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Coloradans Getting Third Dose Of COVID Vaccine Say They Feel More Protected Than Ever – CBS Denver

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:47 am

LOVELAND, Colo. (CBS4) Some of the first Coloradans to get a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine say they feel more protected than ever before from the deadly virus. Coloradans who are immunocompromised have been granted permission to get a third dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines in order to increase the efficacy of the vaccines. Those considered healthy have not been granted authorization for so-called booster shots as of the posting of this article.

I have absolutely gotten the COVID vaccine. My first, my second and now my third, said Betsy Craig, a Northern Colorado resident living with Scleroderma.

Craig was diagnosed in 2005 with Scleroderma and was only given 18 months to survive. However, a stem cell transplant helped her regain longevity and a mostly normal lifestyle.

However, viruses ranging from the common flu to COVID-19 pose a real threat to her life.

Because of her weakened immune system, Craigs two doses of vaccine did not give her the roughly 95% efficacy which most vaccinated people with two doses have. So, the CDC and FDA approved people like Craig to receive a third dose of either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine to increase their protection.

I called the third dose liquid gold, because to me it is. It is the closest thing to protection to keep me breathing, Craig told CBS4s Dillon Thomas.

Dr. Thomas Campbell, Chief Clinical Research Officer for UCHealth, said the vaccines are effective but will need boosters over time.

The primary series we currently do of two doses doesnt work well enough, Campbell said.

Campbell said, once approved by the FDA, vaccinated Americans will likely need to receive routine booster shots to continue to maintain high rates of immunity.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines can protect people up to 96%. Compared to the annual flu shot, which only protects people about 50% of the time from the flu, the vaccines are incredibly effective.

However, like other vaccines, they can lose strength over time. Tetanus shots need boosting every 10 years, while flu shots often need to be boosted every year.

Preliminary research shows the COVID-19 Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will likely need boosters every eight months.

Campbell said, currently, only the immunocompromised need their third doses of the vaccines.

Those individuals never achieve adequate immunity with just two doses. They need a third dose just to get to adequate immunity, Campbell said. That is in contrast to people who are otherwise healthy, they respond well to the two-dose series. But, we know from immerging data, the protection wains over time. This doesnt mean the vaccine doesnt work. It just means that it can work better if we give it a third dose.

When getting a third dose of vaccine Coloradans will not have to return to the place they received their initial doses. Experts say there wont be an issue with availability due to demand as we saw when the vaccines first surfaced.

Also, while highly recommended, it isnt required for people to get the same type of vaccine they did for the first two. Campbell said Pfizer and Moderna can be mixed over time if absolutely necessary.

While the FDA works on rolling out booster shots for regularly healthy people, Craig said she is thrilled to have more protection from the virus.

(Forgoing the third dose) is Russian roulette, and I am just not willing to play Russian roulette if I dont have to. It is just relief that I am not going to die if I get sick, Craig said.

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Crypto leaders are obsessed with life extension. Here’s why Cointelegraph Magazine – Cointelegraph

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:42 am

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is on a mission to make humans immortal. Buterin, 27, proposes the idea that aging is an engineering problem.

He is not alone in his combined interest in Bitcoin and biohacking. Famous biomedical aging researcher Aubrey de Grey, Xanadu architect and Agoric chief scientist Mark Miller, Bitcoin Cash billionaire Roger Ver and former chief technology officer of Coinbase and a16z general partner Balaji Srinivasan, are all fascinated by the pursuit of longevity.

De Grey recently helped advise a decentralized collective funding longevity research. He says:

I have been gratified since the beginning of blockchain to see the enormous fanbase that I and the longevity movement have in there.

Miller, alongside his engineering hall-of-fame accomplishments, is a senior research fellow at the Foresight Institute, a not-for-profit founded in 1986 with the aim of advancing technology for the long-term benefit of life.

Im very much involved in this new world of crypto commerce, often referred to as the blockchain sector, he says. Im very hopeful about that as creating an ecosystem in which secure software will dominate because insecure software results in massive losses quickly, with no recourse.

