Crispr
Beam Therapeutics cutting 20% of its staff
Despite having raised more than $1 billion in venture funding in recent years, base editing biotech Beam Therapeutics plans on laying off 20% of its staff — about 100 employees. The company will be reevaluating some of its programs as it attempts to further cut costs, in an effort to stay afloat in the brutal biotech market.
Although Beam has been cleared to launch clinical trials in cancer and sickle cell disease, it's had difficulty enrolling enough patients in these CRISPR-based studies. It will prioritize its sickle cell programs, as well as an experimental treatment for alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, a rare liver disease. But it'll pause a hepatitis B program and hopes to partner out with its cancer programs, which are using base editing to build allogeneic cell therapies.
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startups
Laronde merges with Flagship compatriot
Laronde, a once-plushly funded startup developing RNA-based medicines, is merging with a fellow Flagship Pioneering company. It'll join with Senda Biosciences and create a new venture called Sail Biomedicines, and will continue to focus on endless RNA therapies — an approach that was once viewed as a "better, superior … Moderna on steroids," one company insider told STAT.
Previously, Laronde's data was hard to replicate, according to an investigation by STAT and the Boston Globe. Laronde shelved its two top drug candidates after the data integrity issue, and dozens of employees — including leadership — have left the company.
Senda was already the product of several Flagship Pioneering startups merging. The company is focused on "SendRNA medicines" that can ferry genetic treatments to specific cells.
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