Caught in a litigation crossfire, Moderna has reportedly opened two new fronts in its COVID-19 vaccine patent war with Pfizer and BioNTech.Seeking damages from Pfizer and BioNTech for alleged infringement, Moderna has lodged new lawsuits at the High Court in Dublin, Ireland, and the Brussels Commercial Court in Belgium, European intellectual property outlet Juve Patent reported Tuesday. The Irish court, where Moderna is claiming infringement by Pfizer-BioNTech on a pair of Spikevax patents, is set to hear the case in early 2024, according to the publication. Less is known about the status of Moderna’s Belgian lawsuit, Juve points out. A spokesperson for Moderna didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The new lawsuits add to a complex web of ongoing mRNA patent litigation. The legal melee began last August when Moderna filed patent infringement lawsuits in the U.S. and Germany. Separately, Moderna has also sued Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech in the Netherlands, plus ...
Bruker Optics announces the launch of the MOBILE-IR II – a portable, battery-powered Fourier Transform Infrared (FT-IR) spectrometer that delivers the high spectral performance of a laboratory benchtop system. This powerful mobile spectrometer will enable users worldwide to bring routine and advanced FT-IR applications to the field. The MOBILE-IR II is intended to “mobilize” established use-cases of FT-IR spectroscopy, and also to enable new applications that demand mobility, flexibility, and spectral performance. Key application examples include the identification of illegal substances during police or border control operations, the characterization of recycled goods for sorting, the use in warehouses for mobile incoming goods inspection, or in mobile laboratories for the exploration of natural resources. Its IP65-class protection makes the MOBILE-IR II waterproof, dustproof and stable for field applications. A built-in battery powers the device during off-grid operations and safeguards it against power blackouts. The additional IP67 carry-case makes it ...
Dive Brief Medtronic has received Medicare and Medicare Advantage coverage for its recently approved MiniMed 780G insulin pump. The company said on Thursday that it has begun processing orders and will start shipping devices to patients with Type 1 diabetes who meet the eligibility criteria over “the next few weeks.” The coverage clears a barrier to patient access for a pump that is central to Medtronic’s plans to kickstart growth at its diabetes business after a tough period defined by regulatory problems. Dive Insight The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the 780G pump in April. Medtronic had aimed to bring the device to the U.S. market sooner, but its plans were delayed by a warning letter, hindering its ability to compete with Insulet and Tandem Diabetes Care in the insulin pump market. With the device now approved for use, Medtronic is working to ensure patients ...
A long-standing and contentiously debated question is the extent to which US federal food assistance programs contribute to or deter healthy beverage intake. Findings of a new study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior show that while beverage intake patterns rarely differed between mothers and young children who participated only in the Supplementation Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), only the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), or neither program, those whose households participated in both programs consumed high amounts of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). Bottled water intake, which is common among communities with high distrust of tap water and can be an economic burden for low-income families, was also common among mothers participating in WIC and SNAP. While both WIC and SNAP aim to improve families’ food security, the programs operate quite differently. WIC benefits allow the purchase of specific foods and beverages and are only available to pregnant and breast-feeding women ...
HANGZHOU, China, July 10, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — Zhejiang Doer Biologics Co., Ltd. (“Doer Bio”), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company developing innovative biotherapeutics for metabolic diseases and cancers, today announced that it has entered into a license agreement with BioNTech SE (Nasdaq: BNTX, “BioNTech”). Under the terms of the agreement, Doer Bio will grant BioNTech a worldwide license to utilize one of Doer Bio’s innovative discoveries to research, develop, manufacture, and commercialize innovative biotherapeutics against an undisclosed target. Doer Bio will receive an upfront payment and will be eligible for potential development, regulatory, and commercial milestone payments. “This license agreement with BioNTech is a great demonstration of the enormous potential of Doer Bio’s platform technologies, which has been well validated by extensive preclinical research and ongoing clinical studies,” said Yanshan Huang, Ph.D., founder and Chief Executive Officer of Doer Bio. “We are thrilled to work with BioNTech, a globally leading biopharmaceutical company, to translate our ...
