#JPM22 goes virtual, caving to pressure after a wave of big drugmakers pull out due to Omicron fears

Crowd gathering at the Westin St. Francis for JPM in 2019 (Endpoints News)

Well, see you in Jan­u­ary 2023.

In a sur­prise about-face, #JPM22 will now be ful­ly vir­tu­al af­ter or­ga­niz­ers of the pop­u­lar biotech con­fer­ence de­cid­ed to pull the plug on a live event in San Fran­cis­co giv­en fears over the Omi­cron vari­ant and a grow­ing cho­rus of drug­mak­ers opt­ing out.

The move is no big sur­prise af­ter re­ports swirled about some of the in­dus­try’s biggest play­ers nix­ing plans to at­tend live and pres­sur­ing the bank to re­con­sid­er the an­nu­al meet at the West­in St. Fran­cis. STAT re­port­ed Tues­day that Mod­er­na and Am­gen, among oth­er large drug­mak­ers, had al­ready pulled out.

But the de­ci­sion will put a damper on bio­phar­ma’s new year. #JPM22 was en­vi­sioned as bio­phar­ma’s re­turn to the new nor­mal af­ter the pre­vi­ous year’s con­fer­ence was all vir­tu­al amid the height of the pan­dem­ic.

With live plans now can­celed, End­points News has al­so made the de­ci­sion to take its mul­ti-day hy­brid event sched­ule ful­ly vir­tu­al. That means no live cock­tail hour or net­work­ing events, but we will still be bring­ing you the biggest news sur­round­ing the con­fer­ence as well as in­sight­ful pan­els and fire­side chats pre­view­ing the new year.

We’ll be sad to not see our friends and col­leagues on site, but we en­cour­age every­one to still reg­is­ter for the event and join the con­ver­sa­tion. This year, even as Omi­cron swirls, is set­ting up to be a big one for the in­dus­try, and we’ll have some of the biggest names out there giv­ing us their takes on what’s next.

See you next year.

Sensor-based technology for clinical trial data collection represents the latest medical paradigm shift. There are more than 700 clinical studies involving wearable devices currently underway in the United States. A study from Intel IT projects their inclusion in clinical trials will surge to 70% by 2025.

Apps, biosensors and patient-centered technologies increase visibility of comprehensive patient data. Pharma leaders anticipate the benefits of wearables to include better data (58%), faster results (33%) and lower trial costs (10%).

Robert Califf (Graeme Sloan/Sipa via AP Images)

As Rob Califf likely makes his return as FDA commissioner next month, his confirmation hearing yesterday offered a peek into some of the larger obstacles he’s going to face in the coming months and years.

The pandemic isn’t going away anytime soon with Omicron, and some vaccines and therapeutics may need to be tweaked or pulled from the market entirely as they prove to be ineffective against the new variant. The FDA, meanwhile, needs to get back on even footing with some longer-term direction.

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A nurse administers a COVID-19 booster shot to Joe Rigdon at a vaccination site in Eastmonte Park, Altamonte Springs. (Photo by Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

When Laura Burns went to get her first Covid-19 shot last January, no one had warned her that the vaccines might not work for her.

Burns, the recipient of a double-lung transplant in 2016, knew to be careful about the medicines she took. She consulted with her transplant team when the Pfizer and Moderna shots were authorized and only signed up after being told the vaccines would likely be safe for her, which they were.

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Jay Bradner, President, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research

John Carroll: Well, hello everybody. This is John Carroll. I’m the editor of Endpoints News, the editor and founder of Endpoints News. I’m here with Jay Bradner, the president of the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research. Jay, we’re going to be talking about ASH in just a second, but you’ve just recently celebrated your sixth anniversary as president of NIBR. And I’m curious, it’s such a significant amount of time for anybody to spend in one career phase. And looking back over the last six years, is everything fundamentally different about the research process and the translational arena that you’re in?

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We will now have to wait until 2022 to find out whether Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline have an effective recombinant vaccine against Covid-19.

The two pharma giants revealed that their Phase III trial isn’t quite ready for a readout. Meanwhile, they seem to have more hope in the booster application of their candidate, touting positive preliminary data suggesting that it spurred an increase in neutralizing antibodies in all patients — whether they received mRNA or adenovirus-based shots as the primary vaccines.

The US government is shifting its distribution of mAb infusions to fight the coronavirus, deciding to go from supplying tens of thousands of doses of GlaxoSmithKline and Vir’s mAb treatment sotrovimab in recent months to zero doses for the entire month of December.

That halt has led to speculation the government was prioritizing the distribution of Regeneron mAb combo of casirivimab and imdevimab and Eli Lilly’s combo of bamlanivimab and etesevimab because both companies have indicated that their infusions might not work as well against the Omicron variant (when compared to Delta).

Harpreet Singh, Immatics CEO (Credit: Allogeneic Cell Therapies Summit)

Just a few weeks after offering a positive readout on its first early clinical-stage offering, the transatlantic biotech Immatics is back with news that the research crowd around Rupert Vessey at Bristol Myers Squibb has anted up $150 million in cash to get on at the ground floor with one of their still-preclinical efforts.

This time the news is centered on IMA401, Immatics’ most advanced bispecific, which uses one binder to latch on to MAGEA4/8 while another is used to whip up T cell activity against tumor cells where that’s a common antigen. For now, that’s still a preclinical effort, with the first human trial set to launch in the first half of next year.

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CVS Health is adding clinical trial services inside some of its retail locations with HealthHubs and in the future at CVS primary care centers (via CVS Health)

During the Covid-19 pandemic, local pharmacies were not only key purveyors of prescriptions and hand sanitizer, but also important testing and vaccine delivery locations. Next up? Clinical trial sites. That’s according to a recent PwC Health report that lays out the case for both pharma and pharmacies — and why it’s more probable than ever.

Figuring out how to scale decentralized trials is necessary, made clear by the pandemic, said Greg Rotz, PwC’s pharma and life sciences leader in the US. The good news from his perspective is both pharma companies and retailers are investing in business models and infrastructure to make it happen.

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Massachusetts biotech Keros Therapeutics now has a deal with Hansoh Healthtech, a Hansoh Pharmaceutical Group subsidiary, in the form of an exclusive license.

The deal was announced earlier this week, with Hansoh getting the license from Keros to develop, manufacture and commercialize KER-050 within China, Hong Kong and Macau.

KER-050, an engineered ligand trap and Keros’ lead drug candidate, is in Phase II trials for myelodysplastic syndrome and a bone marrow cancer known as myelofibrosis. The drug is designed to increase the production of platelets and red blood cells and treat low blood cell counts such as anemia, according to Keros.
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