uniQure Presents New Clinical Data in Hemophilia B Patients Demonstrating Therapeutic Efficacy of AAV5 Gene … – GlobeNewswire (press release)

July 11, 2017 06:30 ET | Source: uniQure N.V.

LEXINGTON, Mass. and AMSTERDAM, the Netherlands, July 11, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- uniQure N.V. (NASDAQ:QURE), a leading gene therapy company advancing transformative therapies for patients with severe medical needs, today presented new clinical data demonstrating that the presence of pre-existing anti-AAV5 neutralizing antibodies (NABs) does not predict the potential efficacy of AAV5-mediated gene transfer in patients with hemophilia B. Clinically meaningful factor IX (FIX) activity levels from the ongoing Phase I-II trial of AMT-060 were observed at NAB titers up to 1:341, determined as corresponding up to the 90th percentile of a healthy control population. NABs were quantified in the blood sera of these patients using a highly sensitive assay. These clinical data were presented today in a poster presentation at the 26th Biennial Congress of theInternational Society on Thrombosis and Hemostasis(ISTH), taking place this week in Berlin, Germany.

The presence of pre-existing NABs to adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors has long posed a critical challenge for the clinical application of gene therapies, as patients who currently screen positive for NABs are generally excluded from treatment. Researchers from uniQure recently presented data in non-human primates suggesting that AAV5 could successfully mediate gene transfer in the presence of NABs at levels as high as 1:1031.

In a poster presentation at the ISTH meeting, a re-analysis was described of pre-gene transfer screening samples from the 10 patients who have been treated in the ongoing Phase I/II trial of AMT-060 for hemophilia B. The patients had tested negative for preexisting anti-AAV5 NAbs using a green fluorescent proteinbased (GFP) assay before receiving treatment. These samples were later re-assessed using a highly sensitive luciferase-based (LUC) NAB assay. Anti-AAV5 NABs were detected retrospectively in three patients who had been treated with the low dose (5x1012 gc/kg) of AMT-060. However, all three patients presented increases in FIX expression and, especially, the patient with the highest NAB level (titer 1:341) had the highest FIX-activity (steady-state FIX 6.8% of normal; latest FIX measurement 10.7% of normal) among all five patients treated in the low-dose cohort. None of the three patients who tested positive for NAB titers, experienced over time elevations in liver enzymes post gene transfer, FIX activity loss, or clinically relevant T-cell responses to the capsid.

These clinical data show that hemophilia B patients presenting with neutralizing antibodies may be considered eligible for AAV5-mediated gene transfer, stated Matthew Kapusta, chief executive officer at uniQure. This development potentially expands the applicability of AAV5 gene therapies to nearly all hemophilia B patients. We believe these factors contribute to making AAV5 a potential best-in-class vector for delivering gene therapies more effectively and safely to a greater portion of patients in need of treatment.

About uniQure uniQure is delivering on the promise of gene therapy single treatments with potentially curative results. We are leveraging our modular and validated technology platform to rapidly advance a pipeline of proprietary and partnered gene therapies to treat patients with hemophilia, Huntingtons disease and cardiovascular diseases. http://www.uniQure.com

uniQure Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, which are often indicated by terms such as "anticipate," "believe," "could," "estimate," "expect," "goal," "intend," "look forward to", "may," "plan," "potential," "predict," "project," "should," "will," "would" and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are based on management's beliefs and assumptions and on information available to management only as of the date of this press release. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the development of our gene therapy product candidates, including the future development of AMT-060, the success of our collaborations and the risk of cessation, delay or lack of success of any of our ongoing or planned clinical studies and/or development of our product candidates. Our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements for many reasons, including, without limitation, risks associated with corporate reorganizations and strategic shifts, collaboration arrangements, our and our collaborators clinical development activities, regulatory oversight, product commercialization and intellectual property claims, as well as the risks, uncertainties and other factors described under the heading "Risk Factors" in uniQures 2016 Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on March 15, 2017. Given these risks, uncertainties and other factors, you should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, and we assume no obligation to update these forward-looking statements, even if new information becomes available in the future.

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uniQure Presents New Clinical Data in Hemophilia B Patients Demonstrating Therapeutic Efficacy of AAV5 Gene ... - GlobeNewswire (press release)

Gene Therapy 2016-2026 – Technologies, Markets and Companies Report 2017 – Profiles of 189 Companies with 240 … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of Jain PharmaBiotech's new report "Gene Therapy - Technologies, Markets and Companies" to their offering.

Gene therapy technologies are described in detail including viral vectors, nonviral vectors and cell therapy with genetically modified vectors. Gene therapy is an excellent method of drug delivery and various routes of administration as well as targeted gene therapy are described. There is an introduction to technologies for gene suppression as well as molecular diagnostics to detect and monitor gene expression.

The markets for gene therapy are difficult to estimate as there is only one approved gene therapy product and it is marketed in China since 2004. Gene therapy markets are estimated for the years 2016-2026. The estimates are based on epidemiology of diseases to be treated with gene therapy, the portion of those who will be eligible for these treatments, competing technologies and the technical developments anticipated in the next decades. In spite of some setbacks, the future for gene therapy is bright. The markets for DNA vaccines are calculated separately as only genetically modified vaccines and those using viral vectors are included in the gene therapy markets

The voluminous literature on gene therapy was reviewed and selected 750 references are appended in the bibliography. The references are constantly updated. The text is supplemented with 76 tables and 21 figures.

Profiles of 189 companies involved in developing gene therapy are presented along with 240 collaborations. There were only 44 companies involved in this area in 1995. In spite of some failures and mergers, the number of companies has increased more than 4-fold within a decade. These companies have been followed up since they were the topic of a book on gene therapy companies by the author of this report. John Wiley & Sons published the book in 2000 and from 2001 to 2003, updated versions of these companies (approximately 160 at mid-2003) were available on Wiley's web site. Since that free service was discontinued and the rights reverted to the author, this report remains the only authorized continuously updated version on gene therapy companies.

Key Topics Covered:

Part I: Technologies & Markets

Executive Summary

1. Introduction

2. Gene Therapy Technologies

3. Clinical Applications of Gene Therapy

4. Gene Therapy of Genetic Disorders

5. Gene Therapy of Cancer

6. Gene Therapy of Neurological Disorders

7. Gene Therapy of Cardiovascular Disorders

8. Gene therapy of viral infections

9. Research, Development and Future of Gene Therapy

10. Regulatory, Safety, Ethical Patent Issues of Gene Therapy

11. Markets for Gene Therapy

12. References

Part II: Companies

13. Companies involved in Gene Therapy

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/466r2h/gene_therapy

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Gene Therapy 2016-2026 - Technologies, Markets and Companies Report 2017 - Profiles of 189 Companies with 240 ... - Business Wire (press release)

Shire applies to test haemophilia A gene therapy in humans … – PharmaTimes

Shire has submitted a request to the US Food and Drug Administration to test its investigational factor VIII (FVIII) gene therapy SHP654 in patients with the bleeding disorder haemophilia A.

SHP654 (also known as BAX 888) aims to protect haemophilia A patients against bleeds through the delivery of a long-term, constant level of factor expression, the firm noted.

Shires gene therapy programme for haemophilia A uses a recombinant adeno-associated virus serotype 8 (rAAV8) vector that selectively targets the liver.

It involves the delivery of a functional copy of FVIII to the bodys liver to enable its own production of FVIII, rather than relying on a factor-based treatment.

The Investigational New Drug submission is based on the results of preclinical and phase I studies showing the potential utility of its candidate, the firm noted.

If Shire gets a green light for human testing it intends to study SHP654 in a global multi-center trial evaluating safety and examining the doses required to boost factor VIII activity levels and affect haemophilic bleeding.

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CRISPR’s high costs may limit development of gene therapy drugs – Genetic Literacy Project

The ruckus over the CRISPR gene-editing system hides a dark reality: its high cost may make it unaffordable and questions remain whether most insurance companies will pay for it.

The cost isnt coming down, said Mark Trusheim, director of the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologysNEW Drug Development Paradigms, a think tank working on the problem of how we will pay for expensive new drugs. Companies will say, We are developing these medicines, just pay us; insurers will say, We cant afford it.

Editas Medicineplans to use CRISPR-Cas9 to treat various diseases, including Leber congenital amaurosisBut in itsannual report, Editas noted significant uncertainty on whether payers would cover the treatment. In fact, a handful of insurance companieshave issued policy documents that exclude gene therapy from coverage, a move that experts say establishes policy against paying for CRISPR-based therapeutics.

Companies will charge whatever the market will bear, [said Tania Bubela, a law and policy expert]. Im not even sure that many of these gene therapies will work, and not all medicine is worth the price. But if these technologies become broadly used, especially in altering T cells for cancer, payers wont meet the demands of steep prices, and Bubela predicts that the system implodes under its own weight.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:Who will pay for CRISPR?

