Latest News from: Columbia University Irving Medical Center

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26-Aug-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center Awarded $18M Grant
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Outstanding basic research, a growing focus on translating discoveries into treatments, and a dedication to patient care have earned the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC) of Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital an $18 million, five-year Cancer Center Support Grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

19-Aug-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Children with Autism Have Extra Synapses in Brain
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Children and adolescents with autism have a surplus of synapses in the brain, and this excess is due to a slowdown in a normal brain “pruning” process during development, according to a study by neuroscientists at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC). Because synapses are the points where neurons connect and communicate with each other, the excessive synapses may have profound effects on how the brain functions. The study was published in the August 21 online issue of the journal Neuron.

19-Aug-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Severing Nerves May Shrink Stomach Cancers
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Research from Columbia University Medical Center shows that nerves may play a critical role in stomach cancer growth and that blocking nerve signals using surgery or Botox® (onabotulinumtoxinA) could be an effective treatment for the disease.

14-Aug-2014 12:25 PM EDT
FDA-Approved Drug Restores Hair in Patients with Alopecia Areata
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center have identified the immune cells responsible for destroying hair follicles in people with alopecia areata, a common autoimmune disease that causes hair loss, and have tested an FDA-approved drug that eliminated these immune cells and restored hair growth in a small number of patients. The results appear in today’s online issue of Nature Medicine.

Released: 17-Jul-2014 7:00 AM EDT
Study Shows How Effects of Starvation Can Be Passed to Future Generations
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A new study, involving roundworms, shows that starvation induces specific changes in so-called small RNAs and that these changes are inherited through at least three consecutive generations, apparently without any DNA involvement.

3-Jul-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Researchers and Collaborators Receive $12.6 Million NIH Grant to Study Genetics of Alzheimer’s Disease
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers from Columbia University are part of a five-university collaboration receiving a $12.6 million, four-year grant from the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), to identify rare genetic variants that may either protect against, or contribute to Alzheimer’s disease risk.

26-Jun-2014 12:00 PM EDT
It May Take Guts to Cure Diabetes
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

By switching off a single gene, scientists at Columbia University’s Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center have converted human gastrointestinal cells into insulin-producing cells, demonstrating in principle that a drug could retrain cells inside a person’s GI tract to produce insulin. The new research was reported today in the online issue of the journal Nature Communications.

Released: 19-Jun-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Drug Shows Promise for the First Time Against Metastatic Melanoma of the Eye
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

For the first time, a therapy has been found that can delay progression of metastatic uveal melanoma, a rare and deadly form of melanoma of the eye.

Released: 3-Jun-2014 7:00 AM EDT
Neurobiologist Thomas Jessell to Receive $500,000 Gruber Neuroscience Prize for Groundbreaking Work on the Neural Networks of the Spinal Cord
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Thomas Jessell, PhD, the Claire Tow Professor of Motor Neuron Disorders in the Departments of Neuroscience and of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at Columbia University, is the recipient of the 2014 Neuroscience Prize of The Gruber Foundation. Jessell is being honored with this prestigious international award for his seminal work on the development and wiring of spinal cord neurons involved in the control of movement.

Released: 28-May-2014 12:00 PM EDT
Uncovering Clues to the Genetic Cause of Schizophrenia
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

The overall number and nature of mutations—rather than the presence of any single mutation—influences an individual’s risk of developing schizophrenia, as well as its severity, according to a discovery by Columbia University Medical Center researchers. The findings could have important implications for the early detection and treatment of schizophrenia.

Released: 22-May-2014 3:15 PM EDT
Study Shows How Common Obesity Gene Contributes to Weight Gain
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have discovered how a gene commonly linked to obesity—FTO—contributes to weight gain. The study shows that variations in FTO indirectly affect the function of the primary cilium, a little-understood hair-like appendage on brain and other cells. Specific abnormalities of cilium molecules, in turn, increase body weight, in some instances, by affecting the function of receptors for leptin, a hormone that suppresses appetite. The findings, made in mice, suggest that it might be possible to modify obesity through interventions that alter the function of the cilium, according to scientists at Columbia University Medical Center.

