Sato Shun won the men’s Cup of China for the second straight year on Saturday (25 October) in Chongqing, People’s Republic of China.
The Japanese skater held on to his short-program lead to finish fairly comfortably ahead of Italy’s Daniel…

Sato Shun won the men’s Cup of China for the second straight year on Saturday (25 October) in Chongqing, People’s Republic of China.
The Japanese skater held on to his short-program lead to finish fairly comfortably ahead of Italy’s Daniel…

Sato Shun won the men’s Cup of China for the second straight year on Saturday (25 October) in Chongqing, People’s Republic of China.
The Japanese skater held on to his short-program lead to finish fairly comfortably ahead of Italy’s Daniel…

Elinzanetant (Lynkuet; Bayer) just became the
“It showed very clearly that elinzanetant was safe in this subset of women from the US for as long as a year,” he told AJMC. “That’s the important take-home message. Very few side effects.”
A pooled analysis of 690 US women aged 40 to 65 years included data from the phase 2b SWITCH-1 study and the phase 3 OASIS-1, OASIS-2, and OASIS-3 trials.3 Over 52 weeks, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were observed in 50.2% of elinzanetant-treated participants compared with 47.0% of those receiving placebo, with most events mild or moderate.
Exposure-adjusted incidence rates were 169.67 per 100 subject-years with elinzanetant and 187.61 per 100 subject-years with placebo. The most common TEAEs were headache (4.8%), which Simon said is a common symptom, and COVID-19 infection (4.3%), which he said had nothing to do with the drug. No unexpected or serious safety signals emerged.
“If that’s the second most common side effect, it really speaks to how clean this therapy is in terms of side effect profile,” he said.4
He added that elinzanetant’s hepatic safety profile distinguishes it from other nonhormonal options. “The safety profile…shows no signal for an adverse effect on hepatic function—on liver—which has been a subject of great controversy in this particular space because of the adverse effects seen in a very small group of patients given fezolinetant and the FDA’s warning labels and changes to the FDA-approved labeling for fezolinetant as a reaction to those liver effects,” Simon told AJMC.2 “None of those liver effects were seen in this safety population overall or this subset of safety in American or US women.”
Now that the drug is approved, Simon noted that longer-term follow-up in separate phase 4 studies may further confirm these results.
Pauline Maki, PhD, professor of psychiatry, psychology, and obstetrics and gynecology, and director of women’s mental health research at the University of Illinois Chicago, presented separate data showing elinzanetant’s ability to
Across 4 trials—OASIS-1, OASIS-2, OASIS-3, and NIRVANA—with 1345 total participants, the therapy reduced PROMIS Sleep Disturbance Short Form 8b T-scores by 4.92 points compared with placebo. Mediation analyses showed that 54.3% of the improvement in sleep was direct and independent of VMS relief, suggesting the drug acts on additional neuroendocrine pathways linked to sleep regulation.
“These findings highlight the potential for [elinzanetant] to improve sleep through mechanisms beyond VMS alleviation and support the notion that sleep disturbances in menopause are not solely caused by VMS,” Maki said. “Further research is warranted to elucidate the pathways through which [elinzanetant] exerts its direct effects on sleep.”
A third pooled analysis was presented by Nick Panay, BSc, MBBS, FRCOG, MFSRH, director of the Menopause & PMS Centre at Queen Charlotte’s & Chelsea Hospital West London Gynaecological Cancer Centre in London, UK.6 The analysis showed consistent efficacy across nearly 1900 women enrolled in the OASIS-1 through OASIS-4 studies. Participants included women with naturally or surgically induced menopause and those receiving endocrine therapy for hormone receptor–positive
Elinzanetant 120 mg consistently reduced daily VMS frequency and severity and improved sleep quality from baseline to week 12, with greater mean changes compared with placebo across all studies. These effects were observed even among participants with lower baseline symptom burdens and in women with therapy-induced hot flashes.
“These results suggest consistent efficacy across differing populations of women, including those with a lower baseline symptom burden (OASIS-3) and those with VMS caused by endocrine therapy for the treatment of breast cancer (OASIS-4),” Panay said.
References

On Saturday, a huge chunk of what is almost certainly space junk was found lying in the middle of a desert road in Western Australia, according…

Chris CraddockJersey communities reporter
BBCJersey students were able to enjoy live African music as musicians shared their culture and heritage with them.
Otto…


Siegel RL, Miller KD, Wagle NS, Jemal A. Cancer statistics, 2023. CA Cancer J Clin. 2023;73(1):17–48.
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Dear Annie: I’ve recently been diagnosed with a recurrence of cancer. The prognosis isn’t good, but right now I feel OK and haven’t changed my daily life. My husband is here for me, and we are considering possible treatment plans.
I haven’t told my daughter yet. Truthfully, I don’t know how. She has newborn twins and a 6-year-old daughter. Since her first husband’s suicide four years ago, I’ve dedicated my life to her well-being. Her new husband is a great guy, and I am sure of his strength and support. But she’s already very overwhelmed with the demands of having three young children.
How can I share my news without adding to her stress? Thank you for your advice. — Balancing Burdens
Dear Balancing: There’s never a good time to deliver bad news, but keeping this from your daughter won’t protect her. If anything, the longer you wait, the more blindsided she’ll feel.
Be honest and keep it simple. Tell her your diagnosis, your treatment plan and about the support you have from your husband. The most important thing right now is letting her know your cancer is back. Other details and bigger conversations can happen later down the line.
You’ve spent so much of your life being there for your daughter. Now it’s time to let her be there for you.
“How Can I Forgive My Cheating Partner?” is out now! Annie Lane’s second anthology — featuring favorite columns on marriage, infidelity, communication and reconciliation — is available as a paperback and e-book. Visit http://www.creatorspublishing.com for more information. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.
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Police officers block an access to the Louvre museum after a robbery on October 19, 2025, in Paris.
| Photo Credit: AP
It was shortly after the…