A cell and gene therapy company is extending its collaboration with Seattle Children’s Hospital to establish manufacturing practices for cell therapy, the company announced Tuesday.
BioLife’s new lentiviral vector manufacturing site, dubbed VectorWorks, will be used to find best practices in biopreservation and closed-system manufacturing with the introduction and integration of Sexton’s AF-500. Seattle Children’s, and its subsidiary Seattle Children’s Therapeutics, have used BioLife’s CryoStar for freezing media for several years in clinical applications and trials to improve the post-thaw viability and recovery of cells.
‘This expanded collaboration is an exciting step for Seattle Children’s Therapeutics as we work towards developing closed-system processes for cell therapy manufacturing,’ said Matt Selley, director of GMP manufacturing for Seattle Children’s. ‘Lentiviral vector manufacturing is a critical component of the cell production process.’
The collaboration will combine AF-500 with Seattle Children’s manufacturing expertise. AF-500 can fill and seal up to 560 vials in 90 minutes, the company says. The CellSeal Connect, which builds upon the technology used for the original CellSeal cryogenic storage vials, allows for a closed-system retrieval of viral vectors.
After big wins in court, Teva found guilty in NY
Drug manufacturer Teva Pharmaceuticals was found guilty by a New York jury for creating a public nuisance by manufacturing opioid pills that have killed thousands of people across the state, and what the CDC estimates are more than 600,000 people across the country.
The manufacturer released a press release stating that it ‘strongly disagrees’ with the outcome, and is preparing an appeal, as well as pursuing a mistrial.
‘In NY, the plaintiffs presented no evidence of medically unnecessary prescriptions, suspicious or diverted orders, no evidence of oversupply by the defendants – or any indication of what volumes were appropriate – and no causal relationship between Teva’s conduct including its marketing and any harm to the public in the state,’ the statement said.
In November, Teva was found not guilty in California by Orange County, Los Angeles County, the City of Oakland, and Santa Clara County on grounds that it caused a public nuisance. A superior court judge in California ruled that opioid manufacturers were not responsible for the crisis because of their misleading marketing. The municipalities sought $50 billion in damages from J&J, AbbVie, Endo and Teva.
Meanwhile in Oklahoma, the state’s Supreme Court overturned an early ruling, stating that the public nuisance law in Oklahoma doesn’t extend to manufacturing, marketing and selling prescription opioids.
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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.
As the FDA is looking to reduce drug shortages further by collecting more data on the volume of drugs and APIs manufactured worldwide, companies like Pfizer, Thermo Fisher, Viatris and industry groups are pushing back on new guidance that seeks to establish how that data should be collected and submitted to the agency.
The technical conformance guide, released last October, spells out the requirements under Section 3112(e) of the CARES Act, which was signed into law in March 2020 and added a new section to the FD&C Act.
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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Chris Perkin, Altasciences via Youtube
Altasciences CEO Chris Perkin has gone through several acquisitions in his 45-year career. And if there’s one thing he learned, it’s how not to go through an acquisition.
His company put that knowledge to use on Tuesday when it announced that it had acquired competitor Sinclair research, a preclinical contract research organization in Missouri. With the pickup, Altasciences gains 80 animal rooms, and full-service IND and NDA-enabling toxicology and safety pharmacology services.
Belén Garijo, Merck KGaA CEO (Kevin Wolf/AP Images for EMD Serono)
Bursting at the seams and executing plans for swift expansion to support its manufacturing work for the mRNA vaccine out of Pfizer/BioNTech, Indianapolis-based Exelead has now been scooped up in a $780 million cash buyout deal.
Germany’s Merck KGaA, which bought out another mRNA manufacturer, AmpTec, early last year, has been beefing up its ops around lipids, which, in mRNA vaccines, play a key role in turning human cells into a mini—vaccine factories?
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Salvatore Mascia, Continuus Pharmaceuticals CEO
A spinout from an MIT lab has landed a deal with a Swedish development group to build a $125 million manufacturing facility in Woburn, MA, just 15 miles outside Boston.
Skanska signed a contract with Continuus Pharmaceuticals to renovate and build another 50,000 square foot site up to current Good Manufacturing Practices standards that will produce dry active pharmaceutical ingredients and finished drug products in both sterile injectable and tablets forms.
Jay Bradner, NIBR president (Jeff Rumans)
Alnylam was a few years ahead in the small interfering RNA (siRNA) space when Novartis jumped on the bandwagon in early 2020, licensing the company’s cholesterol-lowering drug Leqvio through its buyout of The Medicines Company. Less than a month after securing an approval, the pharma giant wants more where that came from.
Novartis is joining forces with Alnylam once again for the discovery and development of a regenerative siRNA-based therapy to treat end-stage liver disease, the companies announced on Thursday.
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Sosei Heptares is teaming up with a big-name partner: Alphabet’s Verily.
No financials were disclosed, but the pair will aim to use Verily’s immune profiling and Sosei Heptares’ GPCR drug design capabilities to develop a variety of new therapeutics. The collaboration will focus on GPCR drugs in the immunology, gastroenterology and immuno-oncology spaces, as well as other disorders with immunoprotective or immunopathogenic mechanisms, the companies said.
After showcasing clinical data at #ASH21 for a sickle cell disease candidate, Sanofi has decided to throw in the towel on its 8-year partnership with collaborator Sangamo — and return its rights to the candidate.
The gene editing biotech announced the ‘transition’ this morning, several days after Sanofi told Sangamo that the biotech was backing out of the deal. The Paris-based pharma giant will be returning its rights and obligations on SAR445136, a zinc finger nuclease gene-edited cell therapy back to Sangamo by the end of June.
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