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CRISPR's high costs may limit development of gene therapy drugs - Genetic Literacy Project

Pharma IQ: Cell & Gene Therapy Manufacturing Summit – PR Newswire (press release)

The conference will take place in London on the 11th - 13th September. Early registration is rewarded so visit the event website for the latest early bird rates or email enquire@iqpc.co.uk to find out more.

With cell and gene manufacturing activity on the rise, the race towards commercialisation of cell and gene products has already begun. Where technology innovations are pathing the way towards the development of these products, challenges surrounding scale up and closed system processing highlight areas that need focus so that cell and gene therapy products can be produced on an industrial scale. Pharma IQ will be addressing the key barriers and opportunities in enhancing the development of cell and gene therapies, with the focus on how manufacturing processes can be improved ready for the market boom!

About Pharma IQ

Pharma IQ has 100k+ members and is an international online community focusing on providing pharmaceutical professionals with knowledge, information and articles. Pharma IQ is dedicated to creating a learning environment for sharing ideas, best practices and solutions within the pharmaceutical community. To learn more visit http://www.cellgenemanufacturing.iqpc.co.uk , or call us at +44(0)207-036-1300

Media Contact: Rumina Akther, Trainee Marketing Manager, IQPC: rumina.akther@iqpc.co.uk or call +44(0)207-036-1300

Press are invited to attend this important industry summit, if you would like to a complimentary press pass please email Rumina Akther on rumina.akther@iqpc.co.uk

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Pharma IQ: Cell & Gene Therapy Manufacturing Summit - PR Newswire (press release)

Ryboquin raises 1.8m for drug development in gene therapy – Drug Target Review

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This latest funding round attracts two prominent new investors; Brian Kennedy and Sir Brian Souter.

Ryboquin Limited, a Scottish Borders based pharmaceutical company, announces that it has closed a 1.8m equity fund raising to accelerate product development in gene therapy.

In addition to support from existing shareholders, including Borders business angel group, TRI Capital and the Scottish Investment Bank (the investment arm of Scottish Enterprise), funding has also been provided by Brian Kennedy, the highly successful Scottish entrepreneur and Sir Brian Souter, the founder and Chairman of Stagecoach. Brian Kennedy will also join the Board.

Founded in 2013, Ryboquin is a privately held, pharmaceutical company focused on commercialising patented intellectual property in the area of delivering gene therapy primarily in the field of human cancer medicine. Ryboquin is in partnership with Nanogenics to promote the targeted nucleic acid delivery system LipTide.

The funds being raised will be used to further scientific development as well as providing funding for corporate expansion.

Paul Murray, Executive Chairman, Ryboquin, says:

The support from existing shareholders and the investment by Brian Kennedy and Sir Brian Souter, two esteemed leaders and hugely successful businessmen, is testimony to the potential of Ryboquin and to the work we are undertaking in the field of cancer gene therapy drug development.

We also welcome Brian Kennedy to the Board and look forward to his contribution as we seek to grow the business both organically and by acquisition.

Brian Kennedy says:

I am delighted to be part of Ryboquin and to be working with the team that could make great progress in the treatment of cancer and other diseases.

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Ryboquin raises 1.8m for drug development in gene therapy - Drug Target Review

After raising $50M, virtual gene therapy startup LogicBio sets up … – Boston Business Journal


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After raising $50M, virtual gene therapy startup LogicBio sets up ...
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LogicBio Therapeutics becomes the latest local entrant to the field of gene therapy, a method of inserting healthy genes into cells to replace missing or faulty ...

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After raising $50M, virtual gene therapy startup LogicBio sets up ... - Boston Business Journal

LogicBio Lands $45M for Gene Therapies in Rare Pediatric Diseases – Xconomy

Xconomy Boston

Gene therapy offers the potential for a long-lasting, if not permanent, treatment for an inherited disease, but cells that divide rapidly, such as those in the liver, present a thorny problem. Because of how they insert themselves in the cells, some forms of gene therapy get diluted as the cells divide.

Its a particular problem in growing children. Cambridge, MA-based LogicBio says it has developed a workaround by combining gene editing with gene therapy. The firm has raised $45 million in additional capital to help bring this technology into human testing, and it is moving from California to the LabCentral shared incubator space in Cambridges Kendall Square.

LogicBio calls its technology GeneRide. The company says its approach can transfer genetic material to specific sites to repair a faulty genetic sequence. The companys focus is metabolic disorders that affect the liver in children. Published research shows that metabolic disorders of the liver can progress to injury affecting other organs. In rare cases, the severity of the disease requires a pediatric liver transplant.

If GeneRide works as the company envisions, the gene therapy would offer a one-time treatment that avoids side effects.

London-based Arix Bioscience (LSE: ARIX) led the Series B round of investment, which was joined by new investors OrbiMed, Edmond De Rothschild Investment Partners, Pontifax, and SBI Japan-Israel Innovation Fund. Earlier investor OrbiMed Israel Partners also joined in the latest investment. In total, LogicBio says it has raised approximately $50 million in financing to date.

Gene therapy remains largely experimental. UniQure (NASDAQ: QURE) received the Western worlds first gene therapy approval in 2012 for alipogene tiparovec (Glybera), a treatment for a rare metabolic disorder. But earlier this year, the company, split between the Netherlands and Lexington, MA, announced it would not seek renewal of its conditional approval, set to expire in October. Patient demand for the drug was limited and the company did not expect that to change.

The first U.S. approval could come soon. Philadelphia-based Spark Therapeutics (NASDAQ: ONCE) is awaiting an FDA decision on a gene therapy for an inherited form of blindness. Cambridge-based Bluebird Bio (NASDAQ: BLUE) last week released early data from a Phase 3 study in patients with beta-thalassemia, a rare blood disorder.

The technologies underlying LogicBios approach were developed at Stanford University by company co-founders Mark Kay, Adi Barzel, and Leszek Lisowski. In addition to its Cambridge site, the company also has scientists in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Frank Vinluan is editor of Xconomy Raleigh-Durham, based in Research Triangle Park. You can reach him at fvinluan [at] xconomy.com

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LogicBio Lands $45M for Gene Therapies in Rare Pediatric Diseases - Xconomy

Manufacturing of AAV Vectors for Gene Therapy – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Inherent Complexity

The inherent complexity of viral vector-based products, due to their physical size, formulation, and the fact that they often utilize a combined drug targeting/delivery vehicle function, makes their physical and biological characterization highly challenging from a regulatory perspective. Consequently, a fallback approach is adopted where the product is defined by the manufacturing process. This approach then makes the introduction of potentially product-impacting process changes difficult to implement and by default, the process becomes locked down within the early stages of development, severely restricting the scope for process improvement and scale up.

Classical process scale up tends to be via a vertical approach, with a focus on increasing the size of single operations (such as fermentation vessels) while keeping similar labor levels, subsequently achieving reduction in cost. This approach is valid if the process is well understood and amenable to linear scale up. The reality is that a large number of the key operations in the production of viral vectors are neither well characterized nor easily scaled. Lack of time and analytical tools will eventually direct developers to take a more horizontal approach to process scale up.

It seems likely that scale up will be based on limited vertical scale up, with multiple and overlapping production streams, potentially exploiting options around the adoption of closed single-use production systems to maximize outputs from production facilities. While this may not be the most efficient approach with regard to labor and facility costs and end-product testing, it is likely to be the only realistic option for many product development groups.

It is inevitable that some process changes will need to be introduced, for example, the requirement to replace purification of vectors by ultracentrifugation, as these processes are perceived as not only being unscalable, but also as highly operator-dependent with regard to yield and purity. The challenge becomes how engineers replace this type of operation. From a regulatory perspective, the key is an understanding of the critical quality attributes (CQAs) that impact product safety, purity, and potency; the critical process parameters (CPPs) required to control them; and the availability of the tools to measure CPPs.

This approach then, in theory, will allow process development groups to develop strategies for introducing and verifying the impact of desired process changes. However, the successful process development of these legacy processes will be dependent on the availability of suitable in-process and final-product assays. There is a clear regulatory, as well as operational, need for drug developers to invest in the analytical tools required to achieve greater understanding of AAV vectors and the processes used to make them for the products to receive commercial licensing.

The production of vectors through transient production routes entails a complex materials supply chain. At the front end is the supply of plasmid DNA constructs used to generate the vectors; clearly the quantities required will not only increase proportionally with the increased scale of vector manufacturing, but also, the associated quality requirements will be increased, moving from materials made to traceable standards to those made to GMP-grade standards (Figure 2). For early-phase development, non-GMP-grade plasmids may be used for the production of material for proof-of principle clinical studies. However, this may not be the case for commercial vectors, where GMP-grade plasmids may be required. One consequence of this will be the potential need for manufacturers to align with suppliers that have large-scale GMP capabilities to ensure the timely and secure delivery of plasmid supplies to support late clinical and commercial production.

