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Home - Medicine - Today’s Diabetes Science Briefing | March 18th 2026, 1:00:12 pm

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Today’s Diabetes Science Briefing | March 18th 2026, 1:00:12 pm

Last updated: March 18, 2026 12:01 pm
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A new modeling framework reveals that the organ where a cancer spreads (like the liver or bone) strongly influences how well it responds to treatment and how long that response lasts, independent of the cancer type. This means doctors may need to consider the location of tumors, not just their genetic makeup, when predicting a patient’s outcome and choosing the best therapy.
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A large study of pediatric coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever) found that while management varied widely among doctors, simply observing children without antifungal treatment was successful 98.8% of the time, and recurrence after treatment was rare (2.1%). This suggests that for many children with this fungal infection, a “watch and wait” approach is safe and effective, avoiding unnecessary medication.
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In patients with Still disease, a high level of a specific immune protein (IL-18) measured just three months after starting treatment is a powerful predictor of a long-term, difficult-to-manage disease course. This finding gives doctors a simple blood test to identify early on which patients are likely to need more aggressive or different treatment to control their illness.
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A comprehensive framework has been created to guide UK hospitals on how to safely implement Endoscopic Sleeve Gastroplasty (ESG), a minimally invasive weight-loss procedure, within the National Health Service. This provides a clear, agreed-upon roadmap involving dietitians, psychologists, and surgeons, which is crucial for making this effective obesity treatment more widely and consistently available.
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Researchers have identified a new molecular pathway (SEMA3C/PLXND1) that drives the excessive scar tissue formation in keloids, a severe type of scar, by activating a well-known fibrosis signal (TGF-β1). This discovery opens the door to developing new, targeted drugs that could block this specific pathway to treat or prevent keloids, for which treatment options are currently limited.
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