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CAMPUS: EGG DONATION – Artificial sperm cells to remove the genetic worries of sperm donation – ESHRE

A Campus meeting in November reviewed the arguments for and against donor conception, and the sometimes difficult ethical arguments raised by the prospect of a donor-conceived child. 'Artificial' sperm cells derived from testicular tissue or stem cells may resolve some of those arguments.

The problem is especially acute in cancers diagnosed in prepubertal boys in whom there are no sperm cells available for storage. Their only option for future fatherhood in the face of cancer treatment is adoption or donor sperm. And this, added Goossens, is not an exceptional problem. Incidence rates are around 17 cases per 100,000 population, with leukemia and CNS tumours the most commonly diagnosed. So the usual pathway to fertility preservation in these young cases is for the oncologist to warn of the risk to future fertility from the cancer treatments and refer to the fertility clinic. Biopsy of testicular tissue, of course, must be performed before any radio- or chemotherapy.

Goossens described two experimental techniques, spermatogonial stem cell retrieval and transplantation, and homotopic tissue grafting. The danger in the former procedure is a risk of introducing malignancy, so banked tissue must be free of malignant contamination. Experiments in mouse-to-mouse models have demonstrated spermatogenesis from tissue grafting, and most recently fully functional conception and delivery in a non-human primate (Grady). Similarly, experiments in mouse models with spermatogonial stem cell transplantation have so far proved efficient, with spontaneous pregnancy already possible.

Of course, the objective of this impressive experimental work is not merely a resolution to the question of genetic continuity in couples faced with third-party donation, but the future fertility and long-term quality of life of so many unfortunate young boys. Advances in cancer treatment have led to the increased survival of all children with cancer, and with it a new imperative for the restoration of their fertility. Not all cancer treatments cause complete testicular damage, but around one-third of children having treatment for pediatric cancers will end up infertile. Following the proof-of-concept study which saw the birth of Grady - in which testicular samples removed from prepubertal monkeys was frozen, thawed and regrafted under scrotal skin - the research group declared that their next logical step, with safety and feasibility apparent, is human trials.

1. Fayomi AP, Peters K, Sukhwani M, et al. Autologous grafting of cryopreserved prepubertal rhesus testis produces sperm and offspring. Science 2019; 363: 1314-1319.

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CAMPUS: EGG DONATION - Artificial sperm cells to remove the genetic worries of sperm donation - ESHRE

Stem Cell Therapy Market Forecasted To Surpass The Value Of US$ XX Mn/Bn By 2045 2017 – 2025 – Markets Gazette 24

TMRR, suggest in its latest market report, that the Stem Cell Therapy market report is about to exceed US$ xx Mn/Bn by 2029. The report finds that the Stem Cell Therapy market registered ~US$ xx Mn/Bn in 2018 and is projected to expand at a healthy CAGR over the foreseeable period.

The Stem Cell Therapy market research focuses on the market structure along with various factors (positive and negative) that influence the market growth. The study contains a precise evaluation of the Stem Cell Therapy market, including growth rate, current market scenario, and volume inflation prospects, on the basis of DROT and Porters Five Forces analyses.

Important players profiled in the Stem Cell Therapy market research include player 1, player 2, player 3 and player 4.

In this Stem Cell Therapy market study, the following years are considered to project the market footprint:

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Key Trends

The key factors influencing the growth of the global stem cell therapy market are increasing funds in the development of new stem lines, the advent of advanced genomic procedures used in stem cell analysis, and greater emphasis on human embryonic stem cells. As the traditional organ transplantations are associated with limitations such as infection, rejection, and immunosuppression along with high reliance on organ donors, the demand for stem cell therapy is likely to soar. The growing deployment of stem cells in the treatment of wounds and damaged skin, scarring, and grafts is another prominent catalyst of the market.

On the contrary, inadequate infrastructural facilities coupled with ethical issues related to embryonic stem cells might impede the growth of the market. However, the ongoing research for the manipulation of stem cells from cord blood cells, bone marrow, and skin for the treatment of ailments including cardiovascular and diabetes will open up new doors for the advancement of the market.

Global Stem Cell Therapy Market: Market Potential

A number of new studies, research projects, and development of novel therapies have come forth in the global market for stem cell therapy. Several of these treatments are in the pipeline, while many others have received approvals by regulatory bodies.

In March 2017, Belgian biotech company TiGenix announced that its cardiac stem cell therapy, AlloCSC-01 has successfully reached its phase I/II with positive results. Subsequently, it has been approved by the U.S. FDA. If this therapy is well- received by the market, nearly 1.9 million AMI patients could be treated through this stem cell therapy.

Another significant development is the granting of a patent to Israel-based Kadimastem Ltd. for its novel stem-cell based technology to be used in the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) and other similar conditions of the nervous system. The companys technology used for producing supporting cells in the central nervous system, taken from human stem cells such as myelin-producing cells is also covered in the patent.

Global Stem Cell Therapy Market: Regional Outlook

The global market for stem cell therapy can be segmented into Asia Pacific, North America, Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East and Africa. North America emerged as the leading regional market, triggered by the rising incidence of chronic health conditions and government support. Europe also displays significant growth potential, as the benefits of this therapy are increasingly acknowledged.

Asia Pacific is slated for maximum growth, thanks to the massive patient pool, bulk of investments in stem cell therapy projects, and the increasing recognition of growth opportunities in countries such as China, Japan, and India by the leading market players.

Global Stem Cell Therapy Market: Competitive Analysis

Several firms are adopting strategies such as mergers and acquisitions, collaborations, and partnerships, apart from product development with a view to attain a strong foothold in the global market for stem cell therapy.

Some of the major companies operating in the global market for stem cell therapy are RTI Surgical, Inc., MEDIPOST Co., Ltd., Osiris Therapeutics, Inc., NuVasive, Inc., Pharmicell Co., Ltd., Anterogen Co., Ltd., JCR Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd., and Holostem Terapie Avanzate S.r.l.

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The content of the Stem Cell Therapy market report includes the following insights:

The Stem Cell Therapy market study answers critical questions including:

All the players running in the global Stem Cell Therapy market are elaborated thoroughly in the Stem Cell Therapy market report on the basis of R&D developments, distribution channels, industrial penetration, manufacturing processes, and revenue. In addition, the report examines, legal policies, and comparative analysis between the leading and emerging Stem Cell Therapy market players.