At the end of the supply chain is the production of the viral vector drug product. For early-stage development, relatively little focus is given to either the product formulation or the filling process. There is often good reason for this, as material for such development studies is in very short supply, with all available material often directed into clinical studies to demonstrate product efficacy.

The result of this is that the basic formulations used in early-stage development are carried forward into late-stage trials, with the products 0.2-m filtered and hand filled into glass vials and stored at 80C.

Future development activities in the AAV field will need to be focused on identifying formulations that provide long-term stability, potentially moving to +28C storage, and generating meaningful stability data. Fully defining the drug product manufacturing process will also ensure the retention of product titers and activity throughout the manufacturing process, including activities such as inspection and labeling.

In conclusion, we are in exciting times with a number of these potentially life-changing products coming through to clinic. However, if we are to bring these products efficiently to the market, developers will need to adopt pragmatic and informed solutions for the manufacturing challenges that lie ahead.

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NightstaRx Raises $45M to Fund Phase III Study with Retinal … – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (blog)

U.K. firm NightstaRx raised $45 million in a Series C financing round to support continued clinical development of its pipeline of retinal gene therapies, including a pending Phase III study with lead candidate NSR-REP1 for treating choroideremia. The new funds will also be used to support an ongoing Phase I/II study with NSR-RPGR in patients with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (RP), and a proposed Phase I/II trial with a gene therapy product targeting an inherited form of macular dystrophy. Nightstar projects starting the macular dystrophy clinical trial during late 2018.

Investors in the Series C round included Nightstars existing investors Syncona and New Enterprise Associates (NEA) and new investors Wellington Management Company and Redmile Group. As an original investor in Nightstar, our goal from day one was to build a global gene therapy leader with the capability of developing multiple programs for inherited retinal diseases, commented Chris Hollowood, Ph.D., chairman of the board of Nightstar and chief investment officer of Syncona, which is funded by The Wellcome Trust. We welcome Wellington Management and Redmile Group as investors and look forward to working with them and NEA to fulfill Nightstars potential.

Founded in 2014 by researchers at the University of Oxford, Nightstar is developing a pipeline of one-time potentially curative treatments for rare inherited retinal diseases. Lead candidate NSR-REP1 is an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector-based gene therapy in development for treating choroideremia, a rare X-linked inherited retinal dystrophy for which there are currently no disease-modifying therapies. The AAV vector is administered by injection under the retina, using standard surgical procedures performed under local anesthetic. Nightstar says a Phase I/II study carried out by the University of Oxford confirmed long-term benefits of the treatment including vision improvement or stabilization.

The firms AAV-vector-based NSR-RPGR gene therapy for X-linked RP is designed to deliver a normal copy of the RP GTPase regulator (RPGR) gene, which Nightstar says is mutated in more than 70% of cases of X-linked RP. The procedure similarly involves injecting the gene-carrying vector under the retina. The ongoing Phase I/II study with NSR-RPGR was started in March.

Nightstar has ongoing collaborations with the University of Oxford, the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, and the Institute for Ophthalmic Research, Tbingen University Hospital. In February, the firm inked a collaboration with Netherlands-based Preceyes to develop a subretinal drug delivery technology based on the latters high-precision robotic device for ocular surgery.

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NightstaRx Raises $45M to Fund Phase III Study with Retinal ... - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (blog)

Biotech Gene Therapy Names Juno, Kite, And bluebird bio Still Have Room To Run – Seeking Alpha

Author's note: The following consists of excerpts from my 45-page May 30 report on bluebird bio (NASDAQ:BLUE), Kite Pharma (NASDAQ:KITE), and Juno Therapeutics (NASDAQ:JUNO). The focus in this submission is BLUE. Please check out my Seeking Alpha profile for important information. Global Gene Therapy Market

The gene therapy market is gaining popularity in the global medical community. The advent of advanced techniques for gene transfer has enabled the use of gene therapy for various new applications. Although it is still at an infant stage, its promise has led to a range of bullish estimates. Market research firm BCC Research forecasts the global market for DNA vaccines to grow at a 54.8% CAGR to $2.7 bln by 2019, while two other observers - Roots Analysis and Research and Markets - predict the gene therapy market as a whole to reach ~$11 bln by 2025. Another report from market intelligence firm Transparency Market Research forecasts that the global stem cell market will grow at a CAGR of > 20% in the next few years and said there is a rich pipeline of more than 500 cell and gene therapy products, which will drive significant capacity as the pipeline matures and progresses to commercial supply.

Key factors driving market growth include demand for novel and efficient therapies to treat cancers and other indications with high unmet needs. Other market drivers include completion of the human genome project, rising incidence and prevalence of cancers and other critical diseases, and the prospective launch of gene therapies in major global markets.

Most gene therapy products are in the pre-clinical or clinical research stage. To-date, there are only five marketed drugs, namely Glybera, Neovasculogen, Gendicine, Rexin-G, and Oncorine. However, these products constitute very little revenue for the gene therapy market. Most revenue for the gene therapy market is generated from products used in clinical trials.

Need for gene therapy: It is estimated that approximately 5% of the global population suffers from a rare disease, and half of the global population affected by rare diseases are children, making rare disease treatment a concern for children across the globe. There are about 7,000 known rare diseases that comprise the most complex healthcare challenges for researchers and health professionals - with most being difficult to diagnose due to heterogeneity in disease epidemiology.

Rare diseases that affect 200,000 people in the US (as per the FDA definition) and a similar percentage in Europe are typically genetic in nature and, thus, present a significant unmet need for potential regimes in the market.

As per World Health Organization, 80% of rare diseases are caused due to genetic abnormality and are inherited for generations. Approximately 5% of the rare diseases have a treatment, and most of the current therapeutic approaches include gene therapy and cell therapy. A significant gap between demand and supply of rare disease drugs is expected to create a massive opportunity for manufacturers and researchers in the area of rare disease treatment.

How Does Gene Therapy Work?

Advances in biotechnology have brought gene therapy to the forefront of medical research. The prelude to successful gene therapy, the efficient transfer and expression of a variety of human gene into target cells, has already been accomplished in several systems.

Gene therapy may be defined as the introduction of genetic material into defective cells for a therapeutic purpose. While gene therapy holds great potential as an effective means for selective targeting and treatment of disease, the field has seen relatively slow progress in the development of effective clinical protocols. Although identifying genetic factors that cause a physiological defect is straightforward, successful targeted correction techniques are proving continually elusive. Hence, safe methods have been devised to do this (using several viral and no-viral vectors). Two main approaches have emerged in-vivo modification and ex-vivo modification. Retrovirus, adenovirus, adeno-associated virus are suitable for gene therapeutic approaches; these are based on permanent expression of the therapeutic gene. Non-viral vectors are far less efficient than viral vectors, but they have advantages due to their low immunogenicity and large capacity for therapeutic DNA.

Viral Vectors: These are virus-based vectors. Examples include retrovirus vector, adeno virus vector system, adeno associated virus vector, and herpes simplex virus. Extensive research is being conducted on the various viral vectors used in gene delivery. Non-viral vectors: Examples of non-viral vector systems include pure DNA constructs, lipoplexes, DNA molecular conjugates, and human artificial chromosomes. Owing to the following advantages, non-viral vectors have gained significant importance in the past few years as they are less immune-toxic, there is risk-free repeat administration and relative ease of large-scale production.

A major disadvantage is that the corrected gene needs to be unloaded into the target cell, and the vector has to be made to reach the required treatment site.

Gene therapy has transitioned from the conceptual, technology-driven, laboratory research, to clinical trial stages for a wide variety of diseases. In addition to curing genetic disorders such as Hemophilia, Chronic Granulomatous Disorder, and Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (ADA-SCID), it is also being tested to cure acquired diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, influenza, and hepatitis.

Gene therapy is not limited to any particular disease. It is proving to be a promising treatment for rare diseases such as X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. The therapy has proved effective in research conducted for the following diseases:

Fat Metabolism Disorder: Gene therapy is used to correct rare genetic diseases caused due to lipoprotein lipase deficiency. This deficiency leads to fat molecules clogging the bloodstream. An adeno-associated virus vector is used to deliver the corrected copy of the LPL to the muscle cells. This corrected copy prevents excess accumulation of fat in the blood by breaking down the fat molecules. In 2012, the EU approved Glybera, the first viral gene therapy treatment for LPLD, manufactured by uniQure (NASDAQ:QURE). Glybera is likely to be approved for the American market by 2018.

Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency: Gene therapy has successfully been used to treat another inherited immune disorder - ADA deficiency. More importantly, none of the patients undergoing this treatment developed any other disorder. The retroviral vector is used in multiple small trials to deliver the functional copy of the ADA gene. Primarily, all the patients involved in these trials did not require any injection of ADA enzyme as their immune functions had immensely improved.