Released: 12-May-2014 12:00 PM EDT
Two Genes Together Drive Aggressive Prostate Cancer
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Two genes work together to drive the most lethal forms of prostate cancer, according to new research from the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia University Medical Center. These findings could lead to a diagnostic test for identifying those tumors likely to become aggressive and to the development of novel combination therapy for the disease.

5-May-2014 4:00 PM EDT
Brain Noise Found to Nurture Synapses
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A study has shown that a long-overlooked form of neuron-to-neuron communication called miniature neurotransmission plays an essential role in the development of synapses, the regions where nerve impulses are transmitted and received. The findings, made in fruit flies, raise the possibility that abnormalities in miniature neurotransmission may contribute to neurodevelopmental diseases. The findings, by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC), were published today in the online edition of the journal Neuron.

Released: 1-May-2014 1:00 PM EDT
Studies Identify Spinal Cord Neurons that Control Skilled Limb Movement
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have identified two types of neurons that enable the spinal cord to control skilled forelimb movement. The first is a group of excitatory interneurons that are needed to make accurate and precise movements; the second is a group of inhibitory interneurons necessary for achieving smooth movement of the limbs. The findings are important steps toward understanding normal human motor function and potentially treating movement disorders that arise from injury or disease.

15-Apr-2014 11:00 AM EDT
“Chaperone” Compounds Offer New Approach to Alzheimer's Treatment
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A team of researchers from Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC), Weill Cornell Medical College, and Brandeis University has devised a wholly new approach to the treatment of Alzheimer's disease involving the so-called retromer protein complex. Retromer plays a vital role in neurons, steering amyloid precursor protein (APP) away from a region of the cell where APP is cleaved, creating the potentially toxic byproduct amyloid-beta, which is thought to contribute to the development of Alzheimer's.

Released: 17-Apr-2014 2:25 PM EDT
Is Parkinson’s an Autoimmune Disease?
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

The cause of neuronal death in Parkinson’s disease is still unknown, but a new study proposes that neurons may be mistaken for foreign invaders and killed by the person’s own immune system, similar to the way autoimmune diseases like type I diabetes, celiac disease, and multiple sclerosis attack the body’s cells.

4-Apr-2014 3:00 PM EDT
Columbia Scientists Identify Key Cells in Touch Sensation
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

In a study published in the April 6 online edition of the journal Nature, a team of Columbia University Medical Center researchers led by Ellen Lumpkin, PhD, associate professor of somatosensory biology, solve an age-old mystery of touch: how cells just beneath the skin surface enable us to feel fine details and textures.

Released: 21-Mar-2014 2:10 PM EDT
Gene Expression Signature Reveals New Way to Classify Gum Disease
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have devised a new system for classifying periodontal disease based on the genetic signature of affected tissue, rather than on clinical signs and symptoms. The new classification system, the first of its kind, may allow for earlier detection and more individualized treatment of severe periodontitis, before loss of teeth and supportive bone occurs. The findings were published recently in the online edition of the Journal of Dental Research.

Released: 18-Mar-2014 4:15 PM EDT
Study Finds No Evidence That Vitamin D Supplements Reduce Depression
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Vitamin D deficiency has been implicated in numerous health conditions in recent years, including depressed mood and major depressive disorder. Recent observational studies provide some support for an association of vitamin D levels with depression, but the data do not indicate whether vitamin D deficiency causes depression or vice versa. These studies also do not examine whether vitamin D supplementation improves depression.

Released: 7-Mar-2014 3:10 PM EST
Ever-So-Slight Delay Improves Decision-Making Accuracy
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have found that decision-making accuracy can be improved by postponing the onset of a decision by a mere fraction of a second. The results could further our understanding of neuropsychiatric conditions characterized by abnormalities in cognitive function and lead to new training strategies to improve decision-making in high-stake environments. The study was published in the March 5 online issue of the journal PLoS One.

