Processa Pharmaceuticals Schedules Conference Call to Discuss Third Quarter Results and Provide Drug Development Update on Nov. 12 at 5:30 p.m. ET

HANOVER, Md., Nov. 03, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via InvestorWire -- Processa Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: PCSA) (“Processa” or the “Company”), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing products to improve survival and/or quality of life for patients who have high unmet medical need conditions, today announces it will host a conference call and live webcast on Nov. 12, 2020, at 5:30 p.m. Eastern time to discuss its third quarter 2020 results and provide an update on the Company’s clinical pipeline. The update will include a discussion of the Company’s three clinical-stage drugs (each of which addresses potential billion-dollar markets):

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Processa Pharmaceuticals Schedules Conference Call to Discuss Third Quarter Results and Provide Drug Development Update on Nov. 12 at 5:30 p.m. ET

Tauriga Sciences Inc. Reports Continued Growth in its E-Commerce Business With a 25.8% Increase in Average Order Size

NEW YORK, NY, Nov. 03, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire -- Tauriga Sciences, Inc. (OTCQB: TAUG) (“Tauriga” or the “Company”), a revenue generating, diversified life sciences company, with a proprietary line of functional “supplement” chewing gums (Flavors: Pomegranate, Blood Orange, Peach-Lemon, Pear Bellini, Mint, Black Currant) as well as two ongoing Biotechnology initiatives, today announced that during October 2020, the Company reported continued growth in its highest margin E-Commerce business segment. Additionally, there was a sharp increase (more than 25%) in the average order size – with respect to each individual On-Line E-Commerce transaction.  The Company’s E-Commerce business is its highest margin segment and there are a number of potential future catalysts that the Company believes can fuel future growth.

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Tauriga Sciences Inc. Reports Continued Growth in its E-Commerce Business With a 25.8% Increase in Average Order Size

NuGenerex Immuno-Oncology Announces the Launch of a New Corporate Website

MIRAMAR, Fla., Nov. 03, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- NuGenerex Immuno-Oncology (NGIO), a subsidiary of Generex Biotechnology Corporation (www.generex.com) (OTCQB:GNBT) (http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/GNBT/quote) is pleased to announce that the company has launched its new corporate website to provide investors with information on the NGIO mission, management, and pipeline for the Ii-Key vaccine platform for cancer and infectious disease. You can also learn about the company’s ongoing SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development program and collaborations. You can visit the site at https://www.nugenerexio.com/.

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NuGenerex Immuno-Oncology Announces the Launch of a New Corporate Website

What’s On The Ballot? Here’s A Look At California’s 2020 Propositions – KPBS

Listen to the Podcast Episode

While much of the attention on the November election is focused on the race for President, Californians are going to have a lot of other decisions to make. One (or 12) of the biggest: the statewide ballot measures.

Aired: November 2, 2020 | Transcript

While much of the attention on the November election is focused on the race for President, Californians are going to have a lot of other decisions to make. One (or 12) of the biggest: the statewide ballot measures.

Yes, there will be a dozen different propositions for California voters this year Prop. 14 through Prop. 25 on everything from expanding rent control to ending the ban on affirmative action. While we at CapRadio will be reporting on these more up until Nov. 3, we wanted to give you a quick overview now on what each measure covers and what a "yes" or "no" vote will mean.

Here are the basics of what you need to know about each proposition (including videos from our colleagues at CalMatters and more reporting from CapRadio):

Proposition 14: Stem cell research

A yes vote on this measure would authorize the state to purchase these bonds, increasing funding for stem cell research on treatments for cancer, Alzheimers and dozens of other diseases.

A no vote would prevent the state from issuing these bonds.

Learn More About Prop. 14

Proposition 15: 'Split roll'

Known as the "split roll" measure, Proposition 15 would increase taxes on factories, stores and other commercial and industrial real estate worth $3 million or more. It would do this by requiring owners pay property tax based on market value, rather than what is often a much lower tax rate based on the original purchase price.

The measure is considered one of the largest revisions of Proposition 13, the landmark 1978 initiative that slashed property taxes and limited how much they could go up. Residential and agricultural properties would be exempt from the changes. The split roll measure would raise an estimated $6.5 billion to $11.5 billion annually, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Legislative Analysts Office. The money would be distributed to K-12 public schools, community colleges and local governments.

A yes vote on this measure would revise Proposition 13, increasing taxes on factories, stores and other commercial and industrial real estate by requiring owners to pay property tax based on its market value, rather than based on what they bought the property for.

A no vote on this measure would allow owners of these properties to continue to pay what is often a much lower tax rate based on the original purchase price.

Learn More About Prop. 15

Proposition 16: End ban on affirmative action

If passed by voters, this state constitutional amendment would end Californias ban on affirmative action. It would allow schools and public agencies to take race, ethnicity and sex into account when making admission, hiring or contracting decisions. It would repeal portions of Proposition 209, the constitutional amendment California voters passed in 1996 prohibiting affirmative action at state institutions.