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Stem Cell Therapy Market Forecasted To Surpass The Value Of US$ XX Mn/Bn By 2045 2017 - 2025 - Markets Gazette 24

Drugs, Biologics, and Regenerative Medicine in 2019 – The National Law Review

Friday, December 13, 2019

Following up on our first post in this year-end series that discussed medical device regulatory activities at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Mintz FDA teams second year-end post will provide an overview of 2019 with a focus on the drug, biologic, and regenerative medicine programs at the agency. In many ways, the past year could be called a business as usual year for the FDAs drugs and biologics centers in that they continued to make progress on all of large-scale programs and priorities initiated by former-Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, who left the agency in April. FDA has been under the leadership of an Acting Commissioner since that time, although Texas radiation oncologist Dr. Stephen Hahn will be taking the reins soon following his confirmation by the full Senate in a 72-18 vote on December 12, 2019. (The Senate HELP Committee advanced the nominee on December 3, 2019; see our blog post just prior to that committee vote here.)

At the same time, however, the final months of 2019 have exposed several challenges for various FDA programs that operate under the extensive drug and biologic authorities contained in the Food Drug & Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) and the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act), respectively. The agency will be forced to grapple with many of these issues directly and deliberately in 2020as a result of deadlines of the agencys own making as well as external pressures coming from other parts of D.C. and from the rapidly changing nature of the U.S. health care system.

According to data presented by the Office of New Drugs in early December (see ONDs slides here), FDA had another extremely productive year when it comes to its approval of new molecular entities that address a unique blend of therapeutic areas. The agency approved 45 new molecular entities in FY 2019 (October1, 2018 to September30, 2019), of which 71%, or 32 products, received priority review status and 23 were designated as orphan drugs intended to treat rare diseases. As OND emphasized in the presentation, several of those new product approvals are notable for their uniqueness and therefore, in the agencys view, 2019 reflects not only quantity but [also] quality. The OND presentation also highlights a significant amount of other information on new molecular entity approvals and may be of interest to those readers who want to take a deeper dive into the data.

In addition to advancing important new drugs and biologics to market, former Commissioner Gottlieb is well-known for having spearheaded to development of a Drug Competition Action Plan (DCAP) and a Biosimilars Action Plan (BAP) during his nearly two-year tenure as head of the agency. Some of our prior coverage of the DCAP and BAP is available here. In general terms, the DCAP encourages market competition for generic drugs and helps to bring greater efficiency and transparency to the generic drug review process; the BAP aims to achieve similar goals for biosimilar products as the agency continues its implementation of the 2010 Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act (BPCIA), including the critical drug-to-biologic transition that will occur by operation of law in March of 2020.

FDA continued to make progress on its various goals under these two initiatives during 2019. Some examples of this progress can be captured with these two data points:

FDA approved 1,171 generic drugs (935 full approvals and 236 tentative approvals) in the last fiscal year. Notably, 125 drug approvals were for first generics of medicines that had no direct generic competition. The agency released a report in October 2019 noting that generic drug approvals reached a record high in FY 2019 and also that several complex generic drug products had been approved for the first time. Under the DCAP, the agency has prioritized getting complex generic drug products to market with the goal of increasing competition and thereby reducing commercial prices for such products, which may be expensive due to difficult manufacturing processes.

On December 6, 2019, FDA licensed its 26th biosimilar product since the BPCIA was enacted and the 10th biosimilar this year (Amgens Avsola (infliximab-axxq), which is a biosimilar to Remicade and the fourth Remicade biosimilar approved by the agency to date). Although thirteen of the previous 25 approved biosimilars have yet to launch due to ongoing patent litigation or for business reasons, the agency has continued to focus on positive developments in the still-nascent U.S. biosimilars market, including with the issuance of a public statement on November 15 in conjunction with approval of the 25th biosimilar (see here).

With all of these wins, however, FDA still faces its fair share of challenges related to its expedited drug and biologic programs, especially as it appears to have accelerated its review of products intended for diseases with an unmet need to breakneck speed. Indeed, the OND presentation from early December also added that for FY 2020 and as of November 21, 2019, the agency had already approved 13 such drugs, suggesting that next year could be a record-breaking one in terms of innovative drug product approvals. A recent Bloomberg Law article (available here) used the phrase breakneck speed to describe the agencys actions in this space based on several recent FDA approvals of new molecular entities that have come months in advance of their assigned target dates. The Bloomberg Law article highlights that in response to FDAs speediness in reaching approval decisions on new drugs and biologics for diseases with unmet needs, patient advocates and, increasingly, insurers that have to pay for those treatments are starting to raise concerns that these products lack sufficient safety or effectiveness data.

Relatedly, there has been increasing pressure on FDA to remove certain accelerated approval drugs from the market following a failure by the drug product sponsor to confirm the efficacy or clinical benefits of the product in the required post-marketing confirmatory clinical trial. The most visible example of this regulatory challenge came in October 2019 when FDA convened an advisory committee to recommend whether it should withdraw accelerated approval from hydroxyprogesterone caproate injection (marketed under the brand name Makena for the prevention of preterm birth in pregnant women). FDAs Bone, Reproductive and Urologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 9-7 to withdraw approval, with the dissenters favoring leaving Makena on the market while requiring the sponsor to conduct a new confirmatory trial. (Notably, no one voted for the option of leaving it on the market without requiring a new confirmatory trial.)Among the concerns of some members who voted to leave the product on the market with a new clinical trial obligation was that the drugs withdrawal would leave no safe treatment options for pregnant women at high risk of preterm birth. FDA will have to make a final decision regarding what to do about Makena in 2020, and it undoubtedly will face intense criticism (and potentially legal challenge) no matter what route it chooses to take for this public health quandary in which it finds itself.

In a similar vein, FDA official Dr. Richard Pazdur participated in a Senate briefing on December 10, 2019, in which he and other speakers defended the Breakthrough Therapy Designation program. FDA insisted again that the designation was intended to let the agency have earlier interactions with drug sponsorsand that it was not meant to be an early rating system for drugs or a signal of how they might do commercially. Given that the Breakthrough program was created in 2012 and is considered to be wildly successful, some speakers at the briefing expressed surprise that there was still any confusion about its purpose and function. Whether Congress picks up any of these emerging areas for consideration as part of FDAs 2022 user fee reauthorization packages remains to be seenas those negotiations will begin in earnest after the New Year, but the issues certainly are complex enough to allow for robust policy discussions to occur.