Dive Brief Danish medical device maker Coloplast has agreed to buy Iceland-based wound care company Kerecis for $1.2 billion upfront, giving it control of a business that is expected to grow sales by 50% this year, the companies announced Friday. Kerecis sells a wound care product based on fish skin. Launched in 2016, the product drove sales at Kerecis to 510 million Danish kroner ($74.5 million) last year, and more growth is forecast for this year. Coloplast, which will run Kerecis as a standalone business unit, increased its long-term organic growth guidance by one percentage point, bumping the target up to the 8% to 10% range. Dive Insight Coloplast is already a player in the wound care segment. With a portfolio that features the Biatain foam dressing, the Danish medtech company grew wound care sales by 12% in its second quarter. Backorders limited growth in the quarter, ...
A study of hospitalized persons with chronic kidney disease (CKD) fournd that acute kidney injury (AKI) did not predict worsening of kidney function trajectory once difference in pre-hospitalization characteristically were fully accounted for. Instead, the authors suggest that much of determinants of faster kidney disease decline observed after AKI may already be present before AKI. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine. Many now believe that AKI is an independent risk factor for accelerated loss of kidney function. This has led to changes in research focus, practice patterns, and public health targets. However, prior studies associating AKI with more rapid subsequent loss of kidney function had methodological limitations, including inadequate control for differences between patients who had AKI and those who did not. Researchers from the University of California, San Francisco and colleagues in the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC study) analyzed data from 3,150 persons ...
PrecisionLife, a leading techbio company driving precision medicine in complex chronic diseases, announced today a data access agreement with the University of Oxford to license the Oxford Endometriosis Gene (OXEGENE) dataset with the aim to develop new personalized treatments for endometriosis patients. Endometriosis is a chronic disease associated with severe pain and infertility. It affects 10% of women globally, but how and why it develops is unknown. On average it takes over 7 years for patients to receive a diagnosis and there are currently no approved diagnostic biomarkers or cures for the disease. The OXEGENE dataset contains anonymized genotype data including disease stage and infertility status, from 1,000 surgically confirmed patients. PrecisionLife’s combinatorial analytics platform is unique in its ability to analyze patient data to better understand the causes of complex chronic disease and achieve mechanistic patient stratification to enable precision medicine where it has not previously been ...
An estimated 50 million individuals in the United States struggle with the challenges of cocaine or alcohol use disorders, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Beyond the well-documented health risks, addiction to these substances detrimentally affects our cognitive flexibility, which is the ability to adapt and switch between different tasks or strategies. Although previous research has hinted at this connection, the underlying reasons for this cognitive impairment remain elusive. Cognitive flexibility is a crucial element in various domains of our life, including academic achievement, employment success and transitioning into adulthood. As we age, this flexibility plays an important role in mitigating cognitive decline. A deficiency in cognitive flexibility, however, is linked to academic deficits and a lower quality of life. A study led by Dr. Jun Wang, associate professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics at the Texas A&M University School of Medicine, provides new insight into the ...
It’s been almost one year since Congress and the Biden administration passed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and so far leaders in the biopharma industry have not been shy in voicing their complaints. As some drug companies and trade groups take to the courts with their arguments, Genentech CEO Alexander Hardy is publicly warning about the “unintended consequences” of the IRA. In a recent interview with Fierce Pharma, the Genentech chief described his concerns with measures included in IRA, which particularly affects the oncology sector, he says. Under the IRA, small molecule drugs are subject to Medicare drug-pricing negotiations after 9 years, while biologics get 13 years on the market before they’re included in the program. Regardless of a drug’s classification, Hardy noted that those timelines squeeze companies as they work to study their drugs in additional indications and reach more patients. Companies like Genentech regularly work to move their ...
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