Annexon has some disappointing news, and it is evident at the Nasdaq.
Annexon, which went public back in 2020, had its share price $ANNX tumble more than 30% down to $7.30 on Wednesday after several patients discontinued treatment in a Phase II clinical trial for Huntington’s disease.
The drug candidate, ANX005, is a C1q blocker that was being designed and tested to disrupt Huntington’s disease. And while Annexon claimed the drug had shown improvement in more than half of patients after six months, five patients withdrew from the treatment — three due to a drug-related adverse event, two of which were considered serious adverse events, including systemic lupus erythematosus and idiopathic pneumonitis. Annexon said that after post-study drug discontinuation, one patient had symptoms resolved and the other patient stabilized.
While no deaths were reported, Annexon confirmed that the trial remains ongoing and it expects to have full data by the end of Q2 this year.
Accro Bioscience raises $50M+ in Series B round
Accro Bioscience announced yesterday that it has raised over $50 million in an oversubscribed Series B round. The financing was led by Hongtai Aplus, along with participation from South China Venture Capital, Shenzhen Capital Group, Suzhou Oriza Holdings and other unnamed investors.
The Chinese biotech, founded in 2017, started out with a Series A from Morningside Ventures and focuses its research on regulated cell death, leading to emphases on inflammatory and autoimmune diseases alongside cancer as its main indications.
Accro co-founder and CEO Xiaohu Zhang expressed optimism in a prepared statement, saying ‘we are very pleased with the support and confidence of our current and new investors.’
Atom Bioscience raises $45 million in Series C for hyperuricemia and gout clinical trial
Chinese inflammatory and metabolic disease biotech Atom Bioscience closed $45 million in a Series C round to push its lead candidate into Phase III.
The Series C, led by Xicheng Jinrui Equity Investment Fund and ShenZhen GTJA Investment Group, will push ABP-671 into a Phase III clinical trial for hyperuricemia and gout. Some of the raise will also go into preclinical and clinical development of other drugs in Atom’s pipeline.
This is Atom’s biggest cash infusion to date since its founding in 2012, and the round brings the biotech’s total financing to $87 million.
Aside from Atom’s lead candidate, the biotech has a candidate for NASH in preclinical studies alongside three candidates for gastric, colon and breast cancer.
Japanese biotech enters collaboration and licensing deal with Roche, Genentech
Japan peptide biotech PRISM BioLab announced in a statement last night that it has entered into a research collaboration and licensing agreement with Roche and Genentech.
While details on the deal are still somewhat scarce, PRISM will give Roche and Genentech access to its library of peptide mimetic small molecules for the biotechs to screen against specific targets. Upon identification of hit compounds, Roche and Genentech may elect to further develop and commercialize the compounds.
PRISM BioLab is eligible to receive an upfront payment, success-based milestone payments and royalties on future net sales, but those details remain out of view for now.
Their Staying Power Lies in their Patient-Centricity
Decentralized clinical trials (DCTs) were traditionally utilized in an isolated fashion prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. To continue their research within the constraints of the pandemic, sponsors and clinical investigators pivoted to a decentralized model out of necessity. At the onset, regulatory agencies offered some guidance on the digital approaches that are acceptable to ensure DCT approaches are applied in a way that maintains patient safety, as well as data quality and integrity.
Patrick Collison, co-founder of Stripe, has become one of Silicon Valley’s biggest advocates for new forms of funding and conducting science (Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for WIRED)
It’s big days for biology.
The pandemic has seen a series of very public scientific breakthroughs: mRNA vaccine, Covid antibodies, CRISPR as therapy. The minds behind these advancements have graced magazine covers and received prestigious awards.
But the last two years have also, far more quietly, seen a series of new experiments in how to fund the next generation of scientific breakthroughs.
Since March 2020, investors, academics, a significant number of Silicon Valley types, at least one Russian billionaire and two crypto billionaires and, most recently, a few West Coast universities have launched a series of grant programs, institutes, NGOs and companies hoping to change how life science research is done. Though unaffiliated and varying greatly in both size and form, they have broadly promised to evade bureaucracy and misaligned incentives and advance both basic and not-so-basic research in ways they say can’t be done in either conventional academia or profit-focused biotech.
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The FDA this week announced further changes to revamp its structure, this time with alterations to its Office of the Chief Scientist that were agreed to by HHS late last month.
The FDA’s OCS has decided to shift its technology transfer program from the Office of Regulatory Science and Innovation to the OCS Immediate Office to further enhance the effectiveness of the agency’s outside partnership programs.
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Jeff Albers and Kate Haviland (Brad Bahner Photography/PR Newswire)
After a busy 2021 brought Blueprint Medicines its fourth FDA approval, the company is kicking off the new year with plans to shake up its C-suite.
Jeff Albers, Blueprint’s CEO for the past eight years, will be stepping down April 4 and transitioning to the executive chairman position, the biotech announced Wednesday morning. He will be replaced by COO Kate Haviland, who moves into both the chief executive and president roles. Christina Rossi also nabs a promotion from chief commercial officer to COO.
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For anyone who’s been following how the US government has been allocating and shipping supplies of its Covid-19 treatments over the past year, the news has shifted so many times that it can be difficult to keep track of what’s still being shipped and where.
More change is coming this week too, as HHS has now decided to re-start shipments of both Eli Lilly (bamlanivimab plus etesevimab) and Regeneron (casirivimab plus imdevimab) monoclonal antibody products after a short pause because neither product works against the new variant Omicron. Lilly’s combo also was halted last June due to the presence of other variants.
Kicking off 2022, hundreds of pharmaceuticals, including some blockbusters, saw their list prices rise by about 5% on average. But overall, net drug prices (cost after rebates) declined for the fourth year in a row, potentially complicating already stalled drug price reform efforts.
Among the drugs seeing new increases as of Jan. 1 are Gilead’s bevy of blockbuster HIV drugs.
Biktarvy, which pulled in more than $7 billion in worldwide sales in 2020, saw a 4.8% price increase in 2021, and now, another 5.6% increase in 2022, according to a new report from the nonprofit 46brooklyn Research.
All the big R&D trends are on display in this new list of drug approvals for 2021. Plus one.
Add up everything OK’d from CDER and CBER, and you have 60 new drug approvals for last year, topping the 59 in 2020. That’s a close second to the 64 OKs that came out of the FDA in 2018. The dark days of the early 2000s are a distant memory now, with a host of hungry upstarts promising to make their own entries one day as Big Pharmas double down on innovation.
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Tom Riga, Spectrum Pharmaceuticals CEO
Covid-19 has been a rough go for many drugmakers, but few more so than Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, which has seen inspection delays and unwanted CRLs haunt its chance at a first approval. Feeling the sting, Spectrum will now downsize to keep the lights on through the year.
Spectrum will cut 30% of its workforce and pivot its R&D efforts around its two furthest-along drugs as part of a restructuring effort that will pave the company’s cash runway out into next year, it announced Wednesday.
Catalent CEO John Chiminski (Catalent)
If there was one defining theme at Catalent in recent years, it was expansion, as the CDMO upped its operations all over the world, from Baltimore to Japan. It did so under longtime CEO John Chiminski, who has led the Somerset, NJ-based company for 12 years, topped by 2 years of the pandemic. This year will be the last in the C-suite for Chiminski, however, as the company announced plans for a passing of the torch this summer.
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