Srinivasans Twitter bio describes his vision as: Immutable money, infinite frontier, eternal life. #Bitcoin. Srinivasan states that the ultimate purpose of technology is to eliminate mortality and life extension is the most important thing we can invent.

Blockchain communities are clearly excited about longevity. But what does cryptocurrency have to do with life extension, and where might this future be headed?

It turns out that the link between crypto and cryogenics stretches back to core contributors, and the Cypherpunks mailing list and its links to transhumanist groups, including the first person to transact Bitcoin with Satoshi, Hal Finney.

Crypto philanthropists are donating significant wealth to this area, which is typically difficult to garner mainstream support for. They may be the only people on the planet optimistic enough to fund tech that currently only exists in sci-fi novels.

According to Buterin, longevity is a battle worth fighting for. Buterin donated $25 million in SHIB cryptocurrency tokens to the Future of Life Institute in June 2021 and has donated over $350,000 to the SENS Research Foundation to reimagine ageing.

He discussed the topic in recent podcast interviews with the likes of Lex Fridman and Tim Ferriss saying that life extension is definitely really important to me.

I think I hope to see the concept of seeing your parents and grandparents die just slowly disappear from the public consciousness as a thing that happens over the course of half a century.

Buterin has emphasized his adherence to the moral philosophy of effective altruism. This value, known to transhumanists as the moral urgency of saving lives, is perhaps what motivated his donations of dog coins to both COVID-19 relief in India and life-extension.

Just even the process of aging turning into something that just becomes reversible and it being a regular thing for people to live one and a half, two centuries and then go even further from there, Buterin states.

Pinned in Buterins Twitter is an essay called The Fable of the Dragon Tyrant by professor Nick Bostrom, director of the Future of Humanity Institute. It argues that allowing death from old age is unethical. If you view aging as a disease, the urgency to support the transhumanist project also makes sense.

While we still lack effective and acceptable means for slowing the aging process, we can identify research directions that might lead to the development of such means in the foreseeable future, states Bostrom. The key to freeing humanity from the dragon tyrant of aging, is funding. The new riches from crypto are key.

Bitcoin.com founder Roger Ver has already signed up to be cryogenically frozen. Rather than investing in cryptocurrency stuff, I want to focus on the extreme life extension technologies, because if you die, you cant enjoy your life anymore, Ver told Cointelegraph. Hes so confident in the tech, he even considered being cryogenically frozen as a legitimate alternative to going to prison in 2002.

DAOs are also taking part in this life extension renewal. There is a strong overlap of crypto people and longevity people, Vincent Weisser, core team member at VitaDAO tells Cointelegraph. VitaDAO funds longevity research and exceeded its initial token raise funding target of $490,000 in June 2021.

Now, they are working with popular blockchain crowd-funding platform Gitcoin to include a future funding category for longevity and life extension.

Transhumanist philanthropy and funding at scale holds the potential to significantly impact longevity research and the transhumanist project.

Transhumanism is a loosely defined movement that promotes the use of technology to enhance the human condition. This includes information technology, genetic engineering, and artificial intelligence for radical extension of human lifespan, augmentation of physical and intellectual capacities, space colonization, and super-intelligent machines.

The goal is not just life extension, but more, to the point of becoming superhuman. Although the transhumanist pursuit of post-humanity is often thought of as medical, the gambit of transhumanist technologies includes economic and social institutional design and cultural development.

Like crypto communities, transhumanism is grounded in a vision of evolution and individual freedom of choice. In practice, this leads to a sense of personal responsibility for contributing to solutions, such as biohacking or making provisions for being cryogenically frozen and one day hopefully reanimated. The goal of the transhumanist project for society is one based on freedom in determining social arrangements, enabled by self-generating systems and spontaneous order. This description of perpetual, open systems is similar to blockchain.

