STAT+: Sobi bets big on next-gen gout drug

Want to stay on top of the science and politics driving biotech today? Sign up to get our biotech newsletter in your inbox.

Morning. Today, we discuss the implications of a child’s tragic death after receiving a brain-focused gene therapy, hear Siddhartha Mukherjee opine on why the next frontier in cancer treatment is metabolic, and more.

The need-to-know this morning

  • Kyverna Therapeutics said its patient-specific CAR-T therapy improved walking ability in patients with stiff person syndrome, an autoimmune disease. The results achieved the primary goal of the pivotal clinical trial and will support a marketing submission to the FDA next year.
  • Argenx discontinued a Phase 3 study of Vyvgart Hytrulo in thyroid eye disease after independent data monitors conducted an interim analysis and concluded the drug would not achieve the study’s primary goal. 
  • A drug developed by Immunome reduced the risk of disease worsening or death by 84% compared to placebo in patients with advanced desmoid tumors. The results achieved the primary goal of the Phase 3 study. Immunome plans to seek FDA approval next year. 
  • Milestone Pharmaceuticals won FDA approval for a new nasal-spray medicine to treat episodes of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, a a common type of abnormal heart rhythm.

Brain-targeted gene therapy’s sobering reckoning

A long-anticipated breakthrough in gene therapy for brain diseases has been jolted by tragedy after the first patient dosed with a new, brain-penetrating virus — developed by Capsida Biotherapeutics — died days later from cerebral edema. This outcome wasn’t predicted by the extensive animal testing that led up to the study, STAT’s Jason Mast writes.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

​STAT Pharma: The science and business of new drug development

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *