Experimental cancer drug could streamline standard tuberculosis treatment and prevent post-TB lung disease

An experimental drug now in clinical trials as a cancer treatment could help boost the power of first-line tuberculosis (TB) treatments by helping infected cells die a gentler death, Johns Hopkins Medicine investigators report, based on mouse-model research of the lung-damaging disease. Findings from the study, published in Nature Communications, could lead to more effective and less onerous therapies that reduce lung damage in TB survivors. It could also prevent lung dysfunction long after treatment completion, which is increasingly recognized as post-TB lung disease that affects tens of millions of TB patients.

White Hulk Squares up to 5 Cops During DUI Stop THEN THIS HAPPENS!
- New Law in England Requires Cat Microchipping or Face £500 Fines - Bertha Stephens
- Regulating AI-generated Voices: The FCC's Stand Against Misleading Robocalls - Sean George
- Google’s Gemini 2.5 Flash introduces ‘thinking budgets’ that cut AI costs by 600% when turned down - Michael Nuñez
- Understanding the Rabbit R1: A Revolution in the World of AI - Sean George
- Iran wants guarantees Trump will not quit a new nuclear pact, Iranian official says - MeighTimbol
- Goody-2 is an AI-powered chatbot that is designed to push boundaries when it comes to safety and responsibility. - Sean George

Android Fanboy Tries the Most Hated iPhone!
- What To Know About Lichenification - Brandi Jones, MSN-Ed, RN-BC
- The Hidden Consequences of Melting Arctic Ice - Arya Chandran
- Suze Orman’s Straightforward Advice on Maximizing Social Security Benefits - Zoul
- Understanding Formaldehyde: A Carcinogen with a Dual Role in the Body - Arya Chandran
- Ryan Coogler Has Spoken To Gillian Anderson About ‘X Files’ Reboot: “Fingers Crossed There” - Glenn Garner
- Chrome’s new dynamic bottom bar gives websites a little more room to breathe - Ryan Whitwam