   
20-Feb-2014 12:00 PM EST
Researchers Pinpoint Brain Region Essential for Social Memory
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have determined that a small region of the hippocampus known as CA2 is essential for social memory, the ability of an animal to recognize another of the same species. A better grasp of the function of CA2 could prove useful in understanding and treating disorders characterized by altered social behaviors, such as autism, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. The findings, made in mice, were published on February 23, 2014, in the online edition of Nature.

Released: 12-Feb-2014 4:00 PM EST
Prenatal Vitamin A Deficiency Tied to Postnatal Asthma
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have found the first direct evidence of a link between prenatal vitamin A deficiency and postnatal airway hyperresponsiveness, a hallmark of asthma. The study, conducted in mice, shows that short-term deficit of this essential vitamin while the lung is forming can cause profound changes in the smooth muscle that surrounds the airways, causing the adult lungs to respond to environmental or pharmacological stimuli with excessive narrowing of airways. The findings were published online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Released: 6-Feb-2014 2:00 PM EST
Toxin from Brain Cells Triggers Neuron Loss in Human ALS Model
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

In most cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a toxin released by cells that normally nurture neurons in the brain and spinal cord can trigger loss of the nerve cells affected in the disease, Columbia researchers reported today in the online edition of the journal Neuron.

   
Released: 23-Jan-2014 1:00 PM EST
Moderate Doses of Radiation Therapy to Unaffected Breast May Prevent Second Breast Cancers
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Survivors of breast cancer have a one in six chance of developing breast cancer in the other breast. But a study conducted in mice suggests that survivors can dramatically reduce that risk through treatment with moderate doses of radiation to the unaffected breast at the same time that they receive radiation therapy to their affected breast. The treatment, if it works as well in humans as in mice, could prevent tens of thousands of second breast cancers.

Released: 22-Jan-2014 5:00 PM EST
Study Identifies Gene Tied to Motor Neuron Loss in ALS
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Columbia University Medical Center researchers have identified a gene, called matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), that appears to play a major role in motor neuron degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. The findings, made in mice, explain why most but not all motor neurons are affected by the disease and identify a potential therapeutic target for this still-incurable neurodegenerative disease. The study was published today in the online edition of the journal Neuron.

Released: 21-Jan-2014 10:20 AM EST
Common Blood Cancer May Be Initiated by Single Mutation in Bone Cells
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

AML is a blood cancer, but for many patients the cancer may originate from an unusual source: a mutation in their bone cells. In a study published today in the online edition of Nature, researchers at Columbia University Medical Center found that a mutation in the bone cells called osteoblasts, which build new bone, causes AML in mice. The mutation was found in nearly 40 percent of patients with AML or myelodysplastic syndrome, a precursor condition, who were examined as part of the study.

Released: 16-Jan-2014 9:05 AM EST
Hearing Loss Expert Joins NY-Presbyterian/Columbia to Lead Otolaryngology
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

One of the nation’s leading experts in hearing loss, Lawrence Lustig, MD, has been appointed chair of the Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and otolaryngologist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, effective July 1, 2014. Dr. Lustig is currently professor of otolaryngology/head and neck surgery at the University of California, San Francisco.

Released: 6-Jan-2014 10:00 AM EST
New Chief of Hematology/Oncology Named at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center has named leading physician-scientist Dr. Gary Schwartz chief of the Division of Hematology/Oncology in the Department of Medicine and associate director for research of its Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center. He assumed his new role on January 1, 2014.

6-Jan-2014 8:00 AM EST
Brief Fever Common in Kids Given Influenza, Pneumococcal Vaccines Together
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Giving young children the influenza and pneumococcal vaccines together appears to increase their risk of fever, according to a study led by researchers from Columbia University Medical Center and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The study looked at children 6–23 months old, and was published online on Jan. 6, 2014, in JAMA Pediatrics.

Released: 3-Jan-2014 11:00 AM EST
Columbia University College of Dental Medicine Honored with Achievement Award
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

The ADEAGies Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the American Dental Education Association, is recognizing Columbia University’s College of Dental Medicine for its Community DentCare program, which provides low- or no-cost dental care to children, adults, and seniors in Northern Manhattan and the Bronx.

