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Editorial Discusses Removal Of Needle Exchange Funding Ban
A Wilmington News Journal editorial discussed the potential lifting of the ban on using federal funding for needle exchange programs. The editorial notes recent Congressional action and the restrictions in a House bill that prohibit needle exchanges to operate "within a 1,000 feet of day care centers, schools, parks, playgrounds, pools and youth centers." According to the News Journal, "This rule wipes out much of the flexibility many cities need in their fight to prevent the spread of HIV among intravenous drug users. The nation"s capital, where the rates of HIV and AIDS cases are considered epidemic, would be hit the hardest because no part of the District of Columbia would be eligible for the funding according to AIDS Action." The editorial adds, "Vans patrolling near vulnerable populations - specifically young, impressionable children - are an issue that must be addressed. But well-intentioned limits should not be allowed to hold up the rest of the program," according to the News Journal (8/1).
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HUD To Distribute $310M In Housing Assistance Grants For People Living With HIV/AIDS
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) on Wednesday announced that it will provide several housing assistance grants to help low-income families living with HIV/AIDS, the Boston Globe reports (7/23). "A record $310 million will assist 58,000 U.S. households annually, officials said," KITV.com reports. The grants were distributed based on the number of AIDS cases reported nationwide. The Gregory House Programs of Honolulu, a nonprofit that provides housing assistance, substance use and other services, will receive $1.3 million (KITV.com, 7/22). The Frannie Peabody Center in Portland, Maine, will receive $1.3 million; the city of Portland will receive $1.4; New Hampshire will receive over $716,000; and the Burlington Housing Authority in Vermont will receive over $392,000, the Globe reports (7/23).
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New Alternatives For Bone Imaging Could Be On The Horizon
On June 4, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that it is considering a pathway for coverage of Sodium Fluoride (NaF-18) for PET bone imaging as an alternative to Technetium-99m imaging. Currently, Tc-99m bone imaging is one of the more commonly performed procedures using this radioisotope. Technetium-99m is in scant supply because of ongoing production outages, resulting in serious delays in patient imaging studies for many medical problems, including oncologic, cardiac and neurologic conditions.
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Cancer Risk May Be Greater With Insulin Analogue Glargine

The risk of cancer possibly increases if patients with diabetes use the long-acting insulin analogue glargine instead of human insulin. The Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG), in collaboration with the "Wissenschaftliches Institut der AOK" (WIdO), the research institute of the German Local Health Care Fund, analysed the data of almost 130,000 patients with diabetes in Germany who had been treated with either human insulin or the insulin analogues lispro (trade name: Humalog), aspart (Novorapid) or glargine (Lantus) between January 2001 and June 2005. The analysis has now been published together with further studies in the scientific journal Diabetologia, the official organ of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD). The disturbing result is that malignancies were found more frequently in patients treated with glargine than in those prescribed a comparable dose of human insulin. "Our analysis does not provide absolute proof that glargine promotes cancer," says Peter T. Sawicki, IQWiG"s Director and co-author of the study. "Our study does, however, arouse an urgent suspicion which should have consequences for the treatment of patients." No difference was found between the short-acting insulin analogues, lispro and aspart, and human insulin. Insulin analogues are synthetic molecules that do not occur naturally, whereas human insulin matches the insulin that the human body manufactures itself. Is glargine the cause? IQWiG emphasises that the link found between prescribing glargine and an increased cancer risk is a statistical association. Thus, it is possible that other factors as yet unknown are the cause of the increased risk, rather than glargine. However, it is disturbing that of three further studies published in the same edition of Diabetologia, two also describe an increase in cancer risk associated with glargine. Glargine has been approved in Germany since 2000. Since then, several laboratory trials have been published which indicate that, under certain conditions, insulin analogues can stimulate the growth of cancer cell lines more strongly than human insulin. "These indications are discussed in the scientific world but have never been dispelled by proper studies," says Sawicki. According to IQWiG, the overall indications of a risk from glargine have now intensified to such an extent that the burden of proof has been reversed for precautionary reasons: as long as reliable studies do not prove the safety of glargine compared to human insulin, the drug should only be used if there are particularly important reasons for doing so. Risk of disease increases with dose The researchers also found that the risk of cancer rose further with increasing glargine dose when compared to human insulin. This dose-dependent relationship with glargine also confirms the suspicion that the drug plays a causal role. The increase in cancer risk was relatively small and was only detected when other, important factors such as age, sex and daily insulin dose were taken into consideration. The patients were on average between 65 and 70 years of age, thus in principle were already exposed to a certain degree of cancer risk. Out of 1000 patients treated with human insulin, about 41 developed malignancies within an average of 20 months. If "similar" patients were to be treated with glargine, the increases in cancer diagnoses would be as follows: in patients prescribed on average 10 glargine units daily, about 4 more patients per 1000 patients would develop cancer. In patients prescribed 50 glargine units daily, about 13 more patients per 1000 patients would develop cancer. However, according to the German Local Health Care Fund data, most patients used glargine in relatively low doses. Of 100 patients using glargine, about 50 patients used less then 20 units daily, and only 5 of 100 patients used more than 50 units daily. Don"t change treatment hastily However, the latest investigation is no reason for patients with diabetes to change their treatment hastily, especially if the glargine dose used is low. Diabetes is a complex disease and many aspects need to be considered in its treatment. "However, if a patient can be treated equally well with human insulin as with glargine, then, after consultation with his or her doctor, the patient should consider changing to human insulin," states Sawicki. "If at all possible, patients with an increased risk of cancer should use human insulin instead of glargine." The researchers have no evidence that glargine or other insulin agents transform normal cells to cancer cells. However, it may be possible that glargine stimulates the growth of existing cancer cells more strongly than other types of insulin. In their study, IQWiG and WIdO had access to pseudonymous data on disease and invoices for 17.9 million insurants of the AOK, of which over 320,000 patients had diabetes (particularly type 2). The data were evaluated of approximately 130,000 patients with diabetes who had used either human insulin or an insulin analogue exclusively, and who had not developed malignancies up to 2001. Dr. Anna-Sabine Ernst Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care


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