cell therapy
Allogene hopes to make strides toward off-the-shelf CAR-T
Allogene Therapeutics is pushing toward a make-or-break moment with its off-the-shelf CAR-T therapy cema-cel, STAT's Adam Feuerstein writes in his Biotech Scorecard newsletter. An upcoming interim readout from the ALPHA3 study could validate — or further undermine — a long-struggling strategy in B-cell lymphoma.
The company is testing whether giving cema-cel earlier, in patients who are in remission but still have a handful of cancer cells present — or "minimal residual disease." It wants to see if the cell therapy can delay or prevent relapse; if it does, the data could potentially position cema-cel as the first off-the-shelf CAR-T therapy approved in blood cancer.
"That's why this [Allogene] study is so interesting, because it is really the first that is trying to answer the question, if you have a complete remission with [minimal residual disease] positivity, does this approach [using an off-the-shelf CAR-T therapy] improve things for patients?" said David Qualls, a lymphoma expert at Dana Farber Cancer Center who was not involved in the study.
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cancer
Corcept gets an approval in ovarian cancer
Corcept Therapeutics has salvaged its lead drug after an earlier FDA rejection, winning approval for relacorilant, which will be marketed as Lifyorli. The approval is for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, where Corcept's drug can be used alongside the ubiquitous Abraxane.
The decision, which came earlier than expected, is backed by Phase 3 data showing a meaningful survival benefit, with a 35% reduction in risk of death and a roughly four-month median overall survival gain versus chemotherapy alone. The drug works by blocking cortisol signaling to make tumors more susceptible to chemo. Last year, Corcept tried to win FDA approval for relacorilant for a very different indication — Cushing's syndrome.
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