Severe Combined Immune Deficiency: A lot of documented work is already available regarding treating this immunodeficiency with gene therapy; however, clinical trials have not shown promising results. The viral vectors used during the trials triggered leukemia in patients. Since then, focus of the research and trials has been on preparing new vectors that are safe and do not cause cancer.

Hemophilia: Patients with hemophilia suffer excessive blood loss as the blood clotting protein (Factor IX) is absent. Researchers have successfully inserted the missing gene in the liver cells using an adeno-associated viral vector. After undergoing this treatment, patients experienced less bleeding as their body was able to create some of the Factor IX protein.

Cystic Fibrosis (CF): CF is a chronic lung disease caused due to a faulty CFTR gene. Genes are injected into cells using a virus. Recent studies also include testing the cationic liposome (a fatty container) to deliver DNA to the faulty CFTR gene, thus making the use of the non-viral gene carrier more successful. Phase II trials using this therapy were published in early 2015, which promised a novel therapeutic approach to CF.

-thalassemia: Clinical trials on gene therapy for -thalassemia (the faulty beta-globin gene, which codes for an oxygen-carrying protein in RBC) can be tracked back to 2007. Blood stem cells were taken from the patients bone marrow, and a retrovirus was used to transfer a working copy of the faulty gene. The modified stem cells were re-injected into the body to supply functional red blood cells. This treatment, once conducted, lasted over seven years, with the patient not undergoing blood transfusion during this time.

Hereditary Blindness: Currently, gene therapy is being tested to treat degenerative form of inherited blindness, where patients lose light-sensing cells in their eyes over time. Experimental data suggests that the animal models of a mouse, rat, and dog show slow or even reverse vision loss using gene therapy. The most important advantage associated with gene therapy for eye disorders is that AAV (adeno-associated virus) cannot shift from the eye to other body parts and hence does not cause an immune reaction.

Parkinson's Disease: Patients with Parkinson's disease lose the ability to control their movement as their brain cells stop producing the dopamine molecule used for signaling. A small group of patients showed improved muscle control when a small area of their brain was treated with a retroviral vector that contained dopamine-producing genes.

This is because cancer genetics is a novel treatment method, marked by high R&D costs. The therapy targets diseases with high unmet needs; this has been the driving force behind academic research laboratories, small biotech firms, and large pharmaceutical companies. The therapy is of short-duration treatment or mostly one-time treatment customized to individuals and often in small patient populations.

bluebird bio (BLUE) is a clinical-stage biotechnology company that focuses on developing transformative gene therapies for severe genetic diseases and cancer. Its product candidates include Lenti-D, which is in Phase II/III clinical studies for the treatment of cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy - a rare hereditary neurological disorder - and LentiGlobin, which is in four clinical studies for the treatment of transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia and severe sickle cell disease. The companys lead product candidate is bb2121, a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell receptor (TCR) product candidate that is in Phase I trial for the treatment of relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.

The company's gene therapy platform is based on viral vectors that utilize a non-replicating version of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1). Its lentiviral vectors are used to introduce a functional copy of a gene to the patient's own isolated hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the case of its LentiGlobin and Lenti-D product candidates, or the patient's own isolated white blood cells, which include T cells, in the case of its bb2121 product candidate.

BLUE has a strategic collaboration with Celgene Corporation (NASDAQ:CELG) to discover, develop, and commercialize disease-altering gene therapies in oncology; with Kite Pharma (KITE) to develop and commercialize second generation T cell receptor product candidates against an antigen related to certain cancers associated with the human papilloma virus; and with Medigene (Germany) for the research and development of (TCR) product candidates directed against approximately four antigens for the treatment of cancer indications. Founded in 1992 and headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the company was formerly known as Genetix Pharmaceuticals and later changed its name to bluebird bio (Incorporated) in September 2010.

With its lentiviral-based gene therapies, T cell immunotherapy expertise, and gene-editing capabilities, BLUE has built an integrated product platform with broad potential application for severe genetic diseases and cancer. BLUE's approach to gene therapy is based on viral vectors that utilize the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 or HIV-1. The HIV-1 vector is stripped off all the components that allow it to self-replicate and infect additional cells. HIV-1 is part of the lentivirus family of viruses. The vectors are used to introduce a modified copy of a gene from the patients own blood stem cells called hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), which reside in the patient's bone marrow. HSCs divide cells that allow for sustained expression of the modified gene.

Lenti-D

bluebird is developing the Lenti-D product candidate to treat patients with cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy.

Adrenoleukodystrophy is a rare X-linked, metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the ABCD1 gene, which results in a deficiency in adrenoleukodystrophy protein, or ALDP, and subsequent accumulation of very long-chain fatty acids. Symptoms of CALD usually occur in early childhood and progress rapidly if untreated, leading to severe loss of neurological function and eventual death.

Completed non-interventional retrospective study (the ALD-101 Study)

CALD is a rare disease, and data on the natural history of the disease, as well as the efficacy and safety profile of allogeneic HSCT, is limited in scientific literature. To properly design clinical studies of Lenti-D and interpret the efficacy and safety results thereof, at the recommendation of the FDA, bluebird performed a non-interventional retrospective data collection study to assess the natural course of the disease in CALD patients that were left untreated in comparison with the efficacy and safety data obtained from patients that received allogeneic HSCT.

For this study, data was collected from four US sites and one French site on a total of 137 subjects, 72 of whom were untreated, and 65 were treated with allogeneic HSCT.

Starbeam Study (ALD-102) - Phase II/III clinical study in subjects with CALD

The company is currently conducting a Phase II/III clinical study of Lenti-D product candidate in the US, referred to as the Starbeam Study (ALD-102), to examine the safety and efficacy of Lenti-D product candidate in subjects with CALD. The study was fully enrolled in May 2015; however, in December 2016, the company amended the protocol for this study to enroll up to an additional eight subjects in an effort to enable the first manufacture of Lenti-D product candidate in Europe and the subsequent treatment of subjects in Europe, and to bolster the overall clinical data package for potential future regulatory filings in the US and Europe. It intended to begin treating the additional patients in early 2017.

The ALD-103 (observational) study

bluebird is also conducting the ALD-103 study, an observational study of subjects with CALD treated by allogeneic HSCT. This study is ongoing and is designed to collect efficacy and safety outcomes data in subjects who have undergone allogeneic HSCT over a period that is contemporary with the Starbeam study.

Lentiglobin Product

Transfusion-dependent -thalassemia (TDT)

-thalassemia is a rare hereditary blood disorder caused by a mutation in the -globin gene, resulting in the production of defective red blood cells, or RBCs. Genetic mutations cause the absence or reduced production of beta chains of hemoglobin, or -globin, preventing the proper formation of hemoglobin A, which normally accounts for more than 95% of the hemoglobin in the blood of adults.

Limitations of current treatment options

In geographies where treatment is available, patients with TDT receive chronic blood transfusion regimens. These regimens consist of regular infusions with units of packed RBC, or pRBC, usually every three to five weeks, to maintain hemoglobin levels and control symptoms of the disease.

The only potentially curative therapy for -thalassemia today is allogeneic HSCT. However, complications of allogeneic HSCT include risk of engraftment failure in unrelated human-leukocyte-antigen, or HLA, matched patients, risk of life-threatening infection, and risk of GVHD - a common complication in which donor immune cells (white blood cells in the graft) recognize the cells of the recipient (the host) as foreign and attack them. As a result of these challenges, allogeneic HSCT can lead to significantly high mortality rates, particularly in patients treated with cells from a donor who is not a matched sibling and in older patients. Overall, TDT remains a devastating disease with an unmet medical need.

The Northstar Study (HGB-204) Phase I/II clinical study in subjects with TDT

The Northstar study is a single-dose, open-label, non-randomized, multi-site Phase I/II clinical study in the US, Australia, and Thailand to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the LentiGlobin product candidate in increasing hemoglobin production and eliminating or reducing transfusion dependence following treatment. In March 2014, the first subject with TDT was treated in this study, and, in May 2016, the study was fully enrolled.

The study enrolled 18 adults and adolescents. To be eligible for enrollment, subjects had to be between 12 and 35 years of age, with a diagnosis of TDT, and received at least 100 mL/kg/year of pRBCs or more than or equal to eight transfusions of pRBCs per year in each of the two years preceding enrollment.

Efficacy will be evaluated primarily by the production of 2.0 g/dL of hemoglobin A containing A-T87Q-globin for the six-month period between 18 and 24 months, post transplants. Exploratory efficacy endpoints include RBC transfusion requirements (measured in milliliters per kilogram) per month and per year, post transplants.

