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16 January, 2025 |
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Thanks to everyone who read our coverage and came out to our events at JPM this week! If you missed anything, be sure to read the live blogs our reporters put together over the last three days. |
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Max Gelman |
Senior Editor, Endpoints News
@MaxGelman
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by Max Gelman
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Most clinical trials for Huntington’s disease have run aground in the last few years, but academic researchers haven’t been dissuaded from trying to shift how the rare genetic disorder is understood. A handful of papers released in the last 12 months suggest those shifts are coming sooner rather than later. The latest scientific study, published in Cell on Thursday, comes from researchers at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. They claim previous research may have been looking at the disease the wrong way and offer a potential new framework for treatments. Led by Steve McCarroll and Sabina Berretta, the group looked at postmortem brain tissue of Huntington’s patients and compared it to tissue from individuals without Huntington’s, aiming to see how a
specific DNA mutation influences the disease’s pathology. They assert, contrary to early assumptions, that Huntington’s patients don’t slowly deteriorate. |
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by Lei Lei Wu, Max Gelman
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US regulators have rejected a T cell therapy for a rare and serious transplant complication related to Epstein-Barr virus from Atara Biotherapeutics and Pierre Fabre. The therapy, known as tabelecleucel or tab-cel, was turned away after the FDA inspected a third-party manufacturing site, Atara said in a Thursday press release. FDA's rejection letter "did not identify any deficiencies" related to the manufacturing of the therapy itself, nor any concerns over efficacy or safety data, Atara said. Additionally, it will not be required to run another clinical trial. Atara's stock price ATRA fell more than 45% on Thursday morning. |
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by Anna Brown
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Vaccine tech company Micron Biomedical has started 2025 on a positive note, raising over $16 million in a Series A extension round. The funding will be used to manufacture its vaccine “button” technology as it gears up for a potential commercial launch in 2027, CEO Steve Damon told Endpoints News. The company’s tech is a
small coin-sized button contain |
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