Word: trialing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Nichols' company finally began testing FGN-1 on humans. In a trial of 18 patients with FAP, 12 showed substantial improvement. One patient, who was developing about 100 polyps a year, had no polyps at all while on the drug. This led to another, larger double-blind study with one group taking a placebo, the other FGN-1. But midway it was discovered that the recruitment of patients had been mishandled and a year's worth of work was lost. Still, Nichols could see that in a core group of subjects the drug was working as he had hoped...
Jesse Gelsinger, 18, had good reasons not to sign up for experimental gene therapy. Though the Tucson, Ariz., teen was born with a rare genetic disorder that partly disabled his liver, his course of drugs and diet was working. The Phase I trial at the University of Pennsylvania, where doctors would pump a modified cold virus into his system to correct genetic flaws, promised nothing in the way of a cure...
...gigolo named Skank, whose promiscuous sexual nature seems to make its way around the tiny town more than once, heat up all the chilly proceedings. A pair of cute little blond kids with potty mouths like you've never heard, the star of the hockey team, who is on trial for shooting a guy from New York City and cameos by some very unexpected stars round out a surprisingly impressive package...
Just when we might think Marshall has passed her trial by fire, she has drawn the ire of a state anti-abortion group, the Massachusetts Citizens for Life. The group has stated that they oppose her confirmation, saying that her impartiality regarding abortion cases is questionable. Marshall was at one time the member of a board of trustees at a Massachusetts home for unwed mothers where abortions are performed...
...Democrats, not them, who?ve tied cement blocks to the bill, the goal is to position HMO reform as close as possible to the business interests that support them most fervently. That means limiting lawsuits and capping damage awards. Democrats tend to prick their ears to the trial lawyers, who see HMOs as the most lucrative enemy since Big Tobacco, and, most important, the angry patients on whose behalf the suits would be filed. Both sides have a point, even if they?re not above using "gamesmanship" to make it. But as it usually goes when Clinton and the House...