Scientists from Healthbiocare GmbH, System Biologie AG and the University of Austria have published data indicating pan-cancer detection could be achieved by combining genetic and epigenetic biomarkers in plasma. The scientists developed a classification model that distinguished between healthy subjects and patients with solid tumors with 95.4% accuracy, 97.9% sensitivity, and 80% specificity.
Endeavor Biomedicines Inc.’s $101 million series B round will let the firm forge ahead with ENV-101 (taladegib), a small-molecule inhibitor of the PTCH1 receptor in the Hedgehog signaling pathway, for cancer and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), as well as ENV-201, described as a potentially best-in-class small-molecule inhibitor of ULK1/2 in KRAS-driven cancers.
“The premise of our whole company is that we target molecular machines, but we don’t target the engine,” Adrian Schomburg told BioWorld. Instead, “we interfere with the throttle and other highly specific controls of these machines.” “We,” in this case, is Eisbach Bio GmbH, a German startup that is developing anticancer programs aimed at exploiting synthetic lethality by targeting helicases. Founded in 2019, the company has three programs, a recently announced collaboration with MD Anderson Cancer Center in oncology, and another program in COVID-19.