A yes vote on this measure would allow government agencies to set goals for recruiting diverse employees and granting contracts to women and minority-owned businesses. These considerations are meant to give a leg up to historically disadvantaged communities.

A no vote would continue the ban on these affirmative action practices created by Proposition 209.

Learn More About Prop. 16

Proposition 17: Voting rights for previously incarcerated people

This constitutional amendment would allow people on parole for felony convictions to vote after their state or federal prison term ends. The states constitution prohibits people with felony convictions from voting until both their incarceration and parole are finished. The change, proposed by state lawmakers, would affect approximately 40,000 Californians, according to a state Senate analysis.

A yes vote on this proposition would allow people on parole for felony convictions to vote.

A no vote on this proposition would continue to prohibit people with felony convictions from voting until both their prison term and their parole are over.

Proposition 18: 17-year-olds voting in primaries

If passed, this constitutional amendment would expand voting rights for certain 17-year-olds in California. Citizens who are 17, residents of the state and will be at least 18 years old at the time of the next general election, would be allowed to vote in any primary or special election that occurs before the next general election. State lawmakers placed this measure on the November ballot.

A yes vote on this proposition would allow these qualifying 17-year-olds to vote in primaries or special elections if they will be 18 by the general election.

A no vote on this would not expand voting rights to these 17-year-olds.

Proposition 19: Transfer of property tax breaks

This would allow homeowners who are over 55, disabled or victims of natural disasters to transfer part of their property tax base with them when they sell their home and purchase a new one. The constitutional amendment would also prevent people who inherit family properties from keeping the low property tax base unless they use the home as their primary residence and the market value is less than $1 million. Most of the revenue from the measure would fund wildfire agencies.

A yes vote on this measure would allow these homeowners who are seniors, disabled or have been victims of a natural disaster to keep a lower property tax rate when they buy a new home.

A no vote on this measure would not allow these qualifying homeowners to keep their lower property tax base when they sell their home and purchase a new one.

Proposition 20: Criminal sentencing

This measure would roll back some changes to Californias criminal sentencing laws approved over the past decade. It would authorize judges to impose felony charges on certain theft or fraud crimes currently chargeable only as misdemeanors. It would also restrict the number of inmates eligible for parole by adding drug, theft and other crimes to the list of violent crimes or sentence enhancements excluded from parole review. Lastly, the measure would require people convicted of drug, theft or domestic violence misdemeanors to submit to DNA collection for the state database.

A yes vote on this measure would allow judges to charge more crimes as felonies, restrict the number of inmates eligible for parole and increase the number of people who will submit their DNA to the states criminal database.

A no vote on this measure would not enact the changes listed.

Learn More About Prop 20

Proposition 21: Rent control

Prop 21 would allow cities and counties to implement rent control for certain residential properties over 15 years old. The initiative's official summary says it would grant exemptions from new rent control policies for individuals who own no more than two homes. The measure is meant to replace the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, which prohibited rent control for housing that was built after 1995 as well as for units such as single-family homes, townhomes and condos.

A yes vote on this measure would allow cities and counties to put rent control policies into place on these properties.

A no vote on this measure would continue the provisions of Costa-Hawkins.

Learn More About Prop. 21

Proposition 22: Rules for app-based drivers

This would exempt certain gig workers from AB5, Californias contentious new labor law, by reclassifying app-based delivery and rideshare drivers as independent contractors. Funded by companies including Uber, Lyft and DoorDash, Prop 22 would require companies with independent contract drivers to provide their drivers with benefits like minimum compensation and health care subsidies based on driving time, vehicle insurance and sexual harassment training rather than regular employee benefits like a minimum wage, workers compensation or overtime pay.

A yes vote on this measure would allow companies not to classify drivers as regular employees, but would require them to provide them with the benefits listed above.

A no vote on this measure would continue AB5s requirement that these drivers be classified as employees and be provided minimum wage, workers compensation and overtime pay.

Learn More About Prop. 22

Proposition 23: Dialysis clinic rules

If approved, Proposition 23 would require dialysis clinics to have a licensed physician, nurse or physician assistant on site during kidney dialysis treatment. It would require outpatient clinics to report data on dialysis-related infections, ban them from discriminating against patients based on their source of payment or care, and require state approval to shut down a dialysis clinic.

A yes vote on this measure would add these new requirements on dialysis clinics.

A no vote on this measure would allow dialysis clinics to continue operating as they have been.

Proposition 24: Consumer privacy

Proposition 24 would allow Californians to block companies from sharing personal information and limit businesses use of sensitive personal information including geolocation, private communications, race or ethnicity, religion, union membership and health or biometric data. It raises maximum penalties for violations involving consumers under the age of 16. The measure would also create a new state agency to enforce consumer privacy regulations, which is estimated to cost about $10 million per year.