Finally, there are expected to be bumps in the road with the upcoming March 2020 transition of proteins previously approved under New Drug Applications (NDAs) to Biologics License Applications (BLAs)for which FDA only finalized its guidance for industry last year. The March 2020 transition date was established under the BPCIA and the agency does not have discretion in getting the transition done (only in how it handles the logistical and administrative issues created by transitioning approved products in this way). Check out our prior blog post on the final deemed to be a license transition guidance.

FDA guidance documents for all regulated product categories continued to be released on a regular basis this year, including several related to areas of agency priorities under the DCAP and BAP including the final biosimilar interchangeability guidance issued in May (see our blog post here) and a draft guidance on insulin interchangeability issued in November 2019. The latter also relates to the March 2020 NDA-to-BLA transition, as insulins are one of the largest class of products that will be transitioning into regulation as biologics, making them open to what is expected to be more efficient competition through the BPCIAs biosimilar pathway than what was possible in the past as insulin NDAs.

Despite the accelerated pace of the issuance of Agency guidance, however, FDA is beginning to face more challenges related to its decision-making and the scope of its exercise of agency discretion. In particular, a significant District Court for the District of Columbia ruling issued on December 6, 2019, Genus Medical Technologies, LLC v. FDA, provides hints of a potential shift in judicial deference to certain agency actions. The court vacated FDAs classification of a medical imaging liquid as a drug rather than as a device after determining that FDA did not have discretion to decide how to regulate a product merely because the definitions of drug and device overlap in the FD&C Act.

According to the district court judge, FDA was not interpreting the drug/device definitions in the statute properly, and Congress did not intend to allow the agency unfettered discretion to pick between the two categories. Rather, the court found that the text of the definitions are clear and do not create a gap or any ambiguity for FDA to fill with an exercise of agency discretion. This recently issued decision may indicate a potential shift in how courts are going to apply long-standing precedents related to judicial deference to agency decisions. If FDA decides to appeal the Genus ruling, it may end up at the Supreme Court as one of many expected challenges to the doctrines that established our current framework for judicial deference of an administrative agencys interpretation of an ambiguous statute.

One of the first FDA press releases for 2019 was co-authored by former Commissioner Gottlieb and Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) Director Peter Marks and was focused on the agencys new policies aiming to advance the development of safe and effective cell and gene therapies. In the press release, the agency leaders predicted that by 2020, FDA would receive more than 200 Investigational New Drug Applications (INDs) for cell and gene therapies each year. The agency has continued to work diligently to increase its staff in CBER to conduct clinical reviews for such INDs and to try to keep pace with the industrys development of these innovative technologies.

As we discussed in our update on FDAs Comprehensive Regenerative Medicine Policy Framework earlier this year, the agency is prioritizing two parallel goals: (1) clarifying the regulatory criteria for product marketing and providing support and guidance to legitimate product developers; and (2) removing unapproved, unproven, and potentially unsafe products from the U.S. market. The second prong of this comprehensive plan for regenerative medicine products was the topic of one of Dr. Gottliebs very last statements as Commissioner before he left the agency, issued on April 3, 2019 in conjunction with CBER Director Dr. Marks, indicating how important this area is to the agencys current public health priorities.

In the April 2019 statement, Drs. Gottlieb and Marks acknowledged FDAs challenges and efforts to stop stem cell clinics and manufacturers from marketing unapproved products that put patients at risk, citing several Warning Letters issued to manufacturers that violated current good manufacturing practices (CGMPs) for human cells and tissue products. They noted that it was of particular concern given that the industry was nearly halfway through the period during which the FDA intends to exercise enforcement discretion for certain regenerative medicine products with respect to INDs and premarket approval requirements. Now that it is December 2019, that deadline is even closer with less than one year left. November 2020 is the end of the three-year period of enforcement discretion announced by FDA when it first articulated the policies and goals of this comprehensive framework in 2017. See our prior posts on the topic here and here.

Under the Comprehensive Regenerative Medicine Policy Framework, FDA appears to have stepped up the pace of issuing Warning and Untitled Letters to sellers of unapproved stem cell products during the second half of 2019. In conjunction with a Warning Letter issued on December 5, 2019 to two related companies for processing and marketing unapproved umbilical cord blood-derived cellular products, Dr. Marks of CBER reiterated the agencys concerns about safety and reminded the public of the upcoming compliance deadline: As evidenced by the number of actions that the agency has taken this month alone, there are still many companies that have failed to come into compliance with the [FD&C Act] and FDAs regulations.

Dr. Marks was referring to two Untitled Letters that were issued to stem cell product distributors on November 20 and November 25, 2019, respectively. The press release cited above also added that the agency had also recently sent 20 letters to manufacturers and health care providers noting that it has come to [FDAs] attention that they may be offering unapproved stem cell products, reiterating the FDAs compliance and enforcement policy.

FDA also prevailed this year in the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Florida against a stem cell clinic charged with violating the FD&C Act and the PHS Act. In June 2019, the court held that the defendants adulterated and misbranded a stem cell drug product made from a patients adipose tissue without FDA approval and for significant deviations from CGMPs, issuing a permanent injunction as requested by the Department of Justice on FDAs behalf. The agencys statement on that important court win by the government is available here.

Lastly, on December 6, 2019, FDA issued a Public Safety Notification on Exosome Products. The safety notification informed the public of multiple recent reports of serious adverse events experienced by patients in Nebraska who were treated with unapproved products marketed as containing exosomes, which came to FDAs attention through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, and others. There are currently no FDA-approved exosome products and, to be honest, we are not even sure what such a product would be since an exome consists of all the sequenced exons within a single human genome after the introns are removed. (So were the clinics administering complete exomes to patients? that seems unlikely.)But what we found noteworthy about this public safety notice is the forceful and direct language FDA used when describing the unscrupulous conduct of the sellers of these products:

Certain clinics across the country, including some that manufacture or market violative stem cell products, are now also offering exosome products to patients. They deceive patients with unsubstantiated claims about the potential for these products to prevent, treat or cure various diseases or conditions. They may claim that they these products do not fall under the regulatory provisions for drugs and biological products that is simply untrue. As a general matter, exosomes used to treat diseases and conditions in humans are regulated as drugs and biological products under the [PHS Act] and the [FD&C Act] and are subject to premarket review and approval requirements.

The clinics currently offering these products outside of FDAs review process are taking advantage of patients and flouting federal statutes and FDA regulations. This ultimately puts at risk the very patients that these clinics claim to want to help, by either delaying treatment with legitimate and scientifically sound treatment options, or worse, posing harm to patients, as evidenced by these recent reports of adverse events.

As we enter the final year of FDAs enforcement discretion period, perhaps these public notices and Warning/Untitled Letters will become even more frequent and the agency will become even more frustrated by the ongoing violations and medical practitioners who flout federal law. This area will see substantial activity in 2020 and we will be watching closely to see what changes, if anything, about FDAs approach in November when the deadline to come into compliance ends. Will there be widespread FBI raids on stem cell clinics engaged in this kind of bad behavior? Only time will tell.

Although we have highlighted what we view as some important challenges for the FDA to address in the coming months, other areas continue to be business as usual without anything very new to report. FDA continues to invest significant resources into improving the quality of compounded drugs and ensuring compliance with Sections 503A and 503B of the FD&C Act. Drug compounding was another topic of one of Dr. Gottliebs very last statements as Commissioner on April 3, 2019, in which he laid out the 2019 compounding priorities that included maintaining quality manufacturing and compliance and regulating compounding from bulk drug substances.

Notwithstanding all the efforts by FDA and State regulators in this area over the past several years, the agency continues to see concerning activity when it comes to compounded drugs, such as problems related to the condition under which compounded sterile medicines are made, which raisesignificant risks to patients. As a result, FDA has made it an intense area of focus to take enforcement actions against compounders who fail to produce sterile drugs in compliance with the law. During the past year, for example, FDA has won at least four permanent injunctions against various compounders after the agency identified behavior that posed a significant risk to public health and safety.

In addition, in 2019 FDA also increased its activities towards reducing and mitigating the impact of drug shortages on the health care system. See our prior blog post on Drug Shortages.

Finally, after a fairly slow year of enforcement in the prescription drug advertising space, the last two months of 2019, at least as of December 12th, have given us three (!) letters two untitled and one warning from the FDAs Office of Prescription Drug Promotion (OPDP). Most interestingly, the Warning Letter issued on December 2, 2019 for omitting warnings about the most serious risks associated with [a medication-assisted treatment] drug from promotional materials was announced to the public via FDA press release, which is not a typical action for normal-course OPDP letters to industry. The drug in question, approved for the prevention of relapse to opioid dependence following opioid detoxification, is associated with several significant risks including potential opioid overdose. Given the countrys public health emergency that is the opioid epidemic, FDA appears to have felt the need to make the deficiencies in the advertisement and those risks more widely publicized. So another thing we will be watching for in the New Year is whether this OPDP action represents the beginning of a new trend by the agency to publicize these Warning Letters more directly, or whether its advertising enforcement activities may be picking up due to industrys evolving approaches to promoting therapeutic products.

1994-2019 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. All Rights Reserved.

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Drugs, Biologics, and Regenerative Medicine in 2019 - The National Law Review

US Network of Specialized Angelman Clinics to Double Thanks to New Partnership – Angelman Syndrome News

As part of her medical training, North Carolina pediatrician Elizabeth Jalazo had studied a little about Angelman syndrome.

I knew enough about it to answer a board question, but I didnt know the complexity of the disorder, she said. Im sure most general pediatricians would share the same sentiment.

Then Jalazo gave birth to a daughter with Angelman and she quickly became an expert on the disease. Evelyn, now 5, is the second of three siblings; theres also Anna, 7, and Charlie, 2.

I didnt know immediately that she had Angelman, but I knew there was something different about Evelyn within five days of her being born, Jalazo said. As most families, we endured a yearlong odyssey of diagnosis. And that was only because I was a clinician at a hospital that had a developmental center where I could push for her to be evaluated.

At the time, Jalazo was a chief resident at Baltimores Kennedy Krieger Institute a division of Johns Hopkins University so I could pick up the phone and ask a professional favor. I basically skipped 9-12 months of wait time.

Jalazo now is a full-time clinician at the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, where she sees kids with Angelman, Hunter syndrome, and other genetic disorders.

For the past six months, shes also been director of clinical integration at the Chicago-based Angelman Syndrome Foundation (ASF), a nonprofit group dedicated to finding a cure for the severe neurological disorder that affects Evelyn and about 25,000 other Americans.

The U.S. network of specialized clinics Jalazo oversees is now set to more than double in size from eight to 18 thanks to a new partnership between the ASF and the Dup15q Alliance. The network also includes four non-U.S. clinics, in Argentina, Canada, Israel, and the Netherlands.

The 15q Clinical Research Network, as the joint effort is known, will serve patients with Angelman and dup15q syndromes both rare conditions that stem from mutations in the same region of chromosome 15.

In Angelman, the mutation is most commonly a microdeletion on chromosome 15 encompassing theUBE3A gene. This prevents the production of the UBE3A enzyme in certain brain regions.

Partnering with the Dup15q Alliance will allow us to increase our reach to the AS community and provide the best care for our families, Amanda Moore,the foundations CEO, said in a press release. Comprehensive and specific care is critical for AS families throughout the stages of their journey by partnering with Dup15q Alliance, we are able to reach thousands more families with care and support by bringing AS clinics to their location.

The ASF operates on an annual budget of $2 million and uses half of that to fund research. It currently serves 3,500 patients in the database and has around 22,000 followers on social media.

The network Jalazo supervises began in 2011, when three specialized Angelman facilities at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, UNCs Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities in Chapel Hill, and the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City all became ASF-supported clinics. Six more were added over the last eight years.

Patients travel to where they can receive this evidence-based care, said Jalazo, who spoke to Angelman Syndrome News at the 2019 NORD Rare Diseases & Orphan Products Breakthrough Summit, organized by the National Organization for Rare Disorders.

When its challenging to travel with a child that has special needs especially one with a rare disorder that no ones ever heard of it becomes incredibly beneficial to see all the specialists you need to see in one or two days, she said.

Most of these clinics operate one day a month, though some sites such as Mass General see patients weekly. The current U.S. network treats around 700 Angelman patients throughout the United States; including the four foreign clinics, the ASF network serves close to 1,000 patients.

In December 2018, Israels Sheba Medical Center at Tel HaShomer joined the network. That specialized AS clinic, housed at Shebas Edmond and Lily Safra Childrens Hospital just outside Tel Aviv, was established seven years ago by pediatric neurologist Gali Heimer. Since then, its evolved into the fourth-largest specialized Angelman syndrome clinic in the world, treating 85 of Israels known 100 or so Angelman patients.

