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AI Finds Life Shortening Hormone Disorder Using Only Hand Photos

A privacy-first AI can diagnose a life-shortening hormone disorder—just from a photo of your hand.

Researchers at Kobe University have developed an artificial intelligence system that can identify a rare endocrine disorder by examining photos of the back of a person’s hand and their clenched fist. By avoiding facial images, the approach was designed with privacy in mind. The team believes this tool could help doctors refer patients to specialists more efficiently and help narrow gaps in access to care.

Acromegaly and Delayed Diagnosis.

Spinal Cord Leptomeningeal Enhancement as a Marker of Extensive Spinal Cord Involvement in Children With MOGAD

This study characterizes the clinical, imaging, and biological features of myelitis associated with spinal cord leptomeningeal enhancement in children with MOGAD and seronegative myelitis.


Background and Objectives.

Purified diets enable experimental rigor through compositional control in animal research

Purified diets offer compositionally defined platforms that improve causal inference in nutrition studies. When aligned with the biological question, they enable targeted nutrient loss- and gain-of-function experiments, systematic lipid-source swaps, and the discovery of diet-microbiome-drug interactions. We recommend complementary validation in grain-based chow or human-relevant diets to maximize translational relevance.

Engineered immune therapy could help fight brain aging

Researchers at Stanford University engineered a modified version of the immune protein interleukin-10 (IL-10) that retains only its anti-inflammatory properties while eliminating its pro-inflammatory ones. When injected into aged mice, this modified protein stimulated the growth of new neurons and improved performance on memory and learning tasks, such as maze navigation and object recognition. The study, published in Immunity, suggests that age-related cognitive decline is linked to the accumulation of exhausted T-lymphocytes in the brain, chronic inflammation, and impaired microglial function — all of which reduce neurogenesis. The findings indicate that selectively modulating immune signaling could open new avenues for treating neurodegenerative diseases. The team plans to further investigate the protein’s mechanisms and explore ways to target specific cell types more precisely to minimize potential side effects.


A modified immune protein developed by Stanford researchers points to a novel strategy for combating age-related cognitive decline.

The Virtual Biotech: A Multi-Agent AI Framework for Therapeutic Discovery and Development

Drug discovery and development requires integrating diverse evidence across biological scales and data modalities. However, relevant data, tools, and expertise remain fragmented across teams and organizations, making integration difficult. To address these challenges, we introduce the Virtual Biotech, a coordinated team of AI agents that mirrors the structure of human therapeutic research organizations to support end-to-end computational discovery. The Virtual Biotech is led by a Chief Scientific Officer agent that receives scientific queries, delegates them to domain-specialized scientist agents, and integrates their outputs through data-driven reasoning. Scientist agents leverage complementary tools and knowledge sources spanning statistical genetics, functional genomics, pathways and interactions, chemoinformatics, disease biology, and clinical data. We showcase the Virtual Biotech across three translational applications. First, the agents autonomously annotated and analyzed outcomes from 55,984 clinical trials to identify genomic features of drug targets associated with trial success. More than 37,000 clinical-trialist agents curated structured trial outcomes and linked targets to multi-omic annotations, including cell-type-specific features derived by the agents from single-cell RNA-sequencing atlases. The agents discovered that drugs targeting cell-type-specific genes were 40% more likely to progress from Phase I to Phase II and 48% more likely to reach market (Phase IV), while exhibiting 32% lower adverse event rates. Second, the Virtual Biotech evaluated B7-H3 as a lung cancer target, integrating statistical genetics, single-cell, spatial, and clinicogenomic evidence to propose an antibody–drug conjugate strategy while identifying key liabilities and differentiation opportunities. Third, the platform analyzed a terminated ulcerative colitis trial targeting OSMR β to infer potential failure mechanisms and proposed biomarker-guided enrollment strategies to address precision-medicine gaps. Together, these results illustrate how the Virtual Biotech can enable more transparent, efficient, and comprehensive multi-scale therapeutic analyses, helping to accelerate early-stage drug discovery workflows while keeping human scientists in the loop.

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Steroid-Refractory Pembrolizumab-Induced Haemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) Successfully Treated With Anakinra: A Case Report

This stage IV lung cancer patient developed: persistent fever thrombocytopenia multiorgan dysfunction steroid-refractory course.

A high H-score led to the diagnosis: ICI-associated HLH. She improved rapidly with anakinra after failing steroids.

Takeaway: In immunotherapy patients, extreme hyperferritinaemia should trigger HLH evaluation early.

Would you have escalated to anakinra…or tried second-line steroids first?

Read more here.


Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are increasingly used in advanced malignancies but can cause rare, severe immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a life-threatening hyperinflammatory syndrome infrequently reported with ICIs and often challenging to diagnose. We report a case of a woman in her 60s with stage IV lung adenocarcinoma treated with pembrolizumab-based chemoimmunotherapy who developed recurrent, steroid-refractory immune-related hepatitis and pneumonitis. Twenty-four weeks after starting pembrolizumab, she presented with persistent fever, thrombocytopenia, extreme hyperferritinaemia (ferritin >33,500 µg/L), and progressive multiorgan dysfunction. Despite overlap with other irAEs and infection, a high H-score prompted evaluation for HLH, confirmed on bone marrow biopsy with haemophagocytosis.

Mapping Microvascular Flow via Radon Transform Ultrasound: Technical Advances and Pilot Application

Objective: This study aims to develop a contrast-free, high-sensitivity ultrasound method, denoted as Radon transform-based flow measurement (R-Flow), for in vivo mapping of microvascular flow vectors and for establishing R-Flow-derived vector-field metrics to noninvasively quantify microcirculatory patterns in liver cirrhosis. Impact Statement: R-Flow enables robust, contrast-free imaging of microvascular dynamics and demonstrates translational feasibility in the human liver. Its direction-aware indices offer pilot in vivo quantification of flow redistribution and remodeling, providing unique insights into hepatic flow dynamics. Introduction: Microvascular dysfunction is a hallmark of many diseases, yet noninvasive visualization and quantitative assessment of abnormal microcirculation remain limited.

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