A yes vote on this measure would enact these new privacy protections and create a new state agency to enforce the regulations.

A no vote on this measure would not change California's data privacy law.

Its Election Day. It's the last day to cast your ballot in person, or to post mark your mail in ballot. KPBS will have coverage throughout today to bring you the election latest. Also, the tensions around Election Day have hospitals on high alert, even though those institutions are always planning ahead for disasters that could send a wave of ... Read more

Aired: November 3, 2020 | Transcript

Some people in San Diego and Tijuana can vote on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.

In a new episode of Port of Entry," we profile three of these binational citizens who can vote in elections in the U.S. and Mexico. And while you might think these folks all fall on the same side of the political fence when ... Read more

Aired: October 23, 2020 | Transcript

KPBS Midday Edition is a daily radio news magazine keeping San Diego in the know on everything from politics to the arts.

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What's On The Ballot? Here's A Look At California's 2020 Propositions - KPBS

Orphan Drug Designation Granted for CSL Behring’s Investigational Plasma-Derived Hemopexin Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease – PRNewswire

KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa., Nov. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Global biotherapeutics leader CSL Behring announced today that its investigational, plasma-derived hemopexin therapy (CSL889) received orphan drug designation from both the European Commission and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Office of Orphan Products Development for the treatment of sickle cell disease (SCD). These designations grant special status to drugs and biological products intended to treat a rare disease, affecting less than 200,000 patients in the US or affecting not more than five in 10,000 people in the European Union.

CSL889 is a form of plasma-derived hemopexin, an important, naturally occurring protein produced in the body whose levels are decreased in patients with SCD. Low levels of hemopexin have been associated with increased symptoms in SCD, particularly acute vaso-occlusive crises (VOC). VOC, the most common manifestation in SCD, are severe, debilitating episodes characterized by severe pain. There is no approved treatment for acute VOC, so episodes can only be managed with supportive measures such as fluids and pain killers.

"Having treated hundreds of adults and children living with sickle cell disease over 30 years, I'm intensely aware of the need for novel and effective therapies, especially to relieve the tremendous pain from VOC," said Professor Greg Kato, who is leading the clinical development of CSL 889 at CSL Behring. "This newly granted orphan status recognizes the urgency for progressing new treatment options into the clinic."

CSL Behring has two Phase I SCD programs poised to evolve the treatment paradigm for patients: CSL889 hemopexin therapy for the treatment of VOC and CSL200 lentiviral stem cell gene therapy for long-term disease management.

About Sickle Cell Disease

Sickle Cell Disease is a hereditary blood disorder in which red blood cells contain an abnormal type of hemoglobin, causing some of the cells to become distorted into a crescent, or sickle-shape. These misshapen red blood cells have difficulty passing through small blood vessels, slowing and blocking blood flow to areas of the body, damaging tissue that isn't receiving a normal flow of blood. Sickle Cell Disease can lead to episodes of severe pain, strokes, kidney, lung and heart problems, slow growth, vision problems and infection vulnerability. While frequency of Sickle Cell Disease varies globally, it is estimated to impact 100,000 people in the US and 1 in 10,000 persons in the European Union.

About CSL Behring

CSL Behringis a global biotherapeutics leader driven by its promise to save lives. Focused on serving patients' needs by using the latest technologies, we develop and deliver innovative therapies that are used to treat coagulation disorders, primary immune deficiencies, hereditary angioedema, respiratory disease, and neurological disorders. The company's products are also used in cardiac surgery, burn treatment and to prevent hemolytic disease of the newborn.

CSL Behring operates one of the world's largest plasma collection networks, CSL Plasma. The parent company, CSL Limited (ASX:CSL;USOTC:CSLLY), headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, employs more than 27,000 people, anddelivers its life-saving therapies to people in more than 100 countries. For inspiring stories about the promise of biotechnology, visit Vita CSLBehring.com/vita and follow us on Twitter.com/CSLBehring.

SOURCE CSL Behring

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Orphan Drug Designation Granted for CSL Behring's Investigational Plasma-Derived Hemopexin Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease - PRNewswire

Could Cell Therapy Be The Answer To COVID-19? – CBS Boston

AgenTus Immune Cell Therapy in Patients with COVID-19

Excessive inflammatory response in the most serious cases of COVID-19, along with surges in infection rates, has caused a healthcare crisis in many countries around the world.

Could cell therapy be the answer?

The public health crisis of COVID-19 has propelled and catalyzed investigations of therapies known to have potential in related disease states for their suitability in combating COVID-19. One such area is immune cell therapy.

To that end, AgenTus Therapeutics, the cell therapy subsidiary of Agenus, an immuno-oncology company advancing immune therapies for patients with cancer, announced the start of a clinical trial with its proprietary allogeneic iNKT cell therapy. iNKT cell therapy has the potential to eliminate the COVID-19 virus, dampen harmful inflammation, and promote protection from reinfection all particularly critical in combating COVID-19. The first patient was treated at Weill Cornell Medical Center and New York Presbyterian Hospital, and early trial results are expected later this year.