Thanks to the new agreement between ASF and Dup15q Alliance both based in the Chicago area 10 Angelman clinics will join the ASF network, including Seattle Childrens Hospital, MiamisNicklaus Childrens Hospital, and the Intermountain Primary Childrens Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.

This isnt the first time ASF and Dup15q Alliance have worked together. Because the two syndromes are similar, the groups have co-hosted a research symposium every two years. Many researchers who study Angelman also study dup15q.

Our goal is to bring together all the providers caring for Angelman individuals across the globe, Jalazo said. We encourage our sites to be multidisciplinary, so that patients can receive comprehensive care, but we do recognize that some clinicians around the world are not seeing patients in a multidisciplinary setting.

As clinical director at the ASF, Jalazo oversees a monthly virtual meeting via Zoom where representatives of all the clinics talk about pressing issues.

One of the biggest challenges is harnessing the power of patient data, she said. Every time a patient shows up at a clinic, an incredible amount of data is collected thats valuable to patient care, to understanding the natural history of the disease, and to drug development. So we want to harness that and ensure were utilizing and formatting it in a way thats accessible.

Jalazo said that when it comes to her own daughter, an early diagnosis definitely helped. Evelyn has been on a modified ketogenic (low-carb, high-fat) diet from a very early age.

She eats whatevers put in front of her, said the pediatrician, adding that Evelyn generally eats eggs and avocados every morning. Shell go find the blender and if its 3 p.m. and I havent made a smoothie, shell bang the cup on the counter.

Indeed, though the little girl cant speak, she does communicate.

If she needs something, shell go get it and bring it to me. Shell force eye contact. Before she could even walk, shed scoot over to you and direct your gaze over to whatever she wanted you to see, Jalazo said. I think she understands most of what I tell her. There are certain tones she uses. Her term of endearment is a g sound which means I love you.

Evelyns sister, Anna, is a natural caretaker and knows intuitively what Evelyn needs, while Evelyn and Charlie have a very typical sibling relationship they fight all the time, Jalazo said.

Shes completely nonverbal and youd assume she cant read the cues of social situations, but she and Charlie communicate 100% effectively, she said.

As for a cure for AS, Jalazo said gene therapy is extremely promising but that short-term, the focus is on antisense oligonucleotides, or ASOs. These are small pieces of DNA or RNA that can bind to specific molecules of RNA and reduce, restore, or modify protein expression.

Its an incredibly exciting time for the Angelman community, in terms of promising therapeutics coming down the pipeline, one of which is gene therapy, she said. In the immediate future, well have the opportunity to see the impact of non-gene therapy approaches like ASOs. This will give us a little sneak peek into what gene therapy can do.

Total Posts: 11

Ana holds a PhD in Immunology from the University of Lisbon and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Instituto de Medicina Molecular (iMM) in Lisbon, Portugal. She graduated with a BSc in Genetics from the University of Newcastle and received a Masters in Biomolecular Archaeology from the University of Manchester, England. After leaving the lab to pursue a career in Science Communication, she served as the Director of Science Communication at iMM.

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US Network of Specialized Angelman Clinics to Double Thanks to New Partnership - Angelman Syndrome News

ICMR issues guidelines for gene therapy in India – Daily Pioneer

To ensure that CRISPR gene editing technology is not misused as was done by a Chinese scientist who created the gene-edited babies recently that attracted global criticism, the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has framed national guidelines and regulations regarding the procedures and requirements to be followed for performing Gene Therapy in India.

CRISPR stands for clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats are DNA sequences found within the genome of prokaryotes, and are used in genome editing along with enzymes called CRISPR-associated nucleases (most commonly Cas9).

Gene Therapy refers to the process of introduction, removal or change in content of an individuals genetic material with the goal of treating the disease and a possibility of achieving long term cure.

Since this nascent field is emerging in India, the Government has proactively have come up with the National Guidelines for Gene Therapy Product Development and Clinical Trials to promote further research and streamline regulatory processes for future clinical trials using gene therapeutic products (GTPs).

As per the New Drugs and Clinical trial Rules (2019) the GTPs falls under new drug and shall always be deemed to be new drug. Thus as per these rules framed jointly by Indian Council of medical Research and Department of Biotechnology (DBT), academic trials are not applicable to clinical trials using GTPs.

"India has large burden of genetic disorders and unmet medical needs and gene therapy can prove to be a turning point in treatment of such disorders. However, it also brings along with it unique technical risks and ethical challenges," said an official from the ICMR.

She cited the creation of babies using germline gene editing by a Chinese scientist recently that has fuelled a debate on ethical concerns regarding applications of gene therapy technologies.

"This also brought to forefront the requirement of stringent guidelines and regulations to prevent misuse and premature commercialization.

"Many countries around the world have developed rules and guidelines to regulate gene therapy trials.

Taking cognizance of situation, it was felt necessary to frame national guidelines and regulations to direct scientists and clinicians including industry regarding the procedures and requirements to be followed for performing gene therapy in India," she added.

It is proposed to establish Gene Therapy Advisory and Evaluation Committee (GTAEC) anchored at ICMR. GTAEC shall be an independent body of experts representing diverse areas of biomedical research, concerned government agencies and other stakeholders.

"This committee will be composed of a core group of scientists and clinicians in the sector, as well as representation of the government agencies (ICMR, DGHS, CDSCO, DBT, DST, MCI). For each disease area in GTP trials, specific clinical consultants with extensive disease specific expertise will be co-opted to aid in the decision-making process," as per the guidelines.

It says that biological material from humans can be procured only from clinics/hospitals that have an evaluation committee.

The EC must ensure that the Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) are in compliance with the national guidelines. "Investigators should treat the biological material with utmost respect and adequate care to avoid its misuse. The institute needs to define SOPs for development, production; storage and disposal of the GTPs or its components should be as per the Regulations and Guidelines on Bio-safety of Recombinant DNA Research and Bio-containment 2017," says the guidelines.

Until 2017, almost 2600 gene therapy and 6 clinical trials have been conducted worldwide in 38 countries, of which 64.9 per cent were in USA, 23.2 per cent in Europe and approximately 6.5 per cent were in Asia.

