Ken Song, Ablaze chairman and RayzeBio CEO
Thanks in part to interest from Big Pharma players like Bayer and Novartis over the last decade, there’s been no shortage in cash for new companies looking to slay tumor cells with targeted radioisotopes. Now a transpacific upstart has hooked $75 million to bring the increasingly popular drugs to China.
Ablaze Pharmaceuticals emerged from stealth on Monday with a Vivo Capital and AdvanTech Capital-led Series A round and a licensing pact with Versant-backed RayzeBio. The goal? Introduce targeted radiopharmaceutical therapies (TRTs) to the Chinese market.
‘Targeted radiopharmaceutical therapies represent the next foundational modality to treat cancer,’ Ken Song, RayzeBio CEO and chairman of the board at Ablaze, said in a statement. ‘In forming Ablaze, we realized to be successful, it was critical to have a company focused on the China market and focused on radiopharmaceuticals.’
Unlike radiation therapy, which is administered by an external beam of high-energy rays, radiopharmaceuticals deliver radioisotopes to tumors via the bloodstream. Song told Endpoints News back in June that the overall concept is similar to that of an antibody-drug conjugate. You start with a binder, a linker and a payload — except instead of an antibody, there are smaller peptides, and instead of a chemotherapeutic payload, there’s a radioactive particle which is ‘many orders of magnitude’ more potent. By switching radioisotopes, scientists can also perform imaging diagnosis, Ablaze says.
Bayer was one of the early entrants in this space, with an Algeta-partnered radionuclide therapy that was shown to boost the overall survival of castration-resistant prostate cancer patients with symptomatic bone metastases. Bayer snapped up Algeta just before the drug, Xofigo, was approved by the FDA. Meanwhile, Novartis secured its place in the race through multibillion-dollar buyouts of Advanced Accelerator Applications and Endocyte, giving it FDA-approved Lutathera among other programs. Then there are the smaller players, like San Diego-based RayzeBio, MPM-founded Aktis Oncology, and now Ablaze, which has locations in both Shanghai and San Diego. CEO Alex Qiao says Ablaze is already in the clinic, though he offered few details on the company’s programs. In addition to the RayzeBio programs, the company has one partnered program with an academic institution, he said.
The Series A — which also saw participation from RAYZ Investments, Nan Fung Life Sciences, Pivotal bioVenture Partners China, venBio Partners, Samsara BioCapital and Venrock Healthcare Capital Partners — will be used to establish a pipeline of TRTs for the treatment of solid tumors, expand the team, and build up infrastructure, according to Qiao.
It’s also exploring other partnerships, the CEO said. But for now, investors are confident the company will be able to break into the market overseas.
‘TRT is an emerging field that has already demonstrated tremendous clinical efficacy in treating cancer worldwide,’ Hongbo Lu, managing partner of Vivo Capital, said in a statement.
While oncology researchers have long pursued the potential of cellular immunotherapies for the treatment of cancer, it was unclear whether these therapies would ever reach patients due to the complexity of manufacturing and costs of development. Fortunately, the recent successful development and regulatory approval of chimeric antigen receptor-engineered T (CAR-T) cells have demonstrated the significant benefit of these therapies to patients.
GlaxoSmithKline has appointed Philip Dormitzer, formerly chief scientific officer of Pfizer’s viral vaccines unit, as its newest global head of vaccines R&D, looking to leverage one of the leading minds behind Pfizer and BioNTech’s RNA collaboration that led to Covid-19 jab Comirnaty, the British drug giant said Tuesday.
Dormitzer had been with Pfizer for a little more than six years, joining up after a seven-year stint with Novartis, where he reached the role of US head of research and head of global virology for the company’s vaccines and diagnostics unit.
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Stéphane Bancel, Moderna CEO
Even as public health officials remain guarded about their comments on the likelihood Omicron will escape the reach of the currently approved Covid-19 vaccines, there’s growing scientific consensus that we’re facing a variant that threatens to overwhelm the vaccine barricades that have been erected.
Stéphane Bancel, the CEO of Moderna, one of the leading mRNA players whose quick vault into the markets with a highly effective vaccine created an instant multibillion-dollar market, added his voice to the rising chorus early Tuesday. According to Bancel, there will be a significant drop in efficacy when the average immune system is confronted by Omicron. The only question now is: How much?
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Tillman Gerngross (Adagio)
Tillman Gerngross, the rarely shy Dartmouth professor, biotech entrepreneur and antibody expert, has been warning for over a year that the virus behind Covid-19 would likely continue to mutate, potentially in ways that avoid immunity from infection and the best defenses scientists developed. He spun out a company, Adagio, to build a universal antibody, one that could snuff out any potential mutation.
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Drugmakers looking to design a new registry or use an existing one to support a regulatory decision on a drug’s effectiveness or safety will need to consult with a new draft guidance released Monday by the FDA.
The agency’s reliance on registry data for regulatory decisions dates back more than two decades, at least, as in 1998 Bayer won approval for its anticoagulant Refludan (withdrawn from the market in 2013 for commercial reasons) based in part on a historical control group pulled from a registry.
Younger teens could be eligible for the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 booster shots as early as next week, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.
The companies will apply for regulatory approval for a booster shot in 16- and 17-year-olds this week, according to a source. The move comes as the Omicron variant has brought new cause for concern, and days after US President Joe Biden stood before the country and assured that it’s ‘not a cause for panic.’
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Bo Ying, Abogen founder (Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University)
With Moderna and BioNTech offering a model — in the US and Europe, respectively — for how mRNA biotechs can enjoy a meteoric rise to profit and fame with just one successful Covid-19 vaccine, a Chinese player is ready to put itself on the map.
Abogen, which set a record just three months ago with a $720 million Series C, has now raised another $300 million as it prepares to file its vaccine candidate for authorization. Partnered with Walvax and China’s military, ABO-028M first entered clinical testing in the summer of 2020 and is now in Phase III trials in Mexico, Indonesia and Nepal.
Most drug development professionals are familiar with the nerve-racking wait for the read-out of a large trial. If it’s negative, is the investigational therapy ineffective? Or could the failure result from an unforeseen flaw in the design or execution of the protocol, rather than a lack of efficacy? The team could spend weeks analyzing data, but a definitive answer may be elusive due to insufficient power for such analyses in the already completed trial. These problems are only made worse if the trial had lower enrollment, or higher dropout than expected due to an unanticipated event like COVID-19. And if a trial is negative, the next one is likely to be larger and more costly — if it happens at all.
https://endpts.com/after-big-pharma-sparked-interest-in-the-us-ablaze-looks-to-bring-radiopharmaceuticals-overseas/