ADVANZ PHARMA has collaborated with Veeva Systems to set up a unified digital-first commercial foundation in Europe. ADVANZ intends to drive a unified field strategy across all markets and strengthen field engagement with healthcare professionals (HCPs) using Veeva Commercial Cloud, a family of data, software and services for advancing commercial excellence in life sciences. ADVANZ is also using Veeva OpenData and Veeva CRM Suite to consolidate its operations and to gain a clear understanding of customers throughout the healthcare ecosystem, with a focus on products within oncology, anti-infectives, critical care, endocrinology and rare diseases. This allows the company’s newly merged field teams to coordinate more effectively with HCP touchpoints across channels and regions. Veeva Europe commercial strategy vice-president Philipp Luik stated: “With Veeva Commercial Cloud, ADVANZ now has a digital foundation to sustain growth as it expands operations in Europe. “By reaching the right people sooner and leading more impactful ...
Clinical-stage cell therapy company Tessa Therapeutics have announced positive safety and efficacy data from the trial (NCT04288726 of TT11X, its off-the-shelf CD30.CAR-modified EBVST (Epstein Barr Virus Specific T Cells) therapy in patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) Hodgkin lymphoma. In tandem with Baylor College of Medicine, Tessa enrolled 18 patients with R/R Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in the trial, all of whom had been heavily pre-treated. Patients were administered with TT11X across four dosing levels, resulting in an overall response rate (ORR) of 78%. Higher doses produced improved clinical response, and no dose-limiting toxicities were observed. Treatment works by utilising highly specialised T-cells able to recognize and kill infected cells, whilst activating the body’s immune system to produce a coordinated response. The company claimed that early trials have demonstrated a strong safety profile and efficacy. TT11X is the lead allogenic cell therapy in Tessa’s planned pipeline of treatments built with its CD30.CAR ...
Belgium-headquartered ANeuroTech is participating in a Series B round, which will raise up to $150m to power the pivotal programme of its lead candidate ANT01 for use as an adjunctive treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD). This includes the company’s upcoming Phase IIIb trial, but also another Phase III study and a long-term safety trial, said ANeuroTech CEO Eric Buntinx in an interview with Pharmaceutical Technology. The company has already contacted funds based in Europe and in the US, said Buntinx. He added that ANeuroTech is speaking to more than ten different parties. The company plans to finish the round by September or October at the latest. ANeuroTech previously raised an undisclosed amount of capital as part of a Series A round, which featured investment from impact finance firm KOIS. ANT01 consists of a 15mg dose of pipamperone, which is a serotonin-2A and dopamine-4 blocker, per the company’s website. While ...
Numerous visual illusions are caused by limits in the way our eyes and visual neurons work—rather than more complex psychological processes, new research shows. Researchers examined illusions in which an object’s surroundings affect the way we see its color or pattern. The paper, published in the journal PLOS Computational Biology, is titled “A model of color appearance based on efficient coding of natural images.” Scientists and philosophers have long debated whether these illusions are caused by neural processing in the eye and low-level visual centers in the brain, or involve higher-level mental processes such as context and prior knowledge. In the new study Dr. Jolyon Troscianko, from the University of Exeter, co-developed a model that suggests simple limits to neural responses—not deeper psychological processes—explain these illusions. “Our eyes send messages to the brain by making neurons fire faster or slower,” said Dr. Troscianko, from the Center for Ecology and Conservation ...
Novartis has entered into an agreement to acquire Chinook Therapeutics for approximately $3.5bn, marking a notable expansion to the Swiss drugmaker’s renal pipeline. The deal grants Novartis access to the US biopharma’s two late-stage candidates in development for Immunoglobulin A Nephropathy (IgAN), a rare and progressive kidney disease that mostly affects young adults. IgAN, which Novartis says currently lacks targeted treatment options, affects up to 21 people per million per year in the US, with a higher rate among Asian populations. The most advanced of the two assets is atrasentan, an oral endothelin A receptor antagonist that Chinook bought from AbbVie at the beginning of 2020. The candidate is currently in phase 3 development for IgAN, with a readout from the study expected in the fourth quarter of this year. The second candidate, zigakibart (BION-1301), is a subcutaneously administered anti-APRIL monoclonal antibody that is expected to enter phase 3 development ...
Regulation of thyroid hormone (TH) levels is a complex multilevel phenomenon. The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of the hypothalamus (the region of the brain that controls the involuntary nervous system) has been identified as a direct regulator of thyrotropin (a hormone secreted by the pituitary gland that regulates the production of thyroid hormones). The PVN is a key regulator of TH levels, integrating multiple signaling systems. Now for the first time, researchers from Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, have shown that in addition to being critical for regulating thyroid hormone levels, thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) neurons play a major role in the response to fasting and weight loss. To test this function, the researchers used a chemogenetic approach (engineering of protein receptors to respond to previously unrecognized small molecules) to either stimulate or inhibit specific neuronal populations. They injected an experimental model with an adeno-associated virus (AAV) coding for ...
Cosette Pharmaceuticals has acquired the worldwide rights to prescription drug, Intraros, from Endorecherche’s subsidiary Endoceutics. The transaction includes 108 issued and pending patents globally with the latest expiring this year including three Orange Book listed patents. The acquisition will expedite Cosette’s women’s health portfolio, with a commercial stage product that is patent protected. At present, Intrarosa is offered in almost all major markets, including the UK, the US, Canada, EU and Israel through local partners such as Tecnimede, Avia, Theramex, Lupin, Labatec, Dexcel, Lacer, Lee’s Pharma, and Valenta. It is expected to be launched in Asian market in 2025. Cosette Pharmaceuticals president and CEO Apurva Saraf said: “This transformative acquisition further strengthens Cosette’s commitment to women’s health with a patent protected, novel drug formulation. “In partnership with MSH Pharma, Cosette will leverage its unique commercial and manufacturing capabilities to ensure continued patient access to Intrarosa. We look forward to expanding ...
The European Commission (EC) has granted UCB’s Bimzelx (bimekizumab) two new approvals, with the inflammatory disease drug now authorised to treat certain adults with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA). The marketing authorisations, which follow a pair of recommendations from the European Medicines Agency’s human medicines committee earlier this year, make Bimzelx the first and only IL-17A and IL-17F inhibitor approved in the EU for these two indications. The authorisation for PsA – a type of arthritis that affects some patients with psoriasis – specifically applies to those with active disease who have had an inadequate response or have been intolerant to one or more disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. The approval was supported by results from two phase 3 trials in which Bimzelx showed improvements over placebo in joint and skin symptoms across biologic naïve and TNF inhibitor-inadequate responder populations. “The approval of [Bimzelx] in PsA provides rheumatologists and dermatologists ...
In everyday life, our emotions often change from moment to moment, and people experience these fluctuations to varying degrees. Psychologists at Leipzig University have studied the relationship between the personality trait neuroticism—a potential risk factor for mental health—and emotional experiences. They found that neurotic people experience negative emotions not only more intensely, but also with more mood swings than others. They have just published their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). “Previous studies are in agreement that neurotic people experience stronger negative emotions in everyday life. Because of new, contradictory studies, there has been disagreement about whether this is also associated with increased variability in emotional experiences, i.e., mood swings,” says the study’s first author, Nina Mader from the Wilhelm Wundt Institute of Psychology at Leipzig University. Personality psychologists at Leipzig University have developed a new approach to modeling data that solves previous methodological problems. ...
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