Promising medical advances for 2026

Nature Medicine has selected promising clinical studies for 2026, emphasizing long-lasting vaccines and innovative treatments. Key areas include tuberculosis, HIV, long Covid, stem cells, and cholesterol. These developments could transform the fight against global diseases.

Nature Medicine has highlighted five clinical studies poised to advance medicine in 2026. The first is a phase 3 trial for a long-lasting tuberculosis vaccine involving 20,000 participants in South Africa, Kenya, Malawi, Zambia, and Indonesia. In 2023, tuberculosis caused 11 million cases and 1.25 million deaths, with the current vaccine losing effectiveness in adolescence, a high-risk period. Results are expected in three years, marking the most promising development in nearly a century.

For HIV, the RIO study by Rockefeller, Imperial, and Oxford universities tests a six-month antibody cocktail. After five months off antivirals, 75% of participants maintained undetectable viral loads, with some for up to two years, compared to 11% in the placebo group.

Addressing long Covid, which causes fatigue and cognitive issues, the UK's National Institute for Health allocated 6.8 million pounds in 2021. The research targets blood vessels, inflammation, and clots, with findings due in 2026.

The Nest trial uses bone marrow stem cells injected through nasal vessels to repair brain damage. Building on a 2010 vision study, it has treated about 200 individuals, yielding significant improvements in Alzheimer's, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, and traumatic encephalopathy. The process is safe and takes under an hour.

Finally, the Lp(a)Horizon trial evaluates pelacarsen against Lp(a) lipoprotein, genetically linked to heart attacks and strokes. Involving 7,000 global participants, it reduces levels by 80%, with results in 2026 potentially addressing the world's leading cause of death.

Relaterade artiklar

Scientists in a lab celebrating conditional approval of iPS cell products for treating Parkinson's and heart disease.
Bild genererad av AI

Health ministry panel conditionally approves iPS cell products

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

A health ministry expert panel has conditionally approved two regenerative medicine products derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells for treating Parkinson's disease and severe heart disease. This marks a potential world first in commercializing Nobel Prize-winning stem cell technology. The approval, based on small-scale clinical trials confirming safety and presumed efficacy, requires post-market verification within seven years.

Forskare vid Stanford Medicine har skapat ett experimentellt nässprayvaccin som skyddar möss mot flera andningshot, inklusive covid-19, influensa, bakteriell lunginflammation och allergener. Vaccinet aktiverar lungornas medfödda immunsystem i månader och erbjuder bredt skydd utan att rikta in sig på specifika patogener. Publicerad i Science den 19 februari antyder studien potential för humana prövningar snart.

Rapporterad av AI

In 2025, Indians went beyond chasing weight loss or wellness hacks to renegotiate their relationships with food, medicine and their own bodies.

En studie ledd av University of Exeter och finansierad av Alzheimer’s Society har identifierat tre redan godkända läkemedel — bältrosvaccinet Zostavax, sildenafil (Viagra) och riluzol — som topp «prioriterade» kandidater att testas i kliniska prövningar för Alzheimers sjukdom, efter en strukturerad granskning av 80 befintliga läkemedel av en internationell expertpanel.

Rapporterad av AI

Japan's health ministry panel on Thursday approved the commercialization of two regenerative medicine products derived from iPS cells, marking a global first. These treatments target patients with severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease, under a conditional approval requiring data collection for up to seven years. Shinya Yamanaka, pioneer of iPS cell research, expressed delight at this milestone.

Forskare vid Universidade de São Paulo undersöker varför vissa brasilianare lever förbi 110 år, och framhåller landets genetiska mångfald som nyckel till att förstå extrem åldrande. Deras studie avslöjar unika genetiska varianter och motståndskraftiga immunsystem hos supercentenarianer som ofta frodas utan modern sjukvård. Detta arbete utmanar traditionella syner på åldrande som nedgång och framställer det istället som biologisk motståndskraft.

Rapporterad av AI Faktagranskad

Arrangörer av en internationell satsning för att kartlägga den ”humana exposomen”—livslång blandning av miljö-, kemiska, biologiska och sociala exponeringar som kan forma hälsan—säger att nya regionala nätverk och policysamarbeten formas medan projektet förbereder sig för att briefa forskare och journalister vid AAAS årsmöte 2026 i Phoenix.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj