LONDON – A pledge to “bottle” improvements made in setting up and running clinical trials during the pandemic has materialized in the formation of Protas Ltd., a nonprofit promising to stage large-scale phase III clinical trials in common diseases for less than one tenth the current cost. Protas will design and run randomized phase III studies of new and repurposed drugs in conditions including depression, dementia, heart, lung and respiratory conditions, arthritis and cancer.
In late February 2021, Oncopeptides AB scored a big win on the FDA’s accelerated approval for the first cancer peptide-drug conjugate, Pepaxto (melphalan flufenamide), in multiple myeloma. Less than eight months later, it was shutting down commercial operations and heading back to the drawing board after safety issues emerging in the confirmatory Ocean study prompted the Stockholm-based firm to pull Pepaxto from the market, just ahead of what was likely to be a negative FDA advisory panel vote.
When, late last year, Daiichi Sankyo Co. Ltd. won breakthrough status from the FDA for HER3-targeting lung cancer prospect patritumab deruxtecan, Wall Street began taking stock of other candidates in the space. “The winning strategy to therapeutically target HER3 remains to be seen,” noted a recent paper in Clinical Cancer Research, “but HER3 is a promising drug target, and the era of drugging the ‘undruggables’ has already started.”
UCB SA anticipates submitting regulatory applications in the third quarter for IL-17-targeting bimekizumab in psoriatic arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis, after chalking up second successful phase III trials in both indications. Meanwhile, the high commercial hopes for the would-be blockbuster remain at least temporarily deferred as pandemic-related travel restrictions have delayed FDA action on the BLA for plaque psoriasis.
Fresh data about vaccines by Valneva SE and the Gamaleya Research Institute show strength against COVID-19’s omicron variant. The new results helped continue a worldwide race to create, approve and distribute vaccines to fight the pandemic.
Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) may have soured investors on otherwise-positive new data from Cardiff Oncology Inc.’s phase Ib/II study with PLK1 inhibitor onvansertib in second-line, KRAS-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Cardiff, however, is forging ahead with a pivotal experiment.
The FDA clapped a clinical hold on the IND for a clinical trial of Dyne Therapeutics Inc.’s DYNE-251 for treating Duchenne muscular dystrophy in patients amenable to skipping exon 51. The agency is asking for more clinical and non-clinical information on the therapy. A response, including data from existing and ongoing studies in the second quarter of 2022, is expected to be filed to the FDA sometime in mid-2022, Dyne said.
PERTH, Australia – Australia has recently established new research and discovery centers to study psychedelic treatments for mental health disorders. Headquartered Melbourne, the Psychae Institute is a global research collaboration supported by a AU$40 million (US$29 million) investment from a North American biotechnology company.
Targeting VEGF and DLL4 at the same time in solid tumors is an approach that continues to entice researchers, with such firms as Abbvie Inc., Compass Therapeutics Inc. and Oncxerna Therapeutics Inc. working to come up with oncology solutions.
“There isn’t a better place to be” now than in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) drug development, said Phyllis Ferrell, global head of external engagement in AD and neurodegeneration at Eli Lilly and Co., during Biotech Showcase’s panel talk titled, “Aduhelm: Stimulating the Next Generation of AD Treatment.”