The HGB-205 study Phase I/II clinical study in subjects with TDT or with severe SCD

bluebird is conducting the HGB-205 study, a Phase I/II clinical study, in France to study the safety and efficacy of its LentiGlobin product candidate in the treatment of subjects with TDT and of subjects with severe SCD. In December 2013, the company said that the first subject with TDT had been treated in this study; in October 2014, bluebird declared that the first subject with severe SCD had been treated in this study. By February 2017, the study had been fully enrolled.

bluebird is conducting HGB-206 multi-site Phase I clinical study in the US to evaluate the safety and efficacy of its LentiGlobin product candidate for the treatment of subjects with severe SCD. In October 2016, the company amended the protocol of its HGB-206 study to expand enrollment and incorporate several process changes, including updated drug product manufacturing process. Enrollment had begun under this amended protocol, and in February 2017, the company treated the first subject under this amended protocol.

The Northstar-2 Study (HGB-207) Phase III study in subjects with TDT and a non-0/0 genotype

The Northstar-2 study is an ongoing single-dose, open-label, non-randomized, international, multi-site Phase III clinical study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the LentiGlobin product candidate to treat subjects with TDT and non-0/0 genotype. Approximately 23 subjects will be enrolled in the study, consisting of at least 15 adolescent and adult subjects between 12 and 50 years of age at enrollment and at least eight pediatric subjects less than 12 years of age at enrollment. In December 2016, the first subject had received treatment with the LentiGlobin product candidate.

The planned Northstar-3 Study (HGB-212) Phase III Study for TDT in subjects with TDT and a 0/ 0 genotype

The company plans the initiation of HGB-212, a Phase III clinical study of LentiGlobin in patients with TDT and the 0/0 genotype in 2H FY2017.

bluebird expects to enroll up to 15 adult, adolescent, and pediatric subjects. The company anticipates that the primary endpoint of the Northstar-3 study will be transfusion reduction, which is defined as a demonstration of a reduction in the volume of pRBC transfusion requirements in the post-treatment time period of 12-24 months, compared with the average annual transfusion requirement in the 24 months prior to enrollment.

Sickle Cell Disease

SCD is an inherited disease that is caused by a mutation in the -globin gene; this results in sickle-shaped red blood cells. The disease is characterized by anemia, vaso-occlusive crisis, infections, stroke, overall poor quality of life, and, sometimes, early death. Where adequate medical care is available, common treatments for patients with SCD largely revolves around the management and prevention of acute sickling episodes. Chronic management may include hydroxyurea and, in certain cases, chronic transfusions. Given the limitations of these treatments, there is no effective long-term treatment. The only advanced therapy for SCD is allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Complications of allogeneic HSCT include a significant risk of treatment-related mortality, graft failure, graft-versus-host disease, and opportunistic infections - particularly in patients who undergo non-sibling-matched allogeneic HSCT.

In March 2017, bluebird announced the Publication of the Case Study on the First Patient with Severe Sickle Cell Disease Treated with Gene Therapy in The New England Journal of Medicine. Patient 1204, a male patient with S/S genotype, was enrolled in May 2014 at 13 years of age into the HGB-205 clinical study. The patient underwent a regular transfusion regimen for four years prior to this study. Over 15 months since transplant, no SCD-related clinical events or hospitalizations occurred - contrasting favorably with the period before the patient began regular transfusions. All medications were discontinued, including pain medication.

The successful outcome in Patient 1204 demonstrates the promise of treatment with LentiGlobin gene therapy in patients with severe SCD and serves as a guide to optimize outcomes in future patients.

Celgene Collaboration

In March 2013, BLUE entered into a strategic collaboration with Celgene to advance gene therapy in oncology (cancer), which was amended and restated in June 2015, and amended again in February 2016. The multi-year research and development collaboration focused on applying BLUEs expertise in gene therapy technology to CAR T cell-based therapies, to target and destroy cancer cells. The collaboration now focuses exclusively on anti- B-cell maturation antigen BCMA product candidates for a new three-year term.

Under the terms of the Amended Collaboration Agreement, for up to two product candidates selected for development under the collaboration, BLUE is responsible for conducting and funding all research and development activities performed up through completion of the initial Phase I clinical study of such a product candidate.

In February 2016, Celgene exercised its option to obtain an exclusive worldwide license to develop and commercialize bb2121, the first product candidate under the Amended Collaboration Agreement, and paid the associated ($10 million) option fee. BLUE will share equally in all costs related to developing, commercializing, and manufacturing the product candidate within the US, if it elects to co-develop and co-promote bb2121 with Celgene. In case BLUE does not exercise its option to co-develop and co-promote bb2121, it will receive an additional fee (of $10 million).

Summary

All three names in my May 30, 2017, (45-page) report are from the same space, and I highly recommend taking a look at the entire report before making an investment decision. It is available on request.

This industry is in its infancy - most trials are only in Phase I or Phase II. The companies do not have earnings yet, and that makes them difficult to value today. In my opinion, the upside here is significant, but you may have to hold on to these names for a few years in order to realize that upside, because today an argument can be made that the stocks have gotten a little bit ahead of themselves.

I am keeping my Buy recommendation on Juno (unchanged), and I am keeping my Hold recommendation on Kite (unchanged). There are currently seven institutions (each) with stakes of at least 250 million dollars in BLUE. There are nine institutions (each) with stakes of at least 175 million dollars in KITE. With JUNO, the institutional ownership is much lower - many institutions probably got shaken out following deaths on the Juno trials last year. In my opinion, the market over-reacted to those deaths. In fact, the shares have already bounced significantly since the low from last year following that market over-reaction (and insiders bought $500,000 worth of Juno shares recently).

I went in and out of KITE twice in the last couple of years and locked in gains of 35% both times. I most recently exited KITE at $87 a share on March 13.

The 52-week high on BLUE is $124, and the all-time high is $194.

There are 8,000,000 shares short, and that is more than 10X the average daily volume.

My recommendation is to allocate 3% portfolio weight to this industry: 1.5% to BLUE, 0.75% to KITE, and 0.75% to JUNO.

I remember an analyst (many years ago) on CNBC defending his Sell recommendation on Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN). It was trading at $100/share at the time. He defended the Sell rating by saying it loses money on every book it sells. AMZN recently hit $1,000 today. The lesson here is do not be afraid to invest in names with multi-billion market caps that are without EPS today. With KITE, BLUE, and JUNO, you must look out 3-5 years.

Sources

Why bluebird bio Stock Surged 20.7% Higher in January

Risks - Mayo Clinic

bluebird bio Reports First Quarter 2017 Financial Results and Recent Operational Progress

bluebird bio Announces Publication of Case Study on First Patient with Severe Sickle Cell Disease Treated with Gene Therapy in The New England Journal of Medicine

Annual Report 10-K

Quarterly Report 10-Q

Press Release | Investor Relations | Bluebird Bio

Kite Pharma Posts Q1 Loss, Reveals CAR-T Patient Death

SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, LLC Announces Investigation of Kite Pharma, Inc. (KITE)

KITE INVESTOR ALERT: Faruqi & Faruqi, LLP Encourages Investors Who Suffered Losses Exceeding $100,000 Investing In Kite Pharma, Inc. To Contact The Firm

SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Levi & Korsinsky, LLP Announces the Commencement of an Investigation Involving Possible Securities Fraud Violations by the Board of Directors of Kite Pharma, Inc.

Kite Investors See An Uncomfortable Parallel With Juno

Kite Pharma: History In The Making?

Kite Pharma: Still Time To Get In Ahead Of Lead Oncology Treatment Approval

Here's What's Dragging Kite Pharma Inc. Down Today -- The Motley Fool

Global Gene Therapy Market to Reach US$316 Million by 2015, According to a New Report by Global Industry Analysts, Inc.

Gene Therapy Market information, Current Trends Analysis, Major Players and Forecast 2024

Gene Therapies Market will generate $204m in 2020

Cancer Gene Therapy Market size to exceed $4.3bn by 2024

Could gene therapy become biotech's growth driver in 2017?

Cell Therapy 2016 - Year in Review (part 1)

Cancer Gene Therapy Market Size, Share, Industry Report 2024

Gene Therapy Market information, Current Trends Analysis, Major Players and Forecast 2024

Gene Therapy Clinical Trials Worldwide

Human Gene Therapy (PDF)

Aranca Report - GENE THERAPY: Advanced Treatments for a New Era

International Journal Of Pharma Sciences and Research (IJPSR) - Gene therapy: Current status and future perspectives Gene Therapy Institute for Clinical and Economic Review

Read more here:

Biotech Gene Therapy Names Juno, Kite, And bluebird bio Still Have Room To Run - Seeking Alpha

Massachusetts girl may be among first-ever to receive gene therapy for rare disease after parents push for cure – Fox News

An 11-year-old girl in Massachusetts is at the forefront of a disease so rare, that it is believed only 22 people worldwide have been diagnosed with it. Talia Duff, who was born with Down syndrome and later diagnosed with Charcot-Marie-Tooth Neuropathy Type 4J (CMT4J), is slated to be among the first to enroll in a clinical trial that is awaiting FDA approval after her parents refused to watch her fall victim to the degenerative genetic disease.