Not everyone thinks eternal life, or the philosophy underpinning it, is a good idea. Political economist Francis Fukuyama calls transhumanism the most dangerous idea in the world and argues it is a strange libertarian movement whose crusaders want nothing less than to liberate the human race from its biological constraints. He lists the risks of the fraught nature of humankind to want to live forever, the effects on equality between the haves and the have nots, and that the essence of humanity is mortality. Yet, transhumanism has a long history in crypto communities.

Transhumanist values are reflected in the ideological underpinnings of blockchain communities around anarchy and autonomy, self-improvement, and a long-term mindset.

Transhumanist ideas have long existed in the technology communities that pioneered the core tenets of public blockchains. For example, cryptography pioneer Ralph Merkle (inventor of public key distribution and Merkle trees) considered himself a transhumanist, publishing on such matters as The Molecular Repair of the Brain.

Furthermore, there was substantial cross-pollination of ideas between the Cypherpunks mailing list, which discussed ideas on privacy and digital cash throughout the 1990s and 2000s in the lead-up to the invention of Bitcoin in 2008, and the Extropian mailing list.

Extropy is the extent of a systems intelligence, information, order, vitality, and capacity for improvement. According to 1998s Principles of Extropy published by president of the Extropy Institute, Max Moore, extropians are those who seek to increase extropy. The core principles, refined in The Extropist Manifesto in 2010, are endless eXtension, meaning perpetual growth and progress in all aspects of human endeavor; transcending the restrictions of authoritarianism, surveillance, or social control; overcoming property rights, including IP and money, by sharing knowledge, culture, and resources; intelligence, including independent thinking and personal responsibility; and smart machines, specifically the attainment of Friendly Artificial Intelligence that exceeds human ability, through funding and favorable legislation.

Extropians advocate and explore the philosophies of transhumanism (technological enhancement), extropy (improving the human condition), and the future. Numerous prominent cypherpunks also subscribed to the Extropian mailing list, including co-founders of the cypherpunk movement Timothy C. May and Eric Hughes.

Another active member of the extropians was Hal Finney. Finney was co-developer of the first anonymous remailer, the first person to transact Bitcoin with Satoshi and the first maintainer of the Bitcoin codebase. He was cryogenically frozen when he passed away in the hope of living in the future alongside his wife, Fran, who noted that Hal liked the present. But he looked towards the future. For this community, technologies like digital cash offered a way of long-term thinking about the future of humanity, transhumanism, and solutions and preventions for cryogenics, outer space, and catastrophic environmental or societal collapse.

The cypherpunks interest in extropianism, and vice versa, was concerned with building infrastructure today that would sustain the future of human evolution. In some ways, this makes sense.

In order for ones cryogenic suspended animation to be paid for, maintained and reversed to wake them up in the far-flung future where science advances to the point where this aspiration is realized, there needs to be an incentive. In 1994, Wired magazine reported over 27 frozen people (technically 17 frozen heads and 10 entire bodies) at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, the same company that Roger Ver has signed up with.

Immortality is mathematical, not mystical, stated Mike Perry, their overseer. The hope is that Bitcoin will be a resilient long-term incentive for someone to wake up Hal, Fran and other friends. Herein lies the need for long-term blockchain infrastructure, to last as a secure monetary reward until the century when unfreezing is possible.

Among the principles of extropianism set out by Moore is intelligent technology, meaning technologies that bring beneficial results, including genetic engineering, life-extending bio-sciences, intelligence intensifiers, smarter interfaces to swifter computers, neural-computer integration, worldwide data networks, virtual reality, intelligent agents, swift electronic communications, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, neural networks, artificial life, off-planet migration, and molecular nanotechnology.

Expect to see more life extension, brain-machine interfaces, limb regeneration, curing deafness, bionic sight and more incredible feats in the next decade, states Srinivasan. Transhumanists predict an inevitable singularity, when technology becomes intelligent, uncontrollable and irreversible, to occur around 2035. Blockchain is part of this technology stack.

