Clasp Therapeutics’ novel T cell engagers could offer advantages over others in this class of cancer immunotherapies. The startup is based on the research of Johns Hopkins University scientist Bert Vogelstein. By FRANK VINLUANCancer immunotherapy comes in several forms, and one area of growing research interest is a type of drug called a T cell engager. These drugs bind to a cancer cell and a T cell simultaneously, bringing both of them together to spark a therapeutic effect. Robert Ross, CEO of Clasp Therapeutics, likens T cell engagers to the chaperone at a middle school dance who grabs a boy and a girl in each hand, getting them to dance together. But in cancer drugs, just as in school dances, sometimes the pairing just isn’t right. The wrong pairing in cancer happens when a drug that’s targeted to a tumor also hits healthy cells, causing toxic effects. Clasp is developing ...
Sanofi today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted priority review of Dupixent (dupliximab) for a sixth potential indication as a supplemental biologic. Sanofi announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted priority review of the Supplemental Biologics License Application (SBLA) for the sixth potential indication for dabigatran (duplizumab), an add-on maintenance treatment for adult patients with uncontrolled chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The FDA approval is expected on June 27, 2024. China has also submitted a marketing authorization application and received acceptance from the Center for Drug Evaluation (CDE) of the State Drug Administration (SDA). Data from two Phase III clinical trials (BOREAS and NOTUS) supporting this SBLA and other applications globally evaluated the efficacy and safety of Dupixent in adult patients with uncontrolled chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with type 2 inflammation who are smokers or have a history of ...
The FDA clinical hold follows a a report of liver failure that may be associated with zelnecirnon, an experimental Rapt Therapeutics drug. The biotech notes that no other patient has experienced liver problems and this safety signal has not been seen in any other tests of the molecule. By FRANK VINLUAN Rapt Therapeutics aim to bring patients oral alternatives to injectable or infused immunology medications has hit a setback. A Rapt drug candidate in mid-stage clinical development in atopic dermatitis and asthma has been placed under an FDA clinical hold after a serious adverse event reported in a study participant, the company announced Tuesday. The patient, a participant in the atopic dermatitis study, experienced liver failure. According to Rapt, the cause of the liver failure is unknown but has been characterized as potentially related to the company’s experimental drug, zelnecirnon. South San Francisco-based Rapt said the FDA verbally notified the ...
Astellas Pharma is working with Kelonia Therapeutics, a startup that develops in vivo CAR T-therapies with technology that precisely delivers genetic cargo to cells. The collaboration combines this tech with a platform from Xyphos Biosciences, a cell therapy developer that Astellas acquired in 2019. By FRANK VINLUAN Cell therapy’s next breakthrough could be the engineering of these cells inside the patient. Two deals more than four years apart put Astellas Pharma in position to ramp up its work developing these in vivo treatments. Under the more recent agreement announced late Thursday, Astellas is collaborating with Kelonia Therapeutics, a startup that has developed technology for precisely delivering genetic cargo to target cells in the body in order to make those cells into in vivo CAR T-therapies. Kelonia calls its technology in vivo gene placement system, or iGPS. The genetic payload delivered to a cell gets it to express a receptor that ...
Stalicla announced the successful closing of a $17.4m Series B funding round as deal-making interest stirs in the central nervous system disorder space. “In the current environment, we see this [financing round] as a huge success, but we’re targeting a much larger round in Q3 2024 with the involvement of large venture capital funds,” says Stalicla CEO Lynn Durham in an exclusive interview with Pharmaceutical Technology. Stalicla aims to use the extra funds to launch a Phase III substance use disorder (SUD) study for its STP7 mGluR5 Negative Allosteric Modulator (mGluR5 NAM) platform in 2025. The US National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institutes of Health are supporting Stalicla’s development of STP7.Stalicla acquired the therapy through an in-licensing agreement with Novartis in January 2023. In this deal, the Swiss company acquired the worldwide rights for studies using the STP7 platform for SUD, neurodevelopmental disorders, and other indications in ...