Its a horrible feeling to go to a doctor and be told that theres nothing that can be done that the best you can do is try to make your child comfortable and enjoy the time you have together, John Duff, Talias dad, told PEOPLE. I learned to cherish moments in life that I would otherwise take for granted.

PREGNANT MOM DELAYS CANCER TREATMENT TO PROTECT UNBORN TWINS

The Duff family, which includes mom Jocelyn and older sister Teaghan, had noticed Talia struggling to crawl at around age four, and a regression in a number of other motor skills that at the time was attributed to her Down syndrome, and later to Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP). Subsequent failed therapies and a diagnoses of osteoporosis due to prescribed steroids caused her parents to push for another diagnosis at Boston Childrens Hospital, according to a post on the familys Cure CMT4J Foundation website.

We learned that Talia did not in fact have CIDP but instead had an extremely rare form of Charcot Marie Tooth Disease a degenerative, genetic disease called CMT4J, the post read.

MEREDITH VIEIRA SPEAKS OUT ON 'SILENT' BONE DISEASE

The family learned the disease would slowly take over Talias body like a form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), eventually causing paralysis and robbing her of her ability to breathe. In the two years since her diagnosis, Talia lost her ability walk or even raise her arms.

We were supposed to sit back and watch our child live her life in reverse, the post on Cure CMT4J Foundation read. I decided not to accept this. I stayed up late nights pouring over scientific papers and booked appointments with the top CMT doctors in the world. We traveled to the University of Iowa and then Vanderbilt University, where we met Dr. Jun Li.

CHRISTIAN ROCKER RAISING FUNDS FOR BANDMATE WHOSE WIFE DIED HOURS AFTER CHILDBIRTH

It was at the meeting with Li that the Duffs learned of a genetic therapy that could potentially cure Talias disease, but that it was eight-to-ten years away from production. Knowing that time was of the essence for Talia, Jocelyn began connecting with other parent advocates and the family started the Cure CMT4J Foundation with a goal of raising $1 million for research. She met with a team of eight researchers in Maryland, who concluded that the gene therapy would have a lasting effect on Talia, and they are now working to attain proof of concept approval from the FDA, PEOPLE reported.

With approval expected to come later this summer, Jocelyn is prepared to then push for approval of a human clinical trial, with Talia expected to be among the first to receive the gene therapy intravenously.

We feel hope now, Jocelyn told PEOPLE. People have said to me, This is a lot of work for you, and my response is, Hey, you would do this for your child, too. I simply cant stand by and do nothing.

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Massachusetts girl may be among first-ever to receive gene therapy for rare disease after parents push for cure - Fox News

New technique enables safer gene-editing therapy using CRISPR – Phys.Org

June 29, 2017 A CRISPR protein targets specific sections of DNA and cuts them. Scientists have turned this natural defense mechanism in bacteria into a tool for gene editing. Credit: Jenna Luecke and David Steadman/Univ. of Texas at Austin

Scientists from The University of Texas at Austin took an important step toward safer gene-editing cures for life-threatening disorders, from cancer to HIV to Huntington's disease, by developing a technique that can spot editing mistakes a popular tool known as CRISPR makes to an individual's genome. The research appears today in the journal Cell.

Scientists already use the gene-editing tool called CRISPR to edit the genetic code of nearly any organism. CRISPR-based gene editing will have an enormous impact on human health. More than a dozen clinical trials employing CRISPR on human cells are reportedly already underway, but the approach is imperfect. In theory, gene-editing should work much like fixing a recurring typo in a document with an auto-correct feature, but CRISPR moleculesproteins that find and edit genessometimes target the wrong genes, acting more like an auto-correct feature that turns correctly spelled words into typos. Editing the wrong gene could create new problems, such as causing healthy cells to become cancerous.

The UT Austin team developed a way to rapidly test a CRISPR molecule across a person's entire genome to foresee other DNA segments it might interact with besides its target. This new method, they say, represents a significant step toward helping doctors tailor gene therapies to individual patients, ensuring safety and effectiveness.

"You and I differ in about 1 million spots in our genetic code," says Ilya Finkelstein, an assistant professor in the Department of Molecular Biosciences at UT Austin and the project's principal investigator. "Because of this genetic diversity, human gene editing will always be a custom-tailored therapy."

The researchers took a DIY approach to developing the equipment and software for their technique, using existing laboratory technology to develop CHAMP, or Chip Hybridized Affinity Mapping Platform. The heart of the test is a standard next generation genome sequencing chip already widely used in research and medicine. Two other key elementsdesigns for a 3-D printed mount that holds the chip under a microscope and software the team developed for analyzing the resultsare open source. As a result, other researchers can easily replicate the technique in experiments involving CRISPR.

"If we're going to use CRISPR to improve peoples' health, we need to make sure we minimize collateral damage, and this work shows a way to do that," says Stephen Jones, a postdoctoral researcher at UT Austin and one of three co-lead authors of the paper.

Andy Ellington, a professor in the Department of Molecular Biosciences and vice president for research of the Applied Research Laboratories at UT Austin, is a co-author of the paper. He says this method also illustrates the unpredictable side benefits of new technologies.

"Next generation genome sequencing was invented to read genomes, but here we've turned the technology on its head to allow us to characterize how CRISPR interacts with genomes," says Ellington. "Inventive folks like Ilya take new technologies and extend them into new realms."

This work can also help researchers predict which DNA segments a certain CRISPR molecule will interact with even before testing it on an actual genome. That's because they're uncovering the underlying rules that CRISPR molecules use to choose their targets. For example, they found that the CRISPR molecule they tested, called Cascade, pays less attention to every third letter in a DNA sequence than to the others.

"So if it were looking for the word 'shirt' and instead found the word 'short,' it might be fine with that," says Jones.

That sounds counterintuitive, but can be really useful. CRISPR originated from a natural defense in bacteria used to guard against invading viruses that evolve rapidly. A good defense sees through slight changes in the viral genetic code.

Knowing these rules will lead to better computer models for predicting which DNA segments a specific CRISPR molecule is likely to interact with. And that can save time and money in developing personalized gene therapies.

Explore further: Modifying fat content in soybean oil with the molecular scissors Cpf1

More information: Cell (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.05.044 , http://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(17)30637-2

Journal reference: Cell

Provided by: University of Texas at Austin

A team from the Center for Genome Engineering, within the Institute for Basic Research (IBS), succeeded in editing two genes that contribute to the fat contents of soybean oil using the new CRISPR-Cpf1 technology: an alternative ...

As CRISPR-Cas9 starts to move into clinical trials, a new study published in Nature Methods has found that the gene-editing technology can introduce hundreds of unintended mutations into the genome.

Researchers from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) have harnessed the power of CRISPR/Cas9 to create more-potent chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells that enhance tumor rejection in mice. The unexpected findings, ...

The gene-editing technique known as CRISPR/Cas9 made a huge splash in the news when it was initially announced. But the first commercial product, expected around 2020, could make it to the market without much fanfare: It's ...

Scientists on the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have improved a state-of-the-art gene-editing technology to advance the system's ability to target, cut and paste genes within human and animal cellsand ...

Picture bacteria and viruses locked in an arms race. For many bacteria, one line of defense against viral infection is a sophisticated RNA-guided "immune system" called CRISPR-Cas. At the center of this system is a surveillance ...

Photosynthesis is one of the most complicated and important processesresponsible for kick-starting Earth's food chain. While we have modeled its more-than-100 major steps, scientists are still discovering the purpose of ...

Whether or not society shakes its addiction to oil and gasoline will depend on a number of profound environmental, geopolitical and societal factors.

The actions of a protein used for DNA replication and repair are guided by electrostatic forces known as phosphate steering, a finding that not only reveals key details about a vital process in healthy cells, but provides ...

Worker and queen honeybees exposed to field realistic levels of neonicotinoids die sooner, reducing the health of the entire colony, a new study led by York University biologists has found.

Scientists from The University of Texas at Austin took an important step toward safer gene-editing cures for life-threatening disorders, from cancer to HIV to Huntington's disease, by developing a technique that can spot ...

If aliens sent an exploratory mission to Earth, one of the first things they'd noticeafter the fluffy white clouds and blue oceans of our water worldwould be the way vegetation grades from exuberance at the equator ...

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New technique enables safer gene-editing therapy using CRISPR - Phys.Org

Lonza expands in Asia: 8000L single-use in Singapore, regenerative meds in Japan – BioPharma-Reporter.com

Lonza will install four 2,000L single-use bioreactorsat its Singapore facilityto cater for growing demand for small to mid-volume biologics production.

