And, avoiding early births due to high blood pressure.

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Health Rounds

Health Rounds

By Nancy Lapid, Health Science Editor

Hello Health Rounds readers! Today we feature a study of patients with a persistent and dangerous common heart rhythm condition that could change current practice. We also report on early data that poses a possible solution to a devastating pregnancy complication, and a potential breakthrough treatment for liver transplant patients. 

In breaking news: US DEA medical marijuana registration portal to launch Wednesday; US FDA to monitor clinical trial data in pilot program aimed at speeding approvals; judge blocks North Dakota discounted medications law; and Britain's lifetime smoking ban set to become law.

Also: MAHA rallies against pesticides; EU prosecutors investigate suspected COVID procurement fraud in Romania; Ghana rejects proposed US health aid deal; children at 'breaking point' in Darfur; and Polish nine-day charity stream breaks records to support kids with cancer.

 

Industry Updates

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Trump administration indicts former NIH official over COVID records

REUTERS/Gary Cameron

The Trump administration has indicted David ‌Morens, a former senior official at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases during the pandemic,  with conspiring to evade records requests received by the agency.

 

Study Rounds

Heart procedure superior to drugs for common arrhythmia

 

A minimally invasive procedure that “rewires” the heart may be a better option than medication for patients with unremitting cases of the heart rhythm disorder atrial fibrillation, or AFib, according to results of a new clinical trial.

Atrial fibrillation raises the risk of stroke by five times and also increases risk of heart failure and early death.

Although minimally invasive procedures are increasingly being employed in patients with paroxysmal, or intermittent, AFib, guidelines still recommend patients with persistent AFib be treated with medications first.

In the study, 310 patients with previously untreated persistent AFib received either traditional medications or underwent pulsed-field catheter ablation with Boston Scientific's Farapulse system.

Under that process, physicians guide thin electrical leads through blood vessels into the heart to deliver short bursts of electrical energy to precisely target and eliminate the heart tissue responsible for triggering and sustaining the abnormal electrical signals.

“You can think of it as resetting the heart's electrical system,” study leader Dr. Jason Andrade of the University of British Columbia said in a statement.

One year later, 56% of patients who underwent ablation were free of abnormal heart rhythms, compared with 30% of those who had started on antiarrhythmic drug therapy, researchers reported at the Heart Rhythm 2026 meeting and in The New England Journal of Medicine.   

The overall risk of serious adverse events was similar in the two groups, they found.

“Traditionally, we’ve taken a stepwise approach, starting with medications and moving to procedures later,” Andrade said. “What this trial shows is that, even in patients with more advanced AFib, earlier intervention with ablation can provide substantial benefits and better control of the disease.”

 

Read more about pulsed-field ablation on Reuters.com

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Blood filtering may control dangerous pregnancy complication

A blood-filtering treatment can safely prolong pregnancy in women who might otherwise need to be induced early because of dangerously high blood pressure, a pilot study suggests.

The treatment could help to slow the progression of preeclampsia during pregnancy and reduce the risk of preterm delivery, researchers said, while noting that larger studies are needed to confirm their findings.

There is currently no treatment for preeclampsia other than delivering the baby.

A placental protein called sFlt-1 is thought to play an important role in development of preeclampsia, with levels increasing as the mother's high blood pressure continues to worsen, the researchers explained in