Alto Neuroscience will apply the IPO proceeds toward clinical tests of its psychiatric drugs in patients who exhibit certain biomarkers. The company’s two most advanced programs are depression drugs in mid-stage development. By FRANK VINLUAN Matching a drug to a patient’s biology is not a new idea, but it hasn’t caught on in neuropsychiatric disorders, which have high failure rates in drug studies. The technology of Alto Neuroscience brings precision medicine to psychiatric drug research and its IPO has raised $128.6 million to see if this approach can yield better clinical trial results. Alto priced its IPO late Thursday, offering more than 8 million shares for $16 apiece. The Los Altos, California-based company was able to raise more than planned. When Alto set preliminary financial terms earlier this week, it projected offering 6.7 million shares in the range of $14 and $16 each, which would have raised $100.5 million at ...
One day after Roche said it was starting to establish Vabysmo as the new standard of care in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and diabetic macular edema (DME), Regeneron clapped back with the same claim about its new treatment—high-dose Eylea. “We continue to see physicians prescribe Eylea HD in both treatment experienced and treatment naïve settings as Eylea HD is increasingly recognized as the new standard of care,” Marion McCourt, Regeneron’s commercial chief, said as the company presented its fourth-quarter and 2023 earnings. Eylea HD is Regeneron’s response to Vabysmo, which hit the market in the first quarter of 2022 as a game-changing, longer-acting treatment. Vabysmo allowed many patients to reduce dosing from six times a year—with Regeneron’s original version of Eylea—to three times a year. Vabysmo has been an immediate hit as illustrated by Roche’s sales figures, which were presented on Thursday. In its first full year on the market, ...
More than two years after Aduhelm’s controversial and ill-fated FDA accelerated approval, Biogen is discontinuing the Alzheimer’s disease therapy after walking a rocky path. Wednesday, Biogen said it’s pulling all efforts from the first-of-its-kind anti-amyloid beta therapy to focus on Leqembi, its Eisai-partnered newer medicine, and its pipeline candidates. The newer drug, Leqembi, won a full FDA approval early last year, making the partners’ marketing efforts on the therapy much simpler than was the case with Aduhelm. Biogen is taking a $60 million charge and is discontinuing all development and sales of Aduhelm, the company said. It’s terminating the ENVISION clinical study, which sought to confirm the benefit of the medicine as required under its 2021 accelerated approval. The decision follows Biogen’s move to launch a strategic review in early 2023 under new CEO Chris Viehbacher, the former Sanofi chief who joined the Massachusetts drugmaker in November 2022. During that ...
Insulin prices have long been a pain point for diabetics. The big three insulin manufacturers have cut prices across their product lineups, but potential competition from other biosimilar insulins is still in earlier stages of development. By FRANK VINLUAN Inflation remains a top consumer gripe, but the higher cost of milk and eggs is negligible when compared to insulin. Spending on insulin has tripled in the past decade, topping $22 billion in 2022, according to research from the American Diabetes Association. While some of that increase is due to a growing patient pool, it’s also due to rising prices. The inflation-adjusted cost of insulin increased 24% from 2017 to 2022. Lower-cost insulin is becoming available to more Americans with diabetes. Implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act last year was a catalyst. One of the federal law’s provisions set a $35 cap on the monthly out-of-pocket cost for insulin. Though the ...
With the unusual threat of a Senate subpoena hanging over their heads, the CEOs of Johnson & Johnson and Merck & Co. have agreed to join their counterpart at Bristol Myers Squibb in testifying before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP). Friday, the HELP Committee’s chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), said J&J’s Joaquin Duato and Merck’s Robert Davis have “reconsidered their positions” and have agreed to join BMS’ CEO Chris Boerner at a committee hearing scheduled for February 8. Duato and Davis’ cooperation comes shortly Sanders said the HELP Committee would vote to subpoena the CEOs after they declined a previous invitation to talk drug pricing. That subpoena vote has now been called off, the Committee said in a press release Friday. Sanders’ HELP Committee has already been crusading against steep drug prices over the past year. The committee has already heard testimony from chief executives ...
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