17-Dec-2013 6:00 PM EST
Study Shows Where Alzheimer's Starts and How It Spreads
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Using high-resolution fMRI imaging in patients with Alzheimer's disease and in mouse models of the disease, researchers have clarified three fundamental issues about Alzheimer's: where it starts, why it starts there, and how it spreads. In addition to advancing understanding of Alzheimer's, the findings could improve early detection of the disease, when drugs may be most effective. The study was published today in the online edition of the journal Nature Neuroscience.

Released: 5-Dec-2013 4:40 PM EST
Columbia's 2013 Horwitz Prize Awarded for Discoveries That Could Lead to New Alzheimer’s Treatments
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

For discoveries about how the brain calculates and remembers where it is—which could be part of the foundation of memory—Columbia University will award the 2013 Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize to Edvard I. Moser, PhD, and May-Britt Moser, PhD, of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Norway, and John Michael O’Keefe, PhD, of University College London in the UK. Their work, conducted in animal models, may lead to new treatments for Alzheimer’s and other neurological disorders that affect the brain's spatial capabilities.

27-Nov-2013 3:00 PM EST
Human Stem Cells Converted to Functional Lung Cells
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

For the first time, scientists have succeeded in transforming human stem cells into functional lung and airway cells. The advance, reported by Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) researchers, has significant potential for modeling lung disease, screening drugs, studying human lung development, and, ultimately, generating lung tissue for transplantation. The study was published today in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Released: 27-Nov-2013 4:00 PM EST
Study Finds Vulnerability in Malaria Parasite
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

An international team of scientists, including researchers at Columbia University Medical Center, has identified a key metabolic enzyme that common malaria parasites require for survival at each stage of infection in humans. The findings raise the possibility of a new approach to combating malaria, one of the world’s deadliest diseases. The study was published today in the online edition of the journal Nature.

19-Nov-2013 5:00 PM EST
New Link Between Obesity and Diabetes Found
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A single overactive enzyme worsens the two core defects of diabetes—impaired insulin sensitivity and overproduction of glucose—suggesting that a drug targeting the enzyme could help correct both at once, according to mouse studies done by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center. The findings were published today in the online edition of Cell Metabolism.

Released: 18-Nov-2013 2:00 PM EST
Columbia Honors Philipp Scherer for Helping to Define Body Fat as Major Endocrine Organ
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Philipp E. Scherer, PhD honored with Columbia’s top award for excellence in diabetes research for helping create a new understanding of fat and its role in diabetes/ metabolic diseases. He helped transform the scientific concept of fat as an inert storage depot to one of it as an endocrine organ that exerts control over the brain, muscles, and other organs.

12-Nov-2013 12:00 PM EST
Human Stem Cells Used to Elucidate Mechanisms of Beta-Cell Failure in Diabetes
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Scientists from the New York Stem Cell Foundation (NYSCF) Research Institute and Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) have used stem cells created from the skin of patients with a rare form of diabetes—Wolfram syndrome—to elucidate an important biochemical pathway for beta-cell failure in diabetes. The findings were published in Diabetes.

Released: 7-Nov-2013 2:00 PM EST
New Method Predicts Time from Alzheimer’s Onset to Nursing Home, Death
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A Columbia-led research team has clinically validated a new method for predicting time to nursing home residence or death for patients with Alzheimer’s. The method uses data from a single patient visit, and is based on a complex model of Alzheimer’s progression developed by consecutively following two sets of Alzheimer’s patients for 10 years each.

18-Oct-2013 1:30 PM EDT
Hair Regeneration Method Is First to Induce New Human Hair Growth
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) have devised a hair restoration method that can generate new human hair growth, rather than simply redistribute hair from one part of the scalp to another. The approach could significantly expand the use of hair transplantation to women with hair loss, who tend to have insufficient donor hair, as well as to men in early stages of baldness. The study was published today in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

10-Oct-2013 1:00 PM EDT
Narrow-Spectrum UV Light May Reduce Surgical Infections
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Despite major efforts to keep operating rooms sterile, surgical wound infections remain a serious and stubborn problem, killing up to 8,200 patients a year in the U.S. Columbia University Medical Center research published in PLOS ONE suggests that narrow-spectrum UV light could dramatically reduce such infections without damaging human tissue.