At present the Tuas facility houses 86,500L of stainless steel bioreactor capacity including four 20,000L stirred fermenters.Last October Lonza announced it was making an undisclosed investment in single-usetechnology for mammalian manufacturing at the site.

And speaking in Tokyo this week, SVP of global sales Cindy Reiss-Clark revealed more details:

We are adding up to four by 2,000L single-use bioreactors, with the first two being on line in early 2018, she told delegates at the first BioPharma Expo, being held alongside Interphex Japan. This expansion is supporting the commercialisation strategies [of our customers] which require small to mid-scale [bioproduction].

She added one of the first customers to leverage the new technologies in Singapore would be Tracon Pharmaceuticals, a Californian-based oncology-focused firm which entered into a long-term agreement for commercial production of its lead candidate TRC105 in February this year.

Lonza will transfer the process to the 2,000L[line] in Singapore, Reiss-Clark said, while providing ongoing clinical support for the antibody which has orphan drug designation for the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma.

Cell and gene therapy space

She also spoke about Lonzas collaboration with Nikon CeLL innovation part of the Nikon Corporation. The firms are developing a cell and gene manufacturing services business in Japan.

The partnership was first announced in May 2015 and a GMP facility in Tokyois on track and will be ready in 2018, according to Reiss-Clark.

The Singapore site has cell and gene therapy capabilities but this latest project will strengthen Lonzas presence in Asia.

The firm recently acquired European cell and gene therapy maker PharmaCell in a deal that a spokesperson told this publication places Lonza as the leading contract development and manufacturing organisation offering an international cell and gene therapy manufacturing network, spanning the US, Europe and Asia.

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Lonza expands in Asia: 8000L single-use in Singapore, regenerative meds in Japan - BioPharma-Reporter.com

Arix leads $45M series B for gene therapy biotech LogicBio – FierceBiotech

LogicBio Therapeutics has got off a $45 million series B funding round as it eyes the cash for disease-modifying gene therapies in rare childhood diseases.

London-based investment firm Arix Bioscience led the oversubscribed round in the semi-stealth biotech, with new investors OrbiMed, Edmond De Rothschild Investment Partners, Pontifax, and SBI, along with previous investors OrbiMed Israel Partners, also stumping up cash.

Arix Bioscience's investment manager, Daniel OConnell, M.D., Ph.D, will join Cambridge, Massachusetts-based LogicBios board as part of the raise. This brings its total raised to $50 million, much of which will be put toward finishing off preclinical work and moving them into human tests.

The biotech sets itself up as a breakthrough gene therapy company targeting lifelong cures for serious, early-onset rare diseases by combining the best of gene therapy and gene editing in a one-time treatment.

It was founded in 2014 with platform technologies discovered by Adi Barzel, Tel Aviv University, Dr Leszek Lisowski, Childrens Medical Research Institute, Australia, and Professor Mark Kay at Stanford University School of Medicine.

The first platform, GeneRide, is a technology that uses homologous recombination that is designed to allow site-specific transfer of therapeutic genetic material without the use of promoters or nucleases. The company says it also has access to a library of synthetic, non-pathogenic, recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors developed at Stanford that allows for better predictability of vector performance in clinical trials.

Joe Anderson, CEO of Arix Bioscience, said: Early intervention for rare genetic disorders in children is important and LogicBio is uniquely positioned at the forefront of this research area with its proprietary genetic therapy technology to deliver a durable cure for young patients with life-threatening genetic diseases and otherwise limited options. LogicBio has huge potential and, alongside its excellent team and investors, we look forward to supporting the company to achieve continued success in this area.

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Arix leads $45M series B for gene therapy biotech LogicBio - FierceBiotech

Hammered on a gene therapy setback, Dimension cuts staff and circles the wagons – Endpoints News

Dimension Therapeutics is winnowing out 25% of its staff as it concentrates on three gene therapy programs, including one partnered with Bayer that has the potential to generate some badly needed milestone cash.

The biotech says it has enough revenue in hand to operate for another year, adding that it can extend the runway out to the end of 2018, provided it bags about $15 million in cash in its deal with Bayer. Three years ago Dimension inked a $252 million pact with Bayer, with $20 million of that upfront.

Annalisa Jenkins

Counting milestone money in your business plan isnt likely to generate much confidence among investors, especially after some disappointing results and evidence of liver toxicity for its initial lead gene therapy for hemophilia B in January crushed the biotechs stock price. DTX101 which faced more advanced competitors with better data has now been shoved out of the spotlight.

The biotechs market cap has now shrunk to $38 million.

The lead program in the clinic now is DTX301 for rare cases of ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency. The biotech is lining up two more programs for INDs, including DTX201 allied with Bayer.

Dimension was one of several gene therapy companies to get started with a technology licensing deal with ReGenX, a spinoff from the University of Pennsylvania which is working with AAV technology developed by scientific founder James Wilson.

Our key focus is to deliver initial data from our ongoing Phase I/II clinical trial for DTX301 in OTC deficiency, advance two proof-of-concept studies for glycogen storage disease type Ia (GSDIa) and hemophilia A, the latter in collaboration with Bayer, and advance our unique HeLa 2.0 manufacturing platform, says CEO Annalisa Jenkins. We believe we can deliver these important objectives in 2017-2018 with our current financial position.

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Hammered on a gene therapy setback, Dimension cuts staff and circles the wagons - Endpoints News

Gene Therapy Vectors Come to Grips with Nervous System, Root and Branch – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

The go to gene-delivery vehicle, the adeno-associated virus (AAV), doesnt always go to where you would want it to go, particularly if the destinations you have in mind include the brain or the peripheral nervous system. Typically, viral vectors struggle to cross the bloodbrain barrier. Also, they tend to become dispersed across the body when they are tasked with delivering genetic cargo to far-flung neurons beyond the brain and spinal cord, such as those that sense pain and regulate heart rate, respiration, and digestion.

To help develop gene-delivery systems that can provide efficient transduction to neurons throughout the body, scientists based at the California Institute of Technology have introduced two AAV variants: one that efficiently ferries genetic cargo past the bloodbrain barrier and another that is efficiently picked up by peripheral neurons residing outside the brain and spinal cord.

Details appeared June 26 in the journal Nature Neuroscience, in an article entitled Engineered AAVs for Efficient Noninvasive Gene Delivery to the Central and Peripheral Nervous Systems. The vectors are able to reach their targets following a simple injection into the bloodstream. Also, the vectors are customizable and could potentially be used as part of a gene therapy to treat neurodegenerative disorders that affect the entire central nervous system, such as Huntington's disease, or to help map or modulate neuronal circuits and understand how they change during disease.

Here, we describe AAV-PHP.eB and AAV-PHP.S, capsids that efficiently transduce the central and peripheral nervous systems, respectively, wrote the articles authors. In the adult mouse, intravenous administration of 1 1011 vector genomes (vg) of AAV-PHP.eB transduced 69% of cortical and 55% of striatal neurons, while 1 1012 vg of AAV-PHP.S transduced 82% of dorsal root ganglion neurons, as well as cardiac and enteric neurons.

The work was led by Viviana Gradinaru, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology and biological engineering at Caltech. "We have now developed a new collection of viruses and tools to study the central and peripheral nervous systems," she said. "We are now able to get highly efficient brain-wide delivery with just a low-dose systemic injection, access neurons in difficult-to-reach regions, and precisely label cells with multiple fluorescent colors to study their shapes and connections."

The new vectors could help researchers study the activity and function of specific types of neurons within peripheral circuits using genetically encoded sensors and tools to modulate neuronal firing with light or designer drugs, respectively. The new vectors could also deliver genes that code for colorful fluorescent proteins, proteins that are useful in identifying and labeling cells.

The efficiency of these vectors facilitates robust cotransduction and stochastic, multicolor labeling for individual cell morphology studies, the articles authors noted. To support such efforts, we provide methods for labeling a tunable fraction of cells without compromising color diversity.

In the labeling process, multiple AAVseach carrying a distinct colorare mixed together and injected into the bloodstream. When they reach their target neurons, each neuron receives a unique combination of colors, thereby giving it a visually distinct hue that makes it easier for the researchers to distinguish its fine details from those of its neighbors. Furthermore, the team devised a technique to control the number of neurons labeledlabeling too many neurons makes it impossible to distinguish individual onesthat allows researchers to visualize individual neuron shapes and trace their connecting fibers through intact tissues using another technology that Dr. Gradinaru's laboratory has helped develop, known as tissue clearing.

"Usually, when researchers want a mouse or other animal model to express fluorescent proteins in certain cells, they need to develop genetically modified animals that can take months to years to make and characterize," said former graduate student and first author Ken Chan (Ph.D. '17). "Now with a single injection, we can label specific cells with a variety of colors within weeks after the injection."

