Showing 5681-5690 of 8972 results for "".
- National Academy of Dermatology Nurse Practitioners Inaugural Conference in Mayhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/20120224-national_academy_of_dermatology_nurse_practitioners__inaugural_conference_in_may/2459865/The inaugural conference of the National Academy of Dermatology Nurse Practitioners will be held May 2-5, 2012 in Clearwater Beach, FL at the Sheraton Sand Key Resort. Designed for all nurse practitioners regardless of experience or practice seting, the program covers both medical and aesthetic derm
- Global Derm Market Reaches $11.6 Billionhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/20120224-global_derm_market_reaches_116_billion/2459867/The global prescription dermatologic therapy market grew 6.2% from 2009 to 2001, to reach $11.6 billion. A new MarketWatch.com. report notes that the most dramatic gains were in the antiaging/photodamage, hair loss and hair removal, psoriasi
- Health Canada Approves BMS' Yervoy for Melanomahttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/20120208-health_canada_approves_bms_yervoy_for_melanoma/2459869/Health Canada approved Yervoy (ipilimumab 3mg/kg, Bristol-Myers Squibb) for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma in patients who have failed or do not tolerate other systemic therapy for advanced diseas
- Sclerotic cGVHD Patients Show Higher Risk for Outcome Reporting Mismatchhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/patient-reported-cgvhd-worsening-linked-to-mortality-in-sclerotic-disease/2485447/A new longitudinal cohort study published in JAMA Dermatology showed differences in frequency and importance of discordance between clinician-reported and patient-reported outcomes in cutaneous chronic graft-vs-host disease (cG
- MEK Inhibition Shows Promise in Aggressive EB-Linked Skin Cancershttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/mek-inhibition-shows-promise-in-aggressive-eb-linked-skin-cancers/2485197/A transcriptome-driven drug repurposing strategy has identified selumetinib as a potential therapeutic candidate for aggressive squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) arising in recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB). Resea
- Most Insurers Cover Botulinum Toxin for Axillary Hyperhidrosis: Analysishttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/most-insurers-cover-botulinum-toxin-for-axillary-hyperhidrosis-analysis/2484933/A new cross-sectional study published in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology finds that while botulinum toxin is broadly covered by private insurers for the treatment of primary axillary hyperhidrosis, access barriers due to
- Smoking, PROs, and Attrition May Skew HS Study Outcomes: Commentaryhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/smoking-pros-and-attrition-may-skew-hs-study-outcomes/2484927/A letter to the editor published in JAAD provided commentary and presented additional opportunities for further research on adalimumab and the effects of smoking on patient response while treating hidradenitis suppurativa (HS).
- AI Model Accurately Scores Psoriasis Severity from Clinical Imageshttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/ai-model-accurately-scores-psoriasis-severity-from-clinical-images/2484588/A new study demonstrates the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to improve the consistency and objectivity of psoriasis severity assessments based on 2D clinical images. Researchers for the study used the YOLOv8 deep lear
- NIH Grants for Vitiligo Research Rise Over Time, Driven by Medical Schools and NIAMShttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/nih-grants-for-vitiligo-research-rise-over-time-driven-by-medical-schools-and-niams/2484513/Funding trends National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding trends shows steady, long-term support for vitiligo research from 1985 through 2024, according to a new analysis. Using the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting To
- Hydrocolloid Dressings After Mohs Surgery Yield No Aesthetic Advantage: Studyhttps://practicaldermatology.com/news/hydrocolloid-dressings-after-mohs-surgery-yield-no-aesthetic-advantage-study/2484049/Hydrocolloid dressings (HCDs) and daily petroleum ointment following excisional dermatologic surgery did not perform differently in terms of scar appearance or surgical complications, according to a new trial. The randomized,