23-Sep-2013 3:00 PM EDT
Bone Hormone Influences Brain Development and Cognition
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have found that the skeleton, acting through the bone-derived hormone osteocalcin, exerts a powerful influence on prenatal brain development and cognitive functions such as learning, memory, anxiety, and depression in adult mice. Findings from the mouse study could lead to new approaches to the prevention and treatment of neurologic disorders. The study was published today in the online edition of Cell.

Released: 12-Sep-2013 4:00 PM EDT
Test Could Identify Which Prostate Cancers Require Treatment
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A new genetic test may help determine which men with early prostate cancer can avoid surgery or other invasive treatment.

Released: 12-Sep-2013 2:00 PM EDT
Columbia Creates Fast-Track MD for PhD Scientists
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons (P&S) has launched a three-year Doctor of Medicine (MD) program for PhD-trained biological scientists. The accelerated curriculum prepares graduates for physician-scientist careers that combine their knowledge of fundamental biomedical science with an understanding of how diseases and their treatments affect humans.

Released: 28-Aug-2013 5:00 PM EDT
A Major Cause of Age-Related Memory Loss Identified
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A team of Columbia University Medical Center researchers, led by Nobel laureate Eric R. Kandel, MD, has found that deficiency of a protein called RbAp48 in the hippocampus is a significant contributor to age-related memory loss and that this form of memory loss is reversible. The findings were published today in the online edition of Science Translational Medicine.

Released: 21-Aug-2013 4:55 PM EDT
Trial Aims to Advance Prenatal Diagnosis of Genetic Defects
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

High-risk pregnant women are being recruited for a clinical trial that aims to give parents detailed information about genetic abnormalities found with the latest prenatal genetic testing, known as microarray.

Released: 7-Aug-2013 2:00 PM EDT
DNA Nanorobots Find and Tag Cellular Targets
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have created a fleet of molecular “robots” that can home in on specific human cells and mark them for drug therapy or destruction. The nanorobots—a collection of DNA molecules, some attached to antibodies —were designed to seek a specific set of human blood cells and attach a fluorescent tag to the cell surfaces. Details of the system were published July 28, 2013, in the online edition of Nature Nanotechnology.

30-Jul-2013 12:00 PM EDT
Celiac Disease Patients with Ongoing Intestine Damage at Lymphoma Risk
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Celiac disease patients with ongoing intestine damage have a greater than 2-fold increased risk of lymphoma vs. celiac patients whose intestines healed. Findings will be published in the Aug. 6 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine.

2-Aug-2013 4:00 PM EDT
Study Reveals Genes that Drive Brain Cancer
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

A team of researchers at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia University Medical Center researchers has identified 18 new genes responsible for driving glioblastoma multiforme, the most common—and most aggressive—form of brain cancer in adults. The study was published August 5, 2013, in Nature Genetics.

24-Jul-2013 3:00 PM EDT
New Genetic Cause of Pulmonary Hypertension Identified
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Scientists have identified new genetic mutations that can cause pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a rare fatal disease characterized by high blood pressure in the lungs. The mutations, found in the gene KCNK3, appear to affect potassium channels in the pulmonary artery, a mechanism not previously linked to the condition. Cell culture studies showed that the mutations’ effects could be reversed with a drug compound known as a phospholipase inhibitor. The study was published today in the online edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

23-Jul-2013 1:15 PM EDT
Key Molecular Pathways Leading to Alzheimer's Identified
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Key molecular pathways that lead to late-onset Alzheimer's disease have been identified by neuroscientists at Columbia University Medical Center. Published in Nature, findings present a new approach to Alzheimer’s research and highlight several new potential drug targets.



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