The lofty, futuristic ideas of transhumanists depend on resilience and digital infrastructure. This is especially true for the goal of friendly artificial intelligence, which is seen as an enabling condition for rapid development across all other core principles of the project. Thanks to blockchain technology, and blockchain philanthropy, we are beginning to have the resources to do it.

An immutable worldwide computer enables a decentralized autonomous organization to allow our uploaded brain image to automatically coordinate with friendly artificial intelligence in a decentralized, freedom-loving way.

Blockchains immutability makes it the perfect long-term infrastructure. Cypherpunks were paranoid about Orwellian dystopias in which authorities would rewrite history to match state propaganda. The architectural and political decentralization of public blockchains means that no one can tamper with, control or delete the record of history. This makes it the perfect record-keeping infrastructure if we are going to live forever.

This is essential when it comes to your brain image or your Bitcoin balance. In order to document who owns what coins when you are cryogenically frozen and woken up in the next century, you need resilient, long-term, tamper-proof blockchains. The values of independence and immutability are essential to both crypto enthusiasts and transhumanists. Buterin states:

Its great that we have people trying to upload or improve brain scanning. Its also great that we have people including cryonics, so we could just go to sleep in the freezer and eventually, hopefully, sometime in the future [] anyone who gets cryogenically frozen will be able to wake up.

The combination of transhumanist philosophy, blockchain technology, community obsession and money enable whole new possibilities. The transhumanist-blockchain vision is that we will all be connected, humans and machine intelligence, through decentralized, automatically executing smart contracts and marketplaces.

Blockchains provide a platform infrastructure to enable a host of technologically advanced human-machine futures. One example is a decentralized marketplace for AI, such as SingularityNET by artificial intelligence researcher, transhumanist, and CEO Ben Goertzel. Here, intelligent computational agents buy, sell and barter over work for digital tokens via a blockchain.

In The Transhumanism Handbook, Melanie Swan predicts that crypto cloudminds, in which mind node peers interact through multicurrency pay channels of digital denominations, will algorithmically enforce good behavior between humans and machines through the privacy and transparency of blockchains. According to Srinivasan, this could also lead to cloud cities, which allow their members to negotiate with other jurisdictions and crowdfund territories in the physical world.

Transhumanism, like human beings, is only in its early stages of development.

Transhumanism, with its focus on superhumans and longevity instead of an afterlife, can be viewed as something akin to a religious impulse. Although many transhumanists take their worldview to be in opposition to religious outlooks on life, transhumanism may become the religion of blockchainers. Yet, this doctrine does not come without a clear burden of responsibility.

While some fear transhumanism, a core tenet is to ensure that technology produces positive outcomes for humanity. Transhumanists advocate that the choice to improve human capacities lies with the individual.

Part of the longevity research agenda is figuring out how to measure the risks of friendly artificial intelligence and make it truly friendly to avoid a catastrophe. Transhumanists want to avoid X risk, which is existential risk to humanity of a hypothetical, global, catastrophic future event that could damage human well-being or destroy human civilization. This is why colonizing outer space is so logical, as Elon and other crypto enthusiasts are pursuing. The Extropian Principles, v. 3.0 by Max Moore from 1998 emphasizes this, stating that migration into space will immensely enlarge the energy and resources accessible to our civilization. Of course, smart machines will also help us explore space because they can handle more gravitational force than humans as they enter the orbit of other planets.

To a transhumanist, the goal of technology is to amplify our abilities and extend human freedoms. How could we ensure humanity lives forever and life spreads throughout the universe? asks Weisser from VitaDAO. Its all about probabilities and increasing the probability that humanity will survive, he says.

A long-term mindset treats aging as an engineering problem. Now, it remains to be seen if the intersection of blockchain philanthropy, VitaDAOs research collective, and other decentralized, transhumanist pursuits will be cautiously and collectively propelled forwards with the kind of long-termism that will benefit humanity. As Buterin states:

I hope you guys can [] come to my thousandth birthday party.

