Health
Two Liquid Egg Brands Recalled Over Bleach Contamination Risk
Thousands of pounds of liquid egg substitutes sold under two popular brand names have been recalled because of the potential risk of contamination with a cleaning solution, federal safety regulators said.
Cargill Kitchen Solutions in Lake Odessa, Mich., recalled about 212,268 pounds of products under its Egg Beaters and Bob Evans labels because they may contain a cleaning solution with sodium hypochlorite, also known as bleach, the Agriculture Department’s Food Safety and Inspection Service said on March 28.
The products were shipped for distribution in Ohio and Texas and for food service use in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois and Iowa.
“There is a possibility that the products were distributed nationwide,” the agency said.
Cargill Kitchen Solutions did not immediately respond to inquiries on Sunday but in a telephone recording about the recall, the company said it was voluntary.
“We have issued this recall out of an abundance of caution because some of the product may contain undeclared sodium hypochlorite,” the company said.
The Food Safety and Inspection Service said it had received a tip about the products’ potential contamination with bleach, sometimes labeled sodium hypochlorite.
“After conducting an investigation and thorough assessment of the contents of the cleaning solution, FSIS scientists concluded that use of this product should not cause adverse health consequences, or the risk is negligible, resulting in a Class III recall,” the agency said.
The agency also noted that the health risks for consumers were relatively low and that there had been no reports of adverse reactions. “Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a health care provider,” the agency said.
It did warn customers not to consume the potentially contaminated products and to throw them away or return them to the store where they purchased them.
The liquid egg products were produced on March 12 and 13, 2025, and carry the label G1804 on their cartons, the agency said.
The recall came as consumers are looking to egg alternatives because of rising prices and shortages at supermarkets nationwide. The recall also comes as other products may have been contaminated with the bird flu amid outbreaks in poultry and cows across the United States.
Although egg prices have dropped recently, the anxiety about their cost continues, and many consumers have gotten creative at finding substitutes, such as liquid egg products.
Health
New cancer therapy hunts and destroys deadly tumors in major breakthrough study
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Scientists at UCLA have developed an “off-the-shelf” cell-based immunotherapy that was able to track down and kill pancreatic cancer cells even after they had spread to other organs.
In a mouse study, the treatment slowed cancer growth, extended survival and remained effective even within the harsh environment of solid tumors.
“Even when the cancer tries to evade one attack pathway by changing its molecular signature, our therapy is hitting it from multiple other angles at the same time. The tumor simply can’t adapt fast enough,” lead author Dr. Yanruide Li, a post-doctoral scholar at UCLA, said in a press release.
CANCER SURVIVAL APPEARS TO DOUBLE WITH COMMON VACCINE, RESEARCHERS SAY
To build the therapy, researchers took human stem cells and turned them into a special type of immune cell called an invariant natural killer T cell (or NKT cell).
Next, they genetically modified those cells by adding a CAR receptor (chimeric antigen receptor), which enables the cells to recognize and attack pancreatic cancer cells.
UCLA scientists created an off-the-shelf CAR-NKT cell therapy that killed pancreatic tumors in multiple pre-clinical models. (iStock)
NKT cells are naturally compatible with any immune system, which means they can enter the body without causing dangerous reactions, according to the researchers. They can also be mass-produced using any donated blood stem cells.
“One donor could provide sufficient cells for thousands of treatments,” potentially offering a more affordable and accessible approach, according to the press release.
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The team tested the therapy in several lab models. These included models where the cancer was placed directly into the pancreas and others designed to mimic how the disease spreads to other organs, like the liver and lungs.
The CAR-NKT cells were able to push their way into the tumor itself, rather than getting stuck on the outside like many immune treatments do, the researchers found.
Researchers emphasized that one dose could cost around $5,000, far lower than personalized CAR-T treatments. (iStock)
Once they got inside the body, these engineered immune cells could spot cancer cells in several different ways and kill them using multiple built-in attack methods.
NEW PANCREATIC CANCER TREATMENT ‘WAKES UP’ IMMUNE CELLS, RESEARCHERS SAY
Most importantly, they stayed active. Many immune cells that enter a solid tumor quickly become overwhelmed and shut down, but these engineered cells kept working instead of burning out, allowing them to continue fighting the cancer for a longer period.
The findings were published in the journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).