Most people who become infected with COVID-19 experience symptoms such as a dry cough and mild fever and recover without medical care, but around 15% develop more serious symptoms including pneumonia and shortness of breath. Approximately 5% of patients with more severe disease experience acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). When this syndrome occurs, the patients lungs become severely inflamed and fluid seeps into the lung tissue from nearby blood vessels, making breathing increasingly difficult. Some of these patients can go on to develop septic shock and multi-organ failure, with more than half dying after reaching this stage.

Respiratory failure from COVID-19 is linked to excessive immune activation that causes a cytokine storm, in which the inflammatory immune protein in the lungs increase to dangerously high levels. This hyper-reaction of the immune system has been observed with other coronaviruses, like SARS and MERS. Cell therapy has previously shown promise for treating respiratory distress for the nearly 500,000 who are affected globally every year even without the COVID-19 pandemic.

Agenus, a US-based biotechnology company headquartered in Lexington, MA with the goal of advancing immune therapies for patients with cancer, recently announced that its proprietary allogeneic iNKT cell therapy will be evaluated for its potential to treat COVID-19 and cancer through its cell therapy subsidiary, AgenTus.

Invariant natural killer T cells (iNKT cells) are a unique cell type that combine features of two critical arms of the immune system, T cells (adaptive immunity) and NK cells (innate immunity), making them invaluable in combatting diseases like cancer and COVID-19. In the case of cancer, they travel to tumor tissue by detecting a protein known as CD1d. They also express a protein known as NKG2D, which recognizes tumor stress ligands. Importantly, these proteins are expressed in both solid and liquid tumors, making iNKT cells broadly applicable to all cancer patients. In preclinical models, iNKT cells have been shown to work alone and have also demonstrated curative potential when activated and combined with Agenus pipeline of immuno-oncology drug candidates.

Agenus has observed that the number of iNKT cells in the body is reduced in people with cancer and infectious diseases like COVID-19, and this reduction is associated with poorer response to disease. In preclinical models that bear similarities to SARS-COV-2, increasing the number or frequency of iNKT cells reduced viral shedding and prevented inflammation-driven lung injury. These specific attributes are of paramount importance in any therapy attempting to overcome COVID-19.

As a result of this research, AgenTus is advancing an iNKT cell therapy program towards clinical trials in both cancer and COVID-19. Beyond the curative potential of iNKT cells as addressed above, AgenTus cell therapy program has the potential to be more practical and more beneficial than currently approved cell therapies. Currently approved cell therapies require genetic manipulation, which increases their cost, manufacturing time and complexity. On the other hand, iNKT cells may be effective even without genetic manipulation and have the potential to be manufactured to treat large numbers of patients from a single batch, presenting the opportunity for lower costs. Further, iNKT cells have been tested in clinical trials and have been well-tolerated, thus decreasing the risk of serious side effects.

Encouraged by these compelling properties of this cell therapy, AgenTus announced today the start of a clinical trial to test iNKT cells in patients with moderate to severe symptoms of COVID-19. The study is being led by Dr. Koen van Besien, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Medicine and Director of the Stem Cell Transplant program at Weill Cornell Medical Center and New York Presbyterian Hospital. The trial is designed to evaluate the benefit of infusing iNKT cells in patients who have moderate to severe symptoms of COVID-19. The outcome of the trial will provide insight into whether administering iNKT cells will help to eliminate the virus, dampen harmful inflammation, and promote protection from reinfection.

As mentioned earlier, iNKT cell therapy offers promise for the fight against cancer as well as the fight against COVID-19. To that end, Agenus is also advancing iNKT cells into clinical trials for patients with cancer. Agenus recently presented data at two major cancer conferences, the Society of Immune Therapy for Cancer (SITC; #SITC19) and the American Association of Cancer Research (AACR; #AACR20), which revealed that in preclinical models AgenTus iNKTs can penetrate tissues, giving them a critical advantage in targeting solid tumors not currently served by approved cell therapies. These data also showed that the combination of checkpoint antibodies and iNKT cell triggering therapy shows curative potential in cancer models that are refractory to available therapies.

Agenus is the only company known to have a portfolio of checkpoint antibodies, cell therapy, and cancer vaccines. This gives the company enormous flexibility to develop novel combinations of agents with curative potential for patients with cancer and infectious disease at a significant cost advantage.

The potential benefits of iNKT cell therapy against both COVID-19 and cancer thus look very promising. Agenus is excited to investigate the possibilities of these treatments against these diseases that cause suffering and death for thousands of patients every year. By leveraging its unique capabilities and extensive pipeline against these diseases, Agenus hopes to provide significant benefit to these patients and a potential path to a cure.

