And, a malaria theory overturned.
 

Health Rounds

Health Rounds

By Nancy Lapid, Health Science Editor

Hello Health Rounds readers! Today we highlight a study that found significant benefits of a newer hip implant over the more traditional type. We also report on a potentially important discovery on how malaria parasites infect cells, which could lead to future preventions, and a study that adds safety reassurance for getting flu and COVID shots at the same time.

Among our breaking news stories: FDA probes anesthesia-linked neurological complications in some patients of Venezuelan ancestry; US judge blocks DOJ from obtaining transgender care records from California hospital; Healthcare gives Democrats a potent midterms attack line; and Judge approves $46.75 million payout for 23andMe data breach victims.

Also: World must close $4 trillion annual funding gap to reach development goals, UN says; Australia's teen social media ban fails to clear first hurdle in age checks; and India's new transgender rules worry doctors, disrupt care.

Meanwhile: Trial for Bundibugyo Ebola treatment starts in DRC, WHO says; at least 3,700 excess deaths reported during heatwave in France, Belgium and Netherlands; and Europe may face ‘more deadly weeks' as new heatwave builds.

 

Industry Updates

  • UnitedHealth says most home-health diagnoses were supported in 2025.
  • Kailera shares tumble on high nausea rates despite weight-loss drug's success.
  • Vertex to buy Crinetics for $10 billion in rare-diseases push.
  • US FDA approves Vera's kidney disease drug.
  • EMA fast-tracks review of Revolutions' experimental pancreatic cancer pill.
  •  Obesity biotech Kalohexis confidentially files to go public in US.
  • Novartis to acquire UK-based Myricx Bio for up to $1.5 billion.
  • BioNTech has held talks with buyers over four German sites set to close, Handelsblatt says.
  • AdaptHealth investigates cybersecurity incident involving patient data.
  • Missouri jury sides with Mead Johnson in case over preterm baby formula.
 
 

Ebola outbreak in Congo still spreading, WHO says

REUTERS/Gradel Muyisa Mumbere/File Photo

The Ebola ‌outbreak in Congo has not yet stabilised and is still expanding as population movement fuels transmission, a World Health Organization official said on Tuesday.

 

Study Rounds

Improving hip surgery outcomes 

 

A modern type of implant dramatically cuts dislocation risks after certain hip replacement surgeries, according to new data.

Instead of the traditional single ball-and-socket implant, the so-called dual-mobility device has a small ball rotating within a larger ball, which then rotates inside a metal cup, or socket. Using two moving surfaces instead of one in effect creates a larger diameter ball and increases the distance the ball must travel to escape the socket.

Researchers in Europe randomly assigned 1,600 people aged 65 or over to receive either a standard implant or a dual-mobility implant. All participants had fractured a thigh bone at the point where it connects with the hip joint.

One year after surgery, dislocation rates were 1.3% with the dual-mobility cup versus 4.2% with traditional hip replacement.

After accounting for individual risk factors, the odds of dislocation were 70% lower with the dual cup, according to a report of the study in The Lancet.

The overall risk of surgical complications was also lower with the new cup, although there were no differences in rates of implant infections, deaths or in quality of life during the first year.

“It is extremely painful when a hip replacement dislocates. When it occurs, patients require sedation or further surgery to realign the joint,” study co-author Dr. Nils Hailer of Uppsala University Hospital in Sweden said in a statement.

A dislocated joint impairs quality of life, as the patient may feel they can no longer really trust the implant, and so their participation in daily activities and their confidence in mobilizing is reduced, resulting in social withdrawal, according to a commentary published with the study.

Dual-mobility implants are more expensive than standard implants, but the researchers said the reduction in complications could offset the higher upfront cost and they are  undertaking a full health economic analysis.

Manufacturers of the devices include Stryker, Smith+Nephew, and Johnson & Johnson's DePuy Synthes unit.

“Surgeons are already familiar with both implant types, meaning the change could be implemented immediately within existing practice,” study co-author Dr. Xavier Griffin of Queen Mary University of London and Barts Health NHS Trust said in a statement.

 

Read more about hip replacement on Reuters.com

  • Weight-loss drugs tied to benefit after hip replacement
 

Malaria infection theories overturned

A new discovery overturns a decades-old assumption about how malaria parasites get into human red blood cells, researchers say.

Malaria parasites are known to force their way into blood cells through a ring-shaped protein structure called the moving junction. But how the structure actually behaves remained unknown, because it survives for less than 60 seconds, dissipating before anyone can get a close look.

As reported in the journal Cell, researchers were able to stall the single-cell Plasmodium falciparum parasites when they had partly broken into red blood cells. They lifted the intact complex out of the cell, froze it, and examined it under powerful microscopes.

They found that rather than simply attaching itself and acting as a passive doorway, as had been thought, the moving junction punctures and reshapes the host cell's membrane, acting as a wedge to make it easier for the parasite to force its way through.

"We've known for decades that this structure is essential for the parasite to get into a cell, but not how it actually works," study leader Chi-Min Ho of Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York said in a statement. "Pulling it directly out of the parasite intact let us finally ask that question directly."

After analyzing the structure, the researchers were able to design an experimental protein that blocks the invasion, a potential proof of concept for a new kind of antimalarial drug.

"Once we could see the target in its real setting, designing something to block it became a tractable problem," Daphne Kaxiras, an MD-PhD student in Ho's lab who led the protein design, said in a statement. "That's the part we're most eager to build on."