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Health & Science

The Week UK

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April 01, 2017

What the scientists are saying...

Health & Science

A drug to “silence” cholesterol

A new “gene-silencing” drug has been found to reduce cholesterol levels by more than 50% in a clinical trial. Based on a technique known as RNA interference, the drug effectively “switches off” the gene responsible for elevating cholesterol levels. Delivered as an injection, the treatment, inclisiran, could be given twice yearly, with or without statins, depending on the patient’s need, to reduce their risk of heart attack or stroke. For the phase 2 trial, at Imperial College London, researchers gave 497 patients with high cholesterol either inclisiran, at varying doses, or a placebo. Most of the patients were already taking statins. A month after receiving a single treatment of inclisiran, patients’ levels of the harmful low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol were down by up to 51%. After six months, they were down by up to 42%. By contrast, patients in the control group were showing slightly elevated cholesterol levels. The results were even better for those who had two doses over three months: their LDL levels fell by as much as 53% after six months. Along with its effectiveness, the minimal dosing required sets the treatment apart: rather than having to take a pill daily, patients could visit their doctor twice a year for an injection. However, much more research is needed before it can come on the market.

Noses adapt to their climate

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The Week UK

The Week UK

Keeping The Press Under Control

Press freedom is under threat – at least according to recent newspaper reports. What are they so worried about?

time to read

4 mins

January 21 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

The Society Photographer Who Married A Princess

The Earl of Snowdon 1930-2017.

time to read

5 mins

January 21 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Exhibition Of The Week War In The Sunshine, The British In Italy 1917-18

For most of us, the story of the First World War is defined by the “mud, gas and trenches” of the Western Front, said Waldemar Januszczak in The Sunday Times.

time to read

2 mins

January 28 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

How Humanity Got Hooked on Sugar

It produces a burst of energy and a feeling of profound pleasure, followed by a life-long craving for more. It is cheap, widelyavailable – and children love it. Gary Taubes reports on how sugar became the world’s most popular drug

time to read

9 mins

February 04 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Exhibition Of The Week The American Dream

Printmaking has long been seen as the “poor relation of art history”, said Alastair Sooke in The Daily Telegraph.

time to read

2 mins

March 18 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Khalid Masood: The Making Of A Killer

Last Tuesday, Khalid Masood checked into the £59-a-night Preston Park Hotel in Brighton.

time to read

3 mins

April 01, 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Europe's Faustian Bargain

A year ago, the EU and Turkey made a controversial deal to stem the flow of refugees into Europe. How has it panned out?

time to read

4 mins

April 01, 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Carswell's Defection: Has UKIP Had It?

“Douglas Carswell was once the golden boy of UKIP,” said Tim Stanley in The Sunday Telegraph: “its first elected MP, its brightest intellect, its shot at respectability.”

time to read

2 mins

April 01, 2017

The Week UK

The North Korea problem

Donald Trump warned this week that he was ready to tackle the nuclear threat from North Korea with or without help from China.

time to read

1 mins

April 8, 2017

The Week UK

The Week UK

Europe's Last Colony

Spain has long been determined to regain sovereignty over “the Rock” at its southern tip, but Gibraltar remains stubbornly British.

time to read

4 mins

April 15 2017

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