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

1) https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-guidance-management-patients.html

2) https://investor.agenusbio.com/2020-06-02-FDA-Clears-IND-for-iNKT-Cells-to-Treat-COVID-19-Patients

3) Exley et al., Clinical Cancer Research, 2017.

4) Tanne et al., American Association of Cancer Research, 2020.

5) Mavers et al., Frontiers in Immunology, 2017.

6) Nair and Dhodapkar, Frontiers in Immunology, 2017.

7) Wolf et al. Frontiers in Immunology, 2018.

8) Burcu et al., Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer, 2019.

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Forward-Looking Statements: This article includes forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding Agenus and AgenTus abilities to produce effective allogeneic cell therapies to treat solid tumors, the anticipated clinical benefits and costs of such cell therapies, and future clinical development and regulatory plans. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including those described in Agenus SEC filings.

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Could Cell Therapy Be The Answer To COVID-19? - CBS Boston

GMP Cell Banking Services Market Predicted to Accelerate the Growth by 2019-2029 – TechnoWeekly

Global GMP Cell Banking Services Market: Overview

A cell bank refers to a facility that helps in the storage of cells of certain genome for future use in medicinal needs or in some product. Cell banks often have large amount of base cell material that can be used in a number of projects. Cell banks are utilized for the generation of detailed characteristics of cell lines and it also assists in the mitigation of cross contamination of the same. Use of cell banks also diminishes the cost of processes of cell culture, thereby offering an economic alternative to continuous keeping of cells in culture. The growth of the global GMP cell banking services market is likely to be driven by the growing popularity of the procedure and emergence of rare diseases across the globe.

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Cell banks are usually utilized in wide range of sectors, such as pharmaceuticals and stem cell research. The traditional procedure that is used in keeping the materials of cells intact is called cryopreservation. Cell banks are also capable of diminishing the prevalence of cell sample diversifying from the process of natural cell division over a period of time.

Increased funding for research and development activities in rare diseases is likely to encourage growth of the global GMP cell banking services market over the forecast period.

The global GMP Cell Banking Services market has been segmented based on end user and region. The main objective of providing such a comprehensive report is to provide a deep insight into the market.

Global GMP Cell Banking Services market: Notable Developments

One such promising development of the global GMP cell banking services market is mentioned below:

Some of the key market players of the global GMP cell banking services market are

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Global GMP Cell Banking Services market: Growth Drivers

Increased for Research on Rare Diseases to Pave Way for Rapid Growth of the Market

There has been an increased funding for research and development projects in rare diseases, which is likely to pave way for the development of the global GMP cell banking services market over the period of analysis. A case in point is funding of research on rare diseases by Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the US. FDA makes use of programs mandated by congress, such as Orphan Products Grants Program, which funds studies of natural history and for conducting clinical trials for rare medical conditions.

In addition to that, establishment of several resource centers for stem cell banking is estimated to positively influence the global GMP cell banking services market. For instance, Kuala Lampur based cord blood bank, Stemlife Berhad started resource center for stem banking in Brunei-based private hospital, Jerudong Park Medical Center. Such strategies by leading market players is likely to propel growth of the global GMP cell banking services market in the years to come.

Global GMP Cell Banking Services market: Regional Outlook

In the global GMP cell banking services market, North America is regarded as one of the most promising regions due to the presence of substantial mammalian cell. This type of cells is estimated to generate most of the revenue in the North America market.

Asia Pacific is another important lucrative region in the market with mammalian cell type accounting for most of the revenue in the region. A rise in the research and development on rare diseases together with increased funding for the same is estimated to drive the market in Asia Pacific.

The global GMP cell banking services market is segmented as:

End User

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GMP Cell Banking Services Market Predicted to Accelerate the Growth by 2019-2029 - TechnoWeekly

CA Prop 14 Explained: What To Know Before You Vote Election Day – Los Angeles, CA Patch

LOS ANGELES, CA Proposition 14, the only statewide bond measure on the general election ballot, asks voters to authorize $5.5 billion in bonds to fund stem cell research. If that sounds familiar, that's because it is. California approved a similar bond request 16 years ago, allowing the state to prop up what was then a fledgling and controversial area of research.

Prop 14's supporters contend the money is needed to fund cutting-edge research on the brink of discovering treatments and cures that could help save countless lives. Opponents say such promises are "shameless exaggerations" and that California isn't in a position to spend billions on stem cell research.

In 2004, Californians authorized $3 billion in bonds to create the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, with the aim of making the Golden State a hub of cutting-edge stem cell research. It offset the George W. Bush administration's decision to halt federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. Sixteen years later, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine is running out of money, forcing it to suspend new projects. Last year, the institute stopped accepting new applications, according to Ballotpedia.

If Prop 14 passes, it will authorize $5.5 billion in state general obligation bonds to support private, university and nonprofit stem cell research and therapy for diseases and conditions such as cancer, HIV/AIDS, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, strokes, epilepsy and other neurological conditions. In addition to funding research, the measure would help fund treatment and physician training.

