Nearly a year and a half after an interim analysis cast doubt on the future of Atara Biotherapeutics Inc.’s phase II study of ATA-188 in treating non-active progressive multiple sclerosis (PMS), the newly released primary analysis didn’t change much.
Bayer AG and Cedilla Therapeutics Inc. have entered into an exclusive license agreement to develop and commercialize Cedilla Therapeutics' cyclinE1/cyclin dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) complex inhibitors, which selectively address oncogenic drivers.
Pfizer Inc. has positive phase III data for its hemophilia treatment as it wades deeper into an indication that already has plenty of competition and at least one company with earnings of more than $1 billion. Pfizer’s marstacimab in treating hemophilia could lead to the first once-weekly subcutaneous treatment for hemophilia B and could end up being the first treatment administered as a flat dose for treating hemophilia A or B.
Bayer AG’s copanlisib was approved in China for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed follicular lymphoma who have received at least two prior systemic therapies. It is the first indication approved in the country for copanlisib, which is entering a market with room to grow but marked by some domestic competition.
Bayer AG’s copanlisib was approved in China for the treatment of adult patients with relapsed follicular lymphoma who have received at least two prior systemic therapies. It is the first indication approved in the country for copanlisib, which is entering a market with room to grow but marked by some domestic competition.
Bayer AG’s diacylglycerol kinase ζ (DGK-ζ) inhibitor BAY-2965501 is being developed as a first-in-class cancer immunotherapy candidate. The company recently presented preclinical data on the compound, which supported advancement of the candidate into clinical testing, with a first-in-human phase I study in solid tumors underway (NCT05614102).
Barely a month and a half after its radioconjugate approach landed a potential $1.7 billion deal with Novartis AG, Bicycle Therapeutics plc drew another big radiopharma player to the table, signing a collaboration agreement with Bayer AG to use Bicycle’s peptide technology to discover and develop radiotherapies against cancer targets. Terms are similar to the Novartis deal, with Bayer paying $45 million up front and Bicycle eligible for development and commercial milestones totaling up to $1.7 billion, and underline the growing interest in the radiopharma space.