oppression at the voting booth is just lying all out in the open.

You know, like in Georgia, which is represented by one Burt Jones, seen in a clip asserting that voting is a privilege that certain people should have to really work for. (Possibly by overcoming the state closing polling places in non-white areas and then forbidding good samaritans from handing out water to the Black people stuck in eight-hour voting lines in the Georgia heat.) Or in Arizona, where, just this week, even the Republican-led, farcically shady audit of Joe Bidens presidential victory there not only proved what every rational human being knew already, but also made Bidens margin over GOP cult leader and twice-impeached seditionist Donald Trump just a hair wider. (Oh, dont worry, Republicans are still recommending further voting restrictions to fix the non-existent voter fraud problem they themselves showed doesnt exist.)

In all, Oliver showed how some 18 states have passed 30 laws since the 2020 Democratic, voter-approved takeover of the presidency, House, and Senate, and thatstrangelyevery single one of those laws intended to make it harder for certain people to vote was spearheaded by the Republican Party. Oh, and that the GOPs furthest-right lobbying wing, the Heritage Foundation, is just as busy undermining American democracy, as Oliver showed a Heritage executive (one Jessica Anderson) bragging about those kooky, woman- and gay-hating white supremacists managing to slip through some Iowa voting suppression laws (which Heritage wrote) without anybody noticing. You know, like with all truly fair and vetted democratic policies.

Oliver, as is his way, made time throughout his concise history of Republican voter suppression and outright racist bullshit to go on some theoretically illustrative tangents involving unusual sexual practices. (No kink-shaming, those currently fantasizing about either the Wheel Of Fortune wheel or lobsters.) Painting a starkly chilling portrait of how the current Republican Party is ginning up solutions for a problem it itself manufactured, Oliver summed up this in-progress, democracy-threatening authoritarianism thusly: Use bullshit claims to stir up baseless fear to pass unnecessary restrictions to target particular groups.

Showing Texas Lt. Governor and major asshole Dan Patrick using the legally un-actionable fuzzy logic that GOP voter suppression tactics are necessary because voters have lost faith in an election system Patrick himself has been working overtime to slander and undermine ever since the Republicans Glorious Leader appeared ready to loose bigly on Election Night, Oliver let Patricks nonsense hang itself. Although Oliver did note that Patricks showboating stunt offering a Texas-style $1 million bounty for every provable instance of voter fraud has seen the bloviating Texas lieutenant liar dodge fellow Lt. Gov John Fettermans call for the cash, having offered up the case of a Pennsylvania Trump voters trying to vote for their dead moms. Who are no doubt very disappointed in them.

As for solutions, Oliver, as ever, had sort of a good news-bad news thing going. There are two proposed laws (the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and the Freedom To Vote Act) that would, between them, halt this Republican campaign of partisan ratfuckery by ensuring everything from early and drive-up voting, to automatic voter registration, to making Election Day a national holiday. And would restore the key tenets of the Supreme Court-gutted, racist-thwarting 1965 Voting Rights Act, something shown as deeply necessary in how GOP legislators keep trying to procedurally ban any talk of racism from the debate over their 100 percent racist voter suppression. In this weeks example of representative villainy, Oliver showed Representative Travis Grantham (R-AZ) telling Black lawmaker Reginald Bolding to, almost verbatim, sit down and shut up when Bolding brought up how the Arizona GOPs proposed laws are blatantly intended to disenfranchise voters of color. (Oh, Grantham used the words colored people in his rant, just for some of that old-timey racist flavor.)

G/O Media may get a commission

On the other hand, Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has promised that his GOP minions will filibuster any bill intended to make it harder for them to suppress votes among those communities (not-white ones) where they know theyre shit out of luck, historically and increasingly. And while Oliver threw shade at Democratic(-ish) Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) for saying hed join his Republican pals in robbing certain people of their voting rights, the host also told the other Joe (Biden) that his folksy entreaty for people to just out-organize this out-in-the-open racist rigging is woefully out of touch with just how determined the GOP is to steal elections. Showing Biden praising Americans for turning out in record numbers (during a pandemic, no less) to make sure Donald Trump wound up on unemployed and making paid appearances for sketchy cults, Oliver noted in exasperation that that doesnt cut it when Republicans are trying to shut out those very voters. Seriously, Joe.

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Covid has wiped out years of progress on life expectancy, finds study – The Guardian

Posted: at 6:10 pm

The Covid pandemic has caused the biggest decrease in life expectancy in western Europe since the second world war, according to a study.

Data from most of the 29 countries spanning most of Europe, the US and Chile that were analysed by scientists recorded reductions in life expectancy last year and at a scale that wiped out years of progress.

The biggest declines in life expectancy were among males in the US, with a decline of 2.2 years relative to 2019 levels, followed by Lithuanian males (1.7 years).

Life expectancy losses exceeded those recorded around the time of the dissolution of the eastern bloc in central and eastern Europe, according to the research, led by scientists at Oxfords Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science.

Dr Jos Manuel Aburto, a co-lead author of the study, said: For western European countries such as Spain, England and Wales, Italy, Belgium, among others, the last time such large magnitudes of declines in life expectancy at birth were observed in a single year was during the second world war.

The findings are contained in a paper published in the International Journal of Epidemiology after the analysis of the 29 countries for which official death registrations for last year had been published. A total of 27 experienced reductions in life expectancy.

Last week, the Office for National Statistics estimated that life expectancy for men in the UK had fallen for the first time in 40 years because of the impact of Covid-19. A boy born between 2018 and 2020 is expected to live until he is 79, down from 79.2 for the period of 2015-17, according to the ONS.

Aburto said the scale of the life expectancy losses was stark across most of those countries studied, with 22 of them experiencing larger losses than half a year in 2020.

Females in eight countries and males in 11 countries experienced losses larger than a year. To contextualise, it took on average 5.6 years for these countries to achieve a one-year increase in life expectancy recently: progress wiped out over the course of 2020 by Covid-19.

Males experienced larger life expectancy declines than females across most of the 29 countries. Most life expectancy reductions across different countries were attributable to official Covid deaths, according to the paper.

Dr Ridhi Kashyap, another co-lead author, said researchers were aware of several issues linked to the counting of Covid deaths, such as inadequate testing or misclassification. However, she added that the fact that our results highlight such a large impact that is directly attributable to Covid-19 shows how devastating a shock it has been for many countries.

We urgently call for the publication and availability of more disaggregated data from a wider range of countries, including low- and middle-income countries, to better understand the impacts of the pandemic globally.

The ONS estimates from earlier this month showed variations between the different parts of the UK in terms of life expectancy, which refers to the average age to which a newborn would live if current death rates continued for their whole life.

Life expectancy for males has fallen in England, from 79.5 years in 2015-17 to 79.3 years in 2018-2, and Scotland from 77 to 76.8. But it has risen slightly in Northern Ireland from 78.4 to 78.7, while staying broadly unchanged in Wales at 78.3.

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