The measure caps the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine operating costs at 7.5 percent of the funding, with the rest going to grants. Over the last decade, the bulk of the institute's grants went to California universities and hospitals. It will cost the state about $260 million a year for 30 years to repay the bonds.

According to the text of the measure, the institute has generated more than $3 billion in matching funds, sponsored more than 1,000 research projects and treated thousands of patients. It claims to have promising treatments in the pipeline awaiting funding for final stages of research.

Check Out The CalMatters 2020 Election Guide

"This medical revolution holds the promise of restoring health and quality of life for many of California's individuals and families suffering from chronic disease and injury," Robert Klein, chairman of Americans for Cures, told the California Stem Cell Report blog. "However, the last tactical mile to bring this broad spectrum of therapies to patients will require more funding and the thoughtful support of California's public as the human trials and discoveries are refined and tested, overcome numerous obstacles or complications, and ultimately serve to improve the life and reduce the suffering of every one of us."

Opponents of the measure say that the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine is no longer necessary because the federal government now spends billions to support stem cell research and private entities are leading the way on advancements without the help of taxpayer-funded grants. They question the institution's track record, oversight and budget.

"We can't afford to waste billions. In the middle of an economic crisis, with soaring unemployment and budget shortfalls in the tens of billions of dollars, we don't have money to burn," reads the opposition on the Official Voter Information Guide. "Paying back Prop. 14's costs of $7.8 billion could mean huge tax increases at a time when our economy is on its knees. Or laying off thousands of nurses and other heroes who do the real work of keeping California healthy."

The measure has the support of the California Democratic Party and the University of California Board of Regents. More than $9 million has been spent on the Yes On 14 campaign, while there are no official opposition campaigns. However, several newspaper editorial boards have come out against the measure including The Orange County Register, the Mercury News and The Bakersfield Californian.

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CA Prop 14 Explained: What To Know Before You Vote Election Day - Los Angeles, CA Patch

Making Progress Against Relapsed/ Refractory DLBCL Without CAR T – OncLive

Approximately of patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) experience refractory disease after initial treatment or have a relapse after achieving remission.1 Until the advent of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies, treatment options for these patients had been mostly palliative, especially for those ineligible for autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT) and those who relapsed after ASCT. Although CAR T-cell therapies have revolutionized the treatment landscape for relapsed/refractory (R/R) DLBCL, not all patients are candidates for this treatment. Of those who do receive it, 30% to 35% experience long-term benefit, demonstrating a great unmet need for others in the treatment landscape.

Emerging agents have started to shake up the R/R DLBCL armamentarium, but there is still a long road ahead to fully define their role. During an OncLive Peer Exchange, a panel of lymphoma experts discussed several novel agents for R/R DLBCL, some of which have been recently approved. They examined the clinical trial data, discussed how these agents compare with CAR T-cell therapy, and provided insights on how they might be used in clinical practice. Before long, well need more sophistication in how we approach patients, moderator John P. Leonard, MD, said. Hopefully, that means well be using treatments more effectively and have more tools at our disposal.

Tafasitamab-cxix (Monjuvi) is a humanized anti-CD19 monoclonal antibody that has been mostly studied as a combination therapy, particularly with lenalidomide (Revlimid). On July 31, 2020, the FDA granted accelerated approval to the combination for adult patients with R/R DLBCL not otherwise specified, including DLBCL arising from low-grade lymphoma, who are not eligible for ASCT.2

The Fc portion has been enhanced to increase ADCC [antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity] and ADCP [antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis], Kami J. Maddocks, MD, said. She noted that investigators initially examined tafasitamab in a single-arm study as monotherapy in patients with R/R non-Hodgkin lymphoma, the data from which demonstrated responses in DLBCL, including a few complete responses (CRs). In this phase 2a study (NCT01685008), investigators observed responses in 9 of the 35 patients (26%) with DLBCL (2 CRs and 7 partial responses [PRs]), with a median duration of response of 20.1 months (range, 1.1-26.5).3 [This study] signaled that there might be some activity with this agent in large cell lymphoma, Maddocks said. She proceeded to explain that the rationale for combining this agent with lenalidomide is that lenalidomide activates natural killer cells, thereby optimizing the tumor environment for tafasitamab.