Within Asia, China has reported about 84 gene therapy clinical trials, followed by Japan (44 trials) and South Korea (14 trials). The vast majority of gene therapy trials have addressed cancer (66.6 per cent), monogenic diseases (11.5 per cent), cardiovascular diseases (6.2 per cent) and infectious diseases (6.3 per cent)

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ICMR issues guidelines for gene therapy in India - Daily Pioneer

University of Iowa researchers say $18 million grant could soon lead to cure for rare brain disease – KCRG

IOWA CITY, Iowa (KCRG) - Researchers at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics received an $18 million federal grant to continue research on a rare brain disorder. They say that could lead them to ultimately finding a cure.

Dr. Peg Nopoulos, a neuroscientist with UIHC says they have been studying Huntington's disease on children that are at risk of acquiring the disease. The fatal brain disease is genetic, currently has no cure, and can affect how a person acts or thinks.

Nopoulos said the grant funding that they will receive over the next five years from the National Institutes of Health will help them complete their clinical trial for the disease, that is currently in the third phase. She said that could lead to positive results to combat the disease.

"We're looking to see if that therapy can slow progression," Nopoulos said. "The ultimate goal is if those trials are successful, then we're going to want to give it to people who are at-risk and who carry the gene but have not yet had the disease. We want to prevent it."

Nopoulos said she believes based on their research, a cure for Huntington's disease could come sooner rather than later.

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University of Iowa researchers say $18 million grant could soon lead to cure for rare brain disease - KCRG

Mergers and Acquisitions Will Strengthen Payer Identity in 2020 – HealthPayerIntelligence.com

December 11, 2019 -Payers will seek to strengthen their identities in 2020 and they will use mergers and acquisitions as the tools for transformation, according to a recent HRIs PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) report.

In 2020, organizations will make strategic deals not to just grow larger but instead to expand into new identities with platforms anchored in value, innovation, customer experience and population health, the report stated. As they weigh their options, health companies will need to ensure that the deals they pursue pass the sniff test of employers and consumers seeking more affordable care.

Forty percent of healthcare executives from across the industryincluding payers, providers, pharmaceutical companies, and othersare somewhat or very likely to work with or acquire companies from other sectors of the industry in the new year. When making these deals, 26 percent of payer executives prioritize finding partners that maintain or increase their companies competitive advantages.

The report highlights four identities that payers and other healthcare organizations can embrace in 2020 that may influence their deal-making decisions.

Some payers may choose to emphasize their strengths as product and innovation leaders. To achieve this, they will seek partnerships with providers and researchers who have acclaimed specialty skillsets. These payers may also focus on acquiring healthcare technology brands to support the payers technological superiority and advancements.

In step with this prediction, a KLAS report from earlier in 2019 revealed that payers are moving away from systems that they have relied on for a long time. Instead, they seem to favor partnering with new, disruptive technologies. These partnerships can help develop an innovative public image.

Cignas deal with Express Scripts is an excellent example of a payer making a deal to enhance its identity as a technology leader. Because of that partnership, the payer has been able to develop a new gene therapy payment model with Embarc.

Payers that strive to be population health and outcomes leaders will require strong relationships and excellent communication with provider and advocacy groups. These payers should also have an excellent grasp of community health and access to care challenges.

Companies choosing this identity may look to acquire smaller organizations focused on key patient segments as they focus product portfolios and develop patient engagement services to ensure optimal outcomes, PwC suggested.

PwC pointed to Clovers Medicare Advantage plan and its Clover Therapeutics medicinal research branch as an example of a successful leader in population health management and patient outcomes.

Other payer may seek to become member experience and consumer advocacy leaders in 2020. In this case, finding partners that can improve access to care, ease, and healthcare payer services are key to elevating the patient experience.

Partnerships in this category are aiming for longevity with their members, with the goal of retaining members for their lifetimes. Facilitating worksite clinics can be one way to improve the member experience by making access to healthcare highly convenient.

Value leadership was responsible for some of the biggest deals of 2019, according to PwC, and it will continue to be a major driver in 2020. For example, Optum acquired DaVita Medical Group and CVS Health Hartford likely because they wanted to enhance their value leadership identity, PwC suggested.

However, as important as these categories may be, the report urged payers and healthcare companies to think outside of the box and potentially combine different identities to make a new one.

The product leader in the future will be a much harder sell, King Li, MD, dean of the Carle Illinois College of Medicine and chief academic officer of the Carle Health System predicted in the report. Its hard to say you are a product leader when people make decisions based on the same AI support. In this case, patient experience will become much more important in achieving a positive outcome.

One trend that payers considering a merger or acquisition next year will need to keep in mind is the patient and employer perspective. These demographics are the most affected by payer mergers and are largely ambiguous on their sentiments toward healthcare mergers. Payers need to keep patient and employer communication lines open to inform them of changes in their coverage during mergers and listen to patients and employers needs.

Lastly, PwC proposed that payers and healthcare organizations looking to make deals and improve their identities find a private equity partner.

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Parkinsons Disease Treatment Market 2019- Global Industry Analysis, by Key Players, Segmentation, Application, Demand and Forecast by 2025 – Tribunal…

Global Parkinsons Disease Treatment Market 2019-2025 Overview

The Parkinsons disease treatment market growth was driven because of increase in the geriatric population and the rise in the occurrence of the Parkinsons disease and the funding for research.

Global Parkinsons disease treatment market is anticipated to experience the substantial growth during the forecast period. Growth in the occurrence of the Parkinsons diseases is projected to supplement the growth of global Parkinsons disease treatment market in the coming future. In addition, the combined treatments supporting in the long action of constant dopaminergic stimulation medicines, neural transplantation and gene therapy is expected to fuel the Parkinsons disease treatment market growth.

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Parkinsons disorder is a neurological disorder affecting the movements of body. There are five stages of this disease and can hamper the individuals leg & hand movements, facial expressions getting worse with the growing age. Increase in the elderly population related to the rise in the investments in the activities of research & development, growth in the awareness for healthcare and the neurological disorders are the factors driving the global Parkinsons disease treatment market growth over the forecast period. On the other hand, due to the presence of the other treatments is hampering the Parkinsons disease treatment market growth.

