gene editing
We now know Tome's gene editing target
From STAT's Jason Mast: For all the hype surrounding CRISPR, the tool has been largely effective at knocking out genes or making small edits. So when two scientists emerged a couple years ago touting technology capable of inserting large genes into human cells without doing major damage to the DNA, investors agreed to pour over $200 million to try to make it a reality.
That round, for Tome Biosciences, was announced in December. On Friday, at a major gene therapy conference, CEO Rahul Kakkar laid out for the first time how the company plans to use the technology: initially to treat a rare disease called phenylketonuria and to design a natural killer cell therapy heavily engineered to safely treat autoimmune diseases. Beyond that are plans to make a heart disease treatment and treatments for rare diseases homocystinuria and hemochromatosis.
The company will, of course, have competition. Tessera has also showed animal data for treating phenylketonuria with a gene editing system for changing individual letters. And Prime Medicine has a very similar technology for large gene insertion, though it has yet to reveal much detail on specific diseases.
gene editing
A CRISPR approach did not cure HIV
An effort to use CRISPR editing to excise HIV from patient genomes did not work. A Phase 1 trial from Excision Therapeutics administered a CRISPR-based therapy to five patients with HIV. Researchers then took three of these patients off of conventional antiviral treatment, with hopes that they wouldn't need to resume daily medication. But despite the CRISPR treatment, virus levels rebounded quickly.
This is likely because the gene editing approach wasn't efficient enough, STAT's Jason Mast writes. Excision used an adeno-associated virus to distribute the gene editing tool throughout the body — and AAVs don't reach all cells. So even if the virus was excised from part of the body, it's likely it lingered elsewhere.
But there were signs of hope: One patient's infection didn't rebound for about four months after stopping antivirals, whereas typically it comes back after three or four weeks. This suggests that CRISPR editing might ultimately be coupled with other approaches to cure HIV.
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rare disease
Maze gets another chance to partner on Pompe drug
Last year, Sanofi was set to pay $150 million in cash and stock to license an experimental Pompe disease treatment made by Maze Therapeutics — but the FTC blocked the deal and it fell through. Now, Maze has partnered with Japanese drugmaker Shionogi to further develop MZE001, again with $150 million up front, STAT's Andrew Joseph writes.
Sanofi already sells two intravenous infusions for Pompe, which caused concern for regulators, who said an acquisition would extend Sanofi's monopoly in the disease and dissuade competitors from entering the space. The French drugmaker walked away from the deal without personally informing the company: CEO Jason Coloma told STAT last year that he was "personally disappointed" in the Sanofi deal falling through.
"Shionogi has a track record of developing and delivering innovative medicines to patients worldwide, and we're confident they are the right partner to continue to advance MZE001 through clinical trials so that it may reach patients with this life-threatening condition as soon as possible," Coloma said in a statement.
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