Data from L-MIND (NCT02399085) provided the basis for the approval of tafasitamab in combination with lenalidomide. The phase 2, open label, multicenter, single-arm trial included 71 patients with DLBCL who received tafasitamab 12 mg/kg intravenously (days 1, 8, 15 and 22 of each 28-day cycle for 3 cycles, then days 1 and 15 only) with lenalidomide 25 mg orally (days 1-21) for a maximum of 12 cycles, followed by biweekly tafasitamab as monotherapy.4 It was really targeted at those patients who relapsed after their initial therapy or maybe received a first salvage and then were not candidates for ASCT, she said. All patients in the study had previously received 1 to 4 systemic regimens, at least 1 of which was an anti-CD20 therapy.4

Maddocks noted that the combination was well tolerated and that the adverse effects (AEs) were in line with expected AEs for lenalidomide monotherapy. The most common grade 3 or higher treatment-emergent AEs were hematologic abnormalities, including neutropenia (48%), thrombocytopenia (17%), and febrile neutropenia (12%).4 There were very few infusion-related reactions. Approximately three-quarters of the patients were able to stay on lenalidomide 20 mg or higher, Maddocks said.

Tafasitamab/Lenalidomide vs CAR T-Cell Therapy

The panelists proceeded to discuss tafasitamab plus lenalidomide in the context of CAR T-cell therapy and when it might be most useful. They noted that the patients in the L-MIND trial were not heavily pretreated, were not refractory to their first-line treatment, and did not have more aggressive disease subtypes, such as double- or triple-hit biology.

Subsequently, this population was different from those included in the CAR T-cell studies, such as ZUMA-1 (NCT02348216), JULIET (NCT02445248), and TRANSCEND-NHL-001 (NCT02631044), in which 77%, 54%, and 67% of patients, respectively, had primary refractoriness, and 69%, 51%, and 50% received more than 3 lines of therapy.5 Further, in reported data from the JULIET and TRANSCEND-NHL-001 studies, 27% and 22% of patients had double-hit lymphoma, respectively. [CAR T-cell therapy] doesnt care that youre a double-hit. You can still respond and have durability. Its the same thing if youre primary refractory, Matthew Lunning, DO, said. Thus far, there are no data to clarify whether this is also the case for tafasitamab plus lenalidomide.

It is also unknown whether tafasitamab plus lenalidomide can be used as a bridge to CAR T-cell therapy. National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines state, It is unclear if tafasitamab will have a negative impact on the efficacy of subsequent anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy.6 Lunning said that preclinical data have shown that there is no negative affect with tafasitamab.

[Cell line studies show] that it does engage the same CD19 antigen that youd expect the CAR T cell to go after but, at least in cell lines, it did not appear to affect the CAR T cells, he said. Maddocks added that there was 1 patient enrolled in the L-MIND trial who received CAR T-cell therapy after progression on tafasitamab plus lenalidomide and who has been in remission for more than a year. However, she warned that you cannot draw conclusions based on 1 patient. As this combination becomes available to people, well hopefully know more about whether there is an effect on the efficacy of CAR T, she said.

Despite the unknown effect of tafasitamab plus lenalidomide as a bridging therapy to CAR T, the panelists agreed this may be a reasonable use. If it takes a couple of weeks to get patients to their apheresis and then another 3 weeks to get them [to delivery], maybe tafasitamab is the best option. Its 8 weekly doses early on and youre getting drug exposure with the intent to go to CAR T-cell therapy or a patient could say no, and you havent lost anything if theyre responding, Lunning said.

Lunning suspects tafasitamab plus lenalidomide will get a lot of use because it is an IV [intravenous] therapy, given weekly for a lot of doses up front, and lenalidomide is an oral therapy that people are very comfortable using in lymphoma and multiple myeloma. Subsequently, he emphasized the importance of capturing the data for those patients previously exposed to tafasitamab/lenalidomide who do not respond or who get a PR and go on to CAR T-cell therapy to determine the true durability of the combination. Thats only going to come out with real-world experience data rather than a commercially funded experience, Lunning said.

The FDA granted selinexor (Xpovio) accelerated approval on June 22, 2020, as a single agent for adult patients with R/R DLBCL, not otherwise specified, including DLBCL arising from follicular lymphoma, after at least 2 lines of systemic therapy.7 The oral agent represents a whole new class of drugs. Its unlike anything that we have for large cell lymphoma or any other cancers. Its called a SINE [selective inhibitor of nuclear export] and it targets certain proteins that are exported out of the nucleus that give cells a prosurvival advantage. It is not necessarily specific to large cell lymphoma, but it targets the mechanism that large cell lymphoma probably uses to keep itself alive and potentially resistant, Nathan H. Fowler, MD, said.

The drugs approval was based on data from SADAL (NCT02227251), a multicenter, single-arm, open-label phase 2b trial in which 134 patients received selinexor 60 mg orally on days 1 and 3 of each week. All patients in the study had previously received 2 to 5 systemic regimens. Thirty-nine patients (29%) responded, with 18 (13%) achieving a CR and 21 (16%) achieving a PR.8 Unlike the L-MIND study, SADAL included patients with double- or triple-expressor status and data showed responses in these patients. If you think about [selinexor in the context of] CAR T-cell data and others, its not quite as good, but its a single drug so its fairly easy to give. It is effective in a subset of patients with large cell lymphoma that is pretty difficult to treat, including patients who have double-hit lymphoma, Fowler said. He also noted that responses appear durable. If you look at patients who have PR or better, the duration of response is over 2 years, [so] there is a select group of patients who do achieve durable benefit with the drug, he explained.