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“Developing a therapy that targets both the primary tumor and its metastases in pre-clinical studies — one that can be ready to use off-the-shelf — represents a fundamental shift in how we might treat this disease,” said senior author Dr. Lili Yang, a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at UCLA, in the same press release.
The researchers noted that one dose could cost around $5,000, far lower than personalized CAR-T treatments.
The therapy can be mass-produced from donor stem cells, potentially lowering cost and expanding access. (iStock)
Pancreatic cancer is notoriously aggressive and difficult to treat, according to the researchers. Most patients aren’t diagnosed until the disease has already spread, and the tumor’s biology creates multiple physical and chemical barriers that weaken the impact of traditional treatments.
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Since the therapy targets a protein that is common in breast, ovarian and lung cancers, the same cell product could potentially treat multiple cancer types.
In separate studies, the team has already demonstrated the therapy’s effectiveness against triple-negative breast cancer and ovarian cancer.
Most patients aren’t diagnosed until the disease has already spread, and the tumor’s biology creates multiple physical and chemical barriers that weaken the impact of traditional treatments. (iStock)
Based on the early findings, the UCLA researchers are preparing to submit applications to the Food and Drug Administration to begin human trials.
“We’ve developed a therapy that’s potent, safe, scalable and affordable,” Yang said in the release. “The next critical step is proving it can deliver the same results in patients we’ve seen in our preclinical work.”
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All testing so far has been done in mice, as the researchers noted that solid tumors in humans are far more complex. Human tumors can evolve and lose the targets that treatments are designed to recognize, raising the risk of the cancer escaping detection and continuing to grow.
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Long-term safety and side effects in humans are unknown ahead of clinical trials.
The researchers also noted that making big batches of identical, safe cells poses logistical and regulatory challenges.
Health
Dick Van Dyke says living longer linked to his lack of hate and anger
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Dick Van Dyke turns 100 this year, and he says he feels “really good.”
In a recent conversation with People, he credits his attitude for both his age and the fact that he has “no pain, no discomfort.”
“I’ve always thought that anger is one thing that eats up a person’s insides – and hate,” Van Dyke said, explaining how people often ask what he did right.
He added that he’s “rather lazy” and never felt driven by the kind of resentment that can harden over time.
ADDING LAUGHTER TO YOUR LIFE CAN BOOST HEALTH AND HEALING, EXPERTS SAY
Dick Van Dyke credits his longevity largely to avoiding anger and hate rather than following any strict lifestyle regimen. (Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images)
“Sometimes I have more energy than others – but I never wake up in a bad mood,” he told People.
The actor explained that while there were always things and people he didn’t like or approve of, he “never really was able to work up a feeling of hate,” and certainly not “a white-heat kind of hate.”
He contrasted himself with his father, who was “constantly upset by the state of things in his life,” noting to People that his father died at 73.
Van Dyke believes avoiding that emotional pattern is one of the chief things that kept him going.
NEGATIVE THOUGHTS MIGHT BE CHANGING YOUR BRAIN IN SURPRISING WAYS, STUDY SUGGESTS
Modern research appears to back up this idea that emotional states play a meaningful role in long-term health.
Studies on aging adults show that anger can heighten inflammation in the body, raising levels of markers like IL-6 and increasing risk of illness.
He says he has “no pain, no discomfort” at nearly 100, attributing it in part to emotional steadiness. (Monica Schipper/Getty Images)
7 STEPS TO ‘SUPER-AGING’ ARE KEY TO LIVING A LONGER, MORE FULFILLING LIFE, EXPERTS SAY
These effects can accelerate the wear-and-tear process associated with aging.
The broader scientific picture suggests that patterns of hostility or persistent irritation function like a physiological tax, straining the systems that keep the body resilient.
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Van Dyke explained in the interview his belief that “people are born with an outlook.”
“I just think I was born with a brighter outlook,” while others, he says, are born having to fight against downward spirals.
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Studies suggest reducing hostility and negative emotions can support resilience, slow aging, and potentially extend lifespan. (Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)
“And after 100 years, I think I’m right.”
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“When you expire, you expire,” he told People. “I don’t have any fear of death for some reason. I can’t explain that but I don’t. I’ve had such a wonderfully full and exciting life… I can’t complain.”
Van Dyke’s 100th birthday falls on Dec. 13.
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Health
‘I Tried Super-Collagen Soup And Lost Two Sizes in a Month—At Age 66!’
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