Cyteir Therapeutics Inc. is leading a pack of companies that have taken a hard look at their future and don’t care for what they see. According to BioWorld data, at least 100 biopharma companies have announced restructurings and layoffs this year, resulting in more than 8,400 jobs lost. Other companies either packing it in, restructuring from within or considering new paths include Aurinia Pharmaceuticals Inc., Bellerophon Therapeutics Inc., Calithera Biosciences Inc. and Spexis AG.
At least 64 biopharma companies have announced workforce reductions so far in 2023, resulting in 6,000 jobs lost in the industry. It is a clear indication of a continuing trend begun last year in which executives needed to rein in spending to keep innovative programs afloat.
Calithera Biosciences Inc.’s in-licensing deal to take ownership of a pair of oncology assets from Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. may be on its way to paying off, perhaps especially with regard to the oral Syk/FLT3 inhibitor mivavotinib, formerly known as CB-659/TAK-659.
Calithera Biosciences Inc.’s stock took a severe beating Nov. 5 as shares closed 54.5% downward due to the company’s phase II stumble of telaglenastat in treating non-small-cell lung cancer. It was the therapy’s second clinical failure in the past 12 months.
BEIJING, China and SANTANDER, Spain – Antengene Corp. and Calithera Biosciences Inc. entered a worldwide exclusive license agreement to develop and market the CD73 inhibitor CB-708 (ATG-037), as part of a push to use the small-molecule inhibitor to grab significant market share in Asia Pacific and global markets.
BEIJING, China and SANTANDER, Spain – Antengene Corp. and Calithera Biosciences Inc. entered a worldwide exclusive license agreement to develop and market the CD73 inhibitor CB-708 (ATG-037), as part of a push to use the small-molecule inhibitor to grab significant market share in Asia Pacific and global markets.
A metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) trial once expected to pave a path to registration for the Calithera Biosciences Inc. candidate telaglenastat failed to show a benefit from the drug in a new analysis of the pivotal phase II study, Cantata. While company executives voiced confidence in the drug's prospects in another indication, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), analyst and investor faith appeared less sturdy, as company shares (NASDAQ:CALA) fell 44.6% to $2.72 on Jan. 4.
A mitochondrial glutamine transporter variant is a key regulator of glutamine metabolism and metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells, and targeting such transporters could be a new strategy for controlling tumor growth.
A mitochondrial glutamine transporter variant is a key regulator of glutamine metabolism and metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells, and targeting such transporters could be a new strategy for controlling tumor growth, Korean researchers reported online in the Dec. 19, 2019, edition of Cell Metabolism.