A challenge with selinexor is its toxicity. The most common grade 3 and 4 AEs observed in the SADAL study included thrombocytopenia (49% and 18%, respectively), neutropenia (21% and 9%), fatigue (grade 3/4, 15%), and nausea (grade 3/4, 6%).7 Maddocks said that in her experience gastrointestinal toxicity was most problematic but once this was addressed with antiemetics, it became less concerning. The FDA recommends that selinexor be administered with antiemetic prophylaxis.7

The panelists emphasized that selinexor is not a replacement for CAR T-cell therapy but added that it may help fill an unmet need for patients who have limited treatment options. For patients who are failing [ASCT or CAR T], we dont have a lot of options. We can do lenalidomide and lenalidomide plus a CD19-targeted agent. Patients who fail CAR T-cell therapy, those who would not qualify [for CAR T], and those who are not near a [CAR T] center are the obvious population [for selinexor], Fowler said. Maddocks and Lunning agreed.

The panelists noted that many other agents are in clinical trials for R/R DLBCL, including bispecific antibodies such as glofitamab and epcoritamab. [These are] going to be generating data but not a lot of data will follow [treatment with] CAR T, Lunning said. Nevertheless, he is excited to see what kind of durability these drugs will ultimately show. In contrast, another investigational bispecific antibody, mosunetuzumab, has shown favorable efficacy in a phase 1/1b study that included patients with heavily pretreated R/R DLBCL, including those with disease progression after CAR T-cell therapy. Of the 7 evaluable patients with DLBCL who received prior CAR T-cell therapy, 2 achieved a CR.9

When we were looking at the BiTE [bispecific T-cell engager] molecules a couple of years ago, there was some sense that they would maybe displace CAR Ts. But a lot of the data that were seeing now are immature. I dont think the durable CR rate appears to be at the same level that were seeing with CAR T, at least in large cell lymphoma. So, I dont see these replacing CAR T-cell therapy, but I agree with Drs Maddocks and Lunning that they will probably follow CAR T as a salvage for these patients, Fowler said.

The other treatment the panelists discussed were anti-CD19 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs). There are 3 CD19 ADCs that have been developed, all showing pretty similar responses; however, 2 are no longer being developed due to toxicity, Maddocks said. She remarked that the third ADC had good initial responses but they were not durable. Subsequently, she noted this agent would probably have to be used as part of a combination therapy to achieve good remissions.

A major challenge in treating DLBCL is that there are no biological markers to guide treatment decision-making. We really need to define the biology by some assay and then use that to put patients into different treatment groups. Thats the holy grail because a one-size-fits-all approach can only move the bar so much in large cell lymphoma, Fowler said.

Its great that were getting all of these new drug classesmore drugs to have the discussions about, Lunning said. Its a chess match against large cell lymphoma and its important to know what piece to play next. You may be moving 1 piece to make a move 3 turns down the road.

References

1. Skrabek P, Assouline S, Christofides A, et al. Emerging therapies for the treatment of relapsed or refractory diffuse large B cell lymphoma. Curr Oncol. 2019;26(4):253-265. doi:10.3747/co.26.5421

2. FDA grants accelerated approval to tafasitamab-cxix for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. FDA. Updated August 3, 2020. Accessed October 9, 2020. https://bit.ly/3nmOT43

3. Jurczak W, Zinzani PL, Gaidano G, et al. Phase IIa study of the CD19 antibody MOR208 in patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Ann Oncol. 2018;29(5):1266-1272. doi:10.1093/annonc/mdy056

4. Monjuvi. Prescribing information. MorphoSys US Inc; 2020. Accessed October 9, 2020. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2020/761163s000lbl.pdf

5. Chavez JC, Bachmeier C, Kharfan-Dabaja MA. CAR T-cell therapy for B-cell lymphomas: clinical trial results of available products. Ther Adv Hematol. 2019;10:2040620719841581. doi:10.1177/2040620719841581

6. NCCN. Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology. B-cell lymphomas, version 4.2020. Accessed October 9, 2020. https://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/pdf/b-cell.pdf

7. FDA approves selinexor for relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. FDA. June 22, 2020. Accessed October 9, 2020. https://bit.ly/36Am12o

8. Xpovio. Prescribing information. Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc; 2020. Accessed October 9, 2020. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2020/212306s001lbl.pdf

9. Schuster SJ, Bartlett NL, Assouline S, et al. Mosunetuzumab induces complete remissions in poor prognosis non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients, including those who are resistant to or relapsing after chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapies, and is active in treatment through multiple lines. Blood. 2019;134(suppl 1):6. doi:10.1182/blood-2019-123742

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