Current developments in the Parkinsons disease treatment, for example, combined treatment to continue the effect of constant dopaminergic stimulation medicines, gene therapy, neural transplantation, neuroprotective treatment to reduce the disease prediction and support for the neurostimulation tools are estimated to provide large development in the global Parkinsons disease treatment market growth during the forecast period. Moreover, major characteristics that are fueling the requirement and demand for the global parkinsons disease treatment market are prevalence of parkinsons disease and growth in the geriatric population. Two important characteristics that are responsible to boost the Parkinsons disease treatment market development are prevalence of the neurodegenerative syndrome and rise in the elderly population. Although, increase in the medicines in the pipeline and growth in the R&D activities are anticipated to surge the Parkinsons disease treatment market size. In addition, lack of skills for the early diagnosis and large spending on treatment is projected to bolster the development of global Parkinsons disease treatment market.

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Key factor driving the growth of Parkinsons disease treatment market is the growth in the acceptance of the treatment for Parkinson disease in healthcare sector. For treating and detecting the dysfunctioning of the human beings central nervous system and the neurological damage because of lack of cells and nerves are the main function of Parkinsons disease treatment market.

Global Parkinsons disease treatment market is segmented into end-use, distribution channel, drug class and region. Based on end-use, market is divided into clinics and hospitals. On the basis of distribution channel, market is divided into retail pharmacies, online pharmacies and hospital. On considering the drug class, market is divided into MAO inhibitors, Levopoda/ Carbidopa and Dopamine Receptor Agonists.

Geographically, regions involved in the development of Parkinsons disease treatment market growth are Europe, North America and Asia Pacific. Asia Pacific is anticipated to show the rapid growth because of the increase in the trend of medical tourism and medical infrastructure. North America holds the largest

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Parkinsons disease treatment market share. Europe is dominating the Parkinsons disease treatment market because of the maximum market revenue in the coming years.

Key players involved in the Parkinsons disease treatment market analysis are Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Novartis AG, Impax Laboratories and GlaxoSmithKline.

Key Segments in the Global Parkinsons Disease Treatment Market are-

By End-Use, market is segmented into:

By Distribution Channel, market is segmented into:

By Drug Class, market is segmented into:

By Regions market is segmented into:

What to expect from the Global Parkinsons Disease Treatment Market report?

Predictions of future made for this market during the forecast period.

Information on the current technologies, trends, devices, procedures, and products in the industry.

Detailed analysis of the market segmentation, depending on the types, devices, and products.

Government regulations and economic factors affecting the growth of the market.

An insight into the leading manufacturers.

Regional demographics of the market.

Who should buy this report?

Venture capitalists, Investors, financial institutions, Analysts, Government organizations, regulatory authorities, policymakers ,researchers, strategy managers, and academic institutions looking for insights into the market to determine future strategies

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Adroit Market Research is an India-based business analytics and consulting company incorporated in 2018. Our target audience is a wide range of corporations, manufacturing companies, product/technology development institutions and industry associations that require understanding of a markets size, key trends, participants and future outlook of an industry. We intend to become our clients knowledge partner and provide them with valuable market insights to help create opportunities that increase their revenues. We follow a code Explore, Learn and Transform. At our core, we are curious people who love to identify and understand industry patterns, create an insightful study around our findings and churn out money-making roadmaps.

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Aspen Neuro Bags $6.5M to Test Parkinson’s Disease Stem Cell Therapy – Xconomy

XconomySan Diego

Nearly nine years ago Jeanne Loring and her colleagues at Scripps Research debuted a test that leveraged advances in genomics and data science to determine, without testing in animals, whether human stem cells were pluripotent, or able to become any type of cell in the body.

Being able to prove that has become increasingly important as scientists look to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)mature, specialized cells that have been reprogrammed as immature cells, regaining the capability of becoming any type of cellas material for new regenerative medicines.

Now Loring and Andres Bratt-Leal, who joined her lab in 2012 as a post-doctoral researcher, have founded a biotech that combines stem cell biology and genomics know-how to advance a potential cell therapy for Parkinsons disease.

The startup announced Thursday it raised a seed round of $6.5 million to support its work. Aspens lead drug candidate, which is in preclinical testing, is intended to replace neurons in the brains of people with the disease, which causes those cells to become damaged or die.

When people with Parkinsons disease lose neurons, they also lose a chemical messenger the cells produce, called dopamine. Without dopamine, communication between nerve cells falters, which leads to the debilitating motor problems that characterize the disease. Existing Parkinsons drugs aim to alter dopamine levels. Aspen, however, wants to fix the upstream problem that leads to those lowered levels by reconstructing patients damaged neural networks.

The cell therapy would involve harvesting patients own living cells through a skin biopsy, reprogramming them to immature cells, or iPSCs, then further engineering them to become predisposed to mature into neurons. Once enough of those cells have been grown in the lab, those neuron precursor cells would be delivered directly to the brain.

Using a patients own cells avoids the dangerous immune system reactions that can occur when donor cells are used in such therapies, and obviates the need for immunosuppression drugs. Two cell therapies that use genetic engineering have been approved by the FDA, both of which take and tweak patients T cells into treatments for cancer. Stem cell transplants have been used to treat some cancers.

Aspen worked to ensure the company could ably manufacture a so-called autologous replacement cell therapy, or one from a patients one cells, by improving the process of differentiating iPSCs into dopamine neurons, Loring says. And the group developed another predictive genomic-based test, similar to the effort Loring spearheaded nearly a decade ago to determine whether cells were pluripotent, that can detect which iPSCs are destined to become neurons.

(Bratt-Leal) put his biological engineering expertise into coming up with a way that was reproducible, that we would get the same cells no matter who we got the original cells from, she says.

The company plans to test the therapy in patients that they determine, through genomic testing, have the most common form of Parkinsons, which is referred to as sporadic and arises without a clear genetic predisposition. It also has a second treatment in the works that it intends to develop for patients with familial forms of the disease, and uses a gene editing toolyet to be selectedto alter their stem cells during the reprogramming process.

Howard Federoff, who was most recently vice chancellor for health affairs and CEO of the UC Irvine Health system, is Aspens CEO. Federoff says he has come to believe that Parkinsons patients need more than just to stabilize their disease They need to turn the clock back.

Many companies are working on drugs to treat Parkinsons, but most are meant to manage symptoms rather than reverse the disease. Levodopa, which supplants missing dopamine, is used widely, but it can cause side effects, including involuntary movement called dyskinesia; and, as the disease progresses, the drug eventually stops working between doses.

Aspen claims it is the only company working toward an autologous neuron replacement. The company, however, will need to raise a Series A round to move its drug candidates through Phase 2 proof-of-concept trials, Loring says.

The company raised its seed round from a group of investors including Domain Associates, Alexandria Venture Investments, Arch Venture Partners, Axon Ventures, OrbiMed, and Section 32. Initially, it was financed through grants from Summit for Stem Cell, a San Diego-based nonprofit.

Sarah de Crescenzo is an Xconomy editor based in San Diego. You can reach her at sdecrescenzo@xconomy.com.

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Aspen Neuro Bags $6.5M to Test Parkinson's Disease Stem Cell Therapy - Xconomy

LentiGlobin Gene Therapy Continues to Show Promising Results in SCD, Updated Trial Data Shows – Sickle Cell Anemia News

LentiGlobin, Bluebird Bios investigational gene therapy for sickle cell disease (SCD), continues to show promising results in SCD patients participating in the companys Phase 1/2 HGB-206 clinical trial, according to the latest study data.

The new findings which included data from additional patients treated in the trial, updated data from those previously reported, and exploratory analyses were presented at the 61st American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition, held Dec. 6-10 in Orlando, Fla.

LentiGlobinisa gene therapy that has been developed to increase the levels of hemoglobin the protein that transports oxygen in the blood in people with SCD.

The therapy works by delivering functional copies of a modified form of the beta-globin gene (A-T87Q-globin gene) into patients red blood cell precursors, known as hematopoietic stem cells, or HSCs. Once these precursors differentiate, their red blood cells start producing a modified version of hemoglobin, called HbAT87Q.

By boosting the production of this anti-sickling form of the protein, LentiGlobin reduces the proportion of defective hemoglobin in patients red blood cells. That, in turn, reduces the sickling and destruction of these red blood cells and other complications associated with SCD.

The safety and efficacy of LentiGlobin is currently being evaluated in three groups identified as A-C of SCD patients participating in Bluebirds ongoing open-label, Phase 1/2 HGB-206 trial (NCT02140554).

Those in group A were treated per the original trial protocol. Meanwhile, those in groups B and C received an enhanced treatment protocol, approved in 2016, that is designed to increase the therapys efficiency. In groups A and B, patients HSCs were extracted from the bone marrow, while in group C, they were extracted from the blood.

As of the data cutoff date of August 26, 2019, seven participants in group A, two in group B, and 17 in group C had been treated with LentiGlobin. According to new data presented at the meeting, only two patients from group A required regular blood transfusions after the treatment.

In addition, the updated findings revealed that the levels of anti-sickling HbAT87Q remained stable in all participants from groups A and B over a post-treatment follow-up period of three years. Similarly, levels of total hemoglobin also were found to have remained stable in both patient groups over a two-year follow-up.

At the trial participants last visit, the median levels of anti-sickling HbAT87Q were 0.9 g/dL among those from group A, and 3.6 g/dL and 7.1 g/dL in the two patients from group B. The median levels of total hemoglobin were 9.0 g/dL among patients from group A, and 11.3 g/dL and 13.0 g/dL among those from group B.

Normal levels of hemoglobin in the blood range from 12.5 to 17.5 g/dL.

Among 12 patients from group C who were followed for at least six months, the median levels of anti-sickling HbAT87Q made up at least 40% of their total hemoglobin. At their last visit, the levels of anti-sickling HbAT87Q ranged from 2.7 to 9.0 g/dL, and the levels of total hemoglobin from 9.3 to 15.2 g/dL.

In groups A and B, LentiGlobin reduced the frequency of painful vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs) and acute chest syndrome (ACS) in the two years following treatment.

Nine patients from group C who were followed for at least six months had experienced four or more VOCs or ACS episodes in the two years prior to receiving LentiGlobin. Treatment with the gene therapy led to a reduction of 99% in the frequency of annual VOCs and ACS. In this group, there were no reports of ACS or severe VOCs for up to 21 months following treatment.

Moreover, among those from group C, LentiGlobin reduced the levels of different markers of red blood cells destruction, including reticulocytes, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and bilirubin.

LentiGlobins safety profile was consistent with previous data. No serious adverse events related to treatment were reported during the study. Only one mild, non-serious event of hot flush was found to be related to LentiGlobin. That event was rapidly resolved and did not require treatment.

Exploratory analyses were performed in a sub-group of patients from all three groups. In 12 participants who had been followed for at least six months, more than 70% of the individuals red blood cells were found to contain the anti-sickling HbAT87Q at the last study visit, these analyses showed. Moreover, in four of these patients, nearly all their red blood cells (90%) were positive for HbAT87Q.

In addition, exploratory analyses revealed that participants red blood cells were less prone to sickling following treatment with LentiGlobin.

At ASH, the growing body of data from our clinical studies of LentiGlobin for SCD reflects results from 26 treated patients with up to four years of follow-up, David Davidson, MD, Bluebird Bios chief medical officer, said in a press release.

We continue to observe patients treated in Group C producing high levels of gene-therapy derived anti-sickling hemoglobin, HbAT87Q, accounting for at least 40% of total hemoglobin in those with six or more months of follow-up, and exploratory assays show that HbAT87Q is present in most red blood cells of treated patients, Davidson said.

The robust production of HbAT87Q was associated with substantial reductions of sickle hemoglobin, HbS, as well as improvement in key markers of hemolysis [red blood cells destruction]. Most importantly, patients in Group C have not experienced any episodes of acute chest syndrome or serious vaso-occlusive crises following LentiGlobin for SCD treatment, he added.

The company is recruiting participants with transfusion-dependent -thalassemia (TDT) for a Phase 3 trial (NCT03207009) testing LentiGlobin. Moreover, according to the companys pipeline, there is a Phase 2/3 trial planned in sickle cell disease for this gene therapy.

Joana is currently completing her PhD in Biomedicine and Clinical Research at Universidade de Lisboa. She also holds a BSc in Biology and an MSc in Evolutionary and Developmental Biology from Universidade de Lisboa. Her work has been focused on the impact of non-canonical Wnt signaling in the collective behavior of endothelial cells cells that make up the lining of blood vessels found in the umbilical cord of newborns.

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Margarida graduated with a BS in Health Sciences from the University of Lisbon and a MSc in Biotechnology from Instituto Superior Tcnico (IST-UL). She worked as a molecular biologist research associate at a Cambridge UK-based biotech company that discovers and develops therapeutic, fully human monoclonal antibodies.

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LentiGlobin Gene Therapy Continues to Show Promising Results in SCD, Updated Trial Data Shows - Sickle Cell Anemia News