"For our new systemic viral vectorsAAV PHP.S and AAV PHP.eBthere are many potential uses, from mapping circuits in the periphery and fast screening of gene regulatory elements to genome editing with powerful tools such as CRISPR/Cas9," asserted Dr. Gradinaru. "But perhaps the most exciting implication is that our tools, when paired with appropriate activity modulator genes, could enable noninvasive deep brain modulation for the treatment of neurological diseases such as Parkinson's disease."

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Gene Therapy Vectors Come to Grips with Nervous System, Root and Branch - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Gene Therapy: A New Twist on an Old Helix – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Many Helpers Make Light Work

Targeting cancer cells that have spread to several organs of the body is difficult. Targeted radiation therapy or chemotherapy tends to destroy not only the cancer cells but also normal cells. Turning to gene therapy to selectively deliver therapeutic genes into these cancer cells on a larger scale and eliminating them in one fell swoop is the ultimate goal of Tocagen.

Using two products, Toca 511 and Toca FC, the company plans on developing an effective combination therapy that could hit the cancer hard. Toca 511 is an injectable retroviral replicating vector (RRV) that provides the genetic material to encode a prodrug activator enzyme, cytosine deaminase (CD), which is derived from yeast and has no human counterpart. It is selectively delivered to only cancer cells, thus producing the CD protein in each cell.

Part two of this therapy involves a pill called Toca FC, which contains 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) that converts to the anticancer agent 5-FU in the presence of CD protein. Toca FC kills not only the cancer cells, but also the myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), which suppress the immune system, and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs).

Harry Gruber, M.D., cofounder and former CEO of Tocagen, talks about the use of gamma-retroviruses: The advantage of using a gamma-retrovirus (as opposed to the lentivirus) is that it cannot enter the nucleus on its own. This makes it selective to dividing cells only, and since cancer cells are rapidly dividing, [gamma-retroviruses] help in spreading the virus and its genetic information. They live in defective cells that lack an innate immunity, and due to this selectivity, they are designed to be universally geared toward only cancer cells.

Dr. Gruber also mentioned that Toca 511/FC received the FDAs Breakthrough therapy designation, which expedites drug development.

The field of gene therapy has come a long way since its inception. Early failures and setbacks forced researchers back to the drawing board to figure out how viral vectors could be accepted by the human body, which ordinarily rejects foreign particles. Researchers also had to learn how such vectors could reach specific targets and deliver foreign DNA that could be integrated into the genome. This dance between therapy and the innate immune system is getting more complex, but is also showing its true beauty within the complexity.

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Gene Therapy: A New Twist on an Old Helix - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

More good news for Bluebird Bio with CALD gene therapy – pharmaphorum

Bluebird Bio haspresented encouraging data from its gene therapy treatment for the rare condition, cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD).

The company is competing with other pioneering firms to develop transformative gene therapies for severe genetic diseases, as well as T cell-based immunotherapies for cancer.

It has had a run of good news recently, including encouraging early stage results from its multiple myeloma candidate bb2121 at ASCO.

But gene therapy Lenti-D is one of its two most advanced candidates, and has just produced encouraging topline interim data from its Phase 2/3 Starbeam Study (ALD-102).

Lenti-D is being studied in boys under 18 years old with CALD. The data shows that two years after receiving the gene therapy, 15 out of the 17 boys on the trial show are free of major functional disabilities (MFDs), the primary endpoint of the trial.

Also known as Lorenzos Oil disease, adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is estimated to affect one in every 21,000 male births worldwide. Cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD), is a potentially fatal form of ALD that affects the nervous system of boys, and involves a breakdown of the protective sheath of the nerve cells in the brain that are responsible for thinking and muscle control.

The current standard treatment for CALD is allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), but complications including graft failure, graft versus host disease (GVHD) and opportunistic infections can be fatal.

The Lenti-D therapy involves genetically modifying a patients own stem cells to contain functional copies of the ABCD1 gene. This restores the production of the missing ALDP protein, which helps to break down the very long chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) which cause the neurodegeneration.

David Davidson

The hope that Lenti-D may benefit boys facing such a devastating disease inspires all of us at bluebird, said David Davidson, M.D., chief medical officer, Bluebird Bio.

Having this proportion of the initial cohort of patients meet the primary endpoint is truly gratifying, bringing us one step closer to our goal of making Lenti-D available for patients with CALD. The two patients who did not meet the primary endpoint underscore the devastating nature of CALD, the importance of early diagnosis through newborn screening, and the challenges of the current standard of care with allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).

The company commented on the condition of the two patients who hadnt responded, including Patient 2016, whose disease progressed before he could receive the new treatment. He subsequently died from complications of the allogeneic transplantation, underlining the problems with current treatment.

Bluebird said the Starbeam Study showed the safety profile of Lenti-D was consistent with myeloablative conditioning, with no patients treated experiencing graft versus host disease (GvHD), graft rejection or clonal dominance.

The Starbeam study had been expanded to treat eight additional patients at sites in Europe and the US, and the study is currently enrolling the additional patients. It says this expansion is intended to enable the first manufacture of Lenti-D in Europe, expand treatment to Europe and to bolster its overall clinical data package ahead of filing.

The company has also just announced encouraging data from its other lead candidate, LentiGlobin.Its phase 3 Northstar-2 studyin transfusion-dependent -thalassemia (TDT) and non- genotypes shows that trial participants are free from transfusions, three and a half years after receiving treatment.

The firm, based in Cambridge, Mass, has also just announced announced a public offering of $350 million of common stock to help fund its R&D plans.

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More good news for Bluebird Bio with CALD gene therapy - pharmaphorum

Bluebird Reports Early Results From Upgraded Gene Therapy – Xconomy

Xconomy Boston

One of the years most closely watched clinical studies could lead to a landmark approval of a gene therapy and throw wide open the debate over how to pay for expensive drugs. The first drips of data have emerged.

Bluebird Bio (NASDAQ: BLUE) says the first three patientsof 15 total expectedhave had good results from a revised version of its LentiGlobin gene therapy to treat certain genetic variants of the rare blood disease beta-thalassemia, which causes severe anemia and requires frequent transfusions.

Bluebird has changed the way it manufactures the product, which requires extracting a patients bone marrow cells, altering their DNA outside the body, then reintroducing the cells to the patient. This study, called NORTHSTAR-2, is the first test of the improved process, which regulators said last year would not require rewinding its clinical program back to the beginninga sigh of relief at the time for the company and its shareholders.

Caveats abound. The results are not only a small sample size, they are also early. Typically data from three patients in a study would not be worth singling out. But Bluebird, of Cambridge, MA, is trying to produce a type of medicine never approved before in the U.S. (Two have been approved in Europe, but one never took hold.)

And the FDA has already shown willingness to consider approval of medicines for rare diseases based on tiny sample sizeswith considerable controversy, in the case of a drug approved last year to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

In one NORTHSTAR-2 patient, the healthy version of the blood protein hemoglobin has reached normal levels six months after a single dose of treatment. The second patients healthy hemoglobin levels are rising but lower than the first patient after three months. The third patient is only two months out from treatment.

For patients with good results, the treatments staying power will be crucial. Bluebird wants it to be a one-time cure, as of course will patients. Insurers will undoubtedly want the samebut what to do if something that costs hundreds of thousands or more than a million dollars, stops working after a few years?

Bluebird officials say they have already begun talking to payers about pay for performance arrangements. Our hope is to tie outcomes of the patient to the value generated, says chief financial and strategic officer Jeff Walsh. It can come in many different forms. (Xconomy reported on several creative drug-pricing ideas in this article.)

Bluebird hopes to make a case for approval for beta-thalassemia before U.S. and European regulators, perhaps in 2019, using data from the NORTHSTAR-2 trial and from previous trials that used the older LentiGlobin version. The main goal of NORTHSTAR-2 is for patients to produce enough of their own healthy hemoglobin to eliminate the need for regular blood transfusions. The first patient has reached that goal, says chief medical officer David Davidson.

The new version of LentiGlobin product, among other things, squeezes more copies of the correct gene into each targeted cellmore shots on goal to change each malfunctioning cell for the better, in other words.

The NORTHSTAR-2 patient with six months of results to report has fared better than similar beta-thalassemia patients six months after they received the previous version of LentiGlobin in a study called HGB-204. The NORTHSTAR-2 patient is producing 13.3 g/DL of hemoglobin, within the normal range for a woman; the median production among 10 HGB-204 patients after six months was 9.7 g/DL.

A doctor working on the study is presenting the data, along with updates from its LentiGlobin treatment for sickle cell disease, at the European Hematology Association meeting this weekend.

Alex Lash is Xconomy's National Biotech Editor. He is based in San Francisco.

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Bluebird Reports Early Results From Upgraded Gene Therapy - Xconomy