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Lykan And Vineti Form Cell Therapy Agreement – Contract Pharma

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

Lykan Bioscience, a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) focused on cell-based therapies, and Vineti, which offers a software platform supporting supply chain orchestration for clinical and commercial cell therapies, have entered a partnership to unite Lykans purpose-built cell therapy manufacturing capabilities and Vinetis supply chain and data management system. The partnership empowers biopharma customers with optimized manufacturing efficiency and a complete solution to bring cell-based, life-saving therapies to patients in need.Advanced therapies, such as cell therapies, require advanced infrastructure. Legacy systems managing the production of cell therapies are often manual and outdated, slowing the scale, speed, and patient safety during development. The cell therapy industry requires a new level of visibility, detail, and access across each product and facility within the supply chain. Lykan and Vinetis global, non-exclusive partnership between two leading innovators in the cell therapy space will ensure chain of identity (COI) and chain of custody (COC) visibility as therapies go through each step in the manufacturing supply chain, bringing patient safety back to the forefront.At Lykan, our mission is to be an innovative manufacturer of cell therapy products. We strive to help our biopharma partners achieve a rapid transition from clinical to commercial manufacturing and maximize patient access to cell therapies. The complex nature of cell therapy process development and manufacturing means our partners need innovative technologies, a reliable platform and strong manufacturing expertise to deliver safe and effective therapies, said Patrick Lucy, president and CEO, Lykan. Our strategic partnership with Vineti aims to enable our partners success with faster and simpler operations using a more robust and traceable control system.Lykan Bioscience has established a world-class, purpose-built, multi-product cell therapy manufacturing facility just outside of Boston, MA. Advanced and integrated software systems, such as Vinetis Personalized Therapy Management (PTM) platform, a proven purpose-built, enterprise-grade digital solution for advanced therapy data and supply chains, will enable Lykan to conduct real-time monitoring of the manufacturing process and product, complete with electronic batch records that will support real-time testing and release of product from each of Lykans eight clinical and commercial cGMP manufacturing suites.Amy DuRoss, CEO of Vineti, said, Cell therapies are at a point where they require a truly world-class, purpose-built, multi-product cell therapy manufacturing facility, with the best digital tools, allowing for true connectivity across the ecosystem. We are thrilled to partner with Lykan Bioscience to ensure COI and COC visibility as therapies go through each step in the supply chain, to efficiently deliver these therapies to the patients that need them faster."This partnership follows Lykans recent announcement on the hiring of the companys new CTO and Vinetis release of its PTM Essentials solution for clinical-phase advanced therapies. More information on the Lykan-Vineti solution is available through both companys business development teams.

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Researchers Highlight Delivery of CAR T-Cell Therapy Through Modified AAV – AJMC.com Managed Markets Network

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

In a preclinical study, researchers were able to show that their modified adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector safely delivered the chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) gene into the host cells and produced enough CAR T cells to cause effective tumor regression and elicit antitumor immunological characteristics in a mouse model of human T-cell leukemia.

Recently published findings are documenting a novel approach that researchers say may make chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy for leukemia simpler and less expensive because it doesnt require patient lymphodepletion or the processes of current CAR T-cell production. The approach allows the patient to generate CAR T cells by injecting an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector that supplies the CAR gene.

In the current study, researchers were able to show that their modified AAV vector safely delivered the CAR gene into the host cells and produced enough CAR T cells to cause effective tumor regression and elicit antitumor immunological characteristics in a mouse model of human T-cell leukemia. Notably, this response was observed after a single infusion and the generated CAR T cells circulated the host body for weeks, able to detect and attack the target cells.

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report describing that an AAV carrying a CAR gene can reprogram immune cells in vivo to generate enough CAR T cells to induce tumor regression, reflected the researchers. Our current CAR gene-carrying AAV strategy contrasts with the costly and time-consuming method of conventional manufacturing CAR T therapy, which requires primary T-cell isolation and transgene introduction and expansion via lentiviral vectors or retroviral vectors ex vivo.

According to the researchers, AAV has been a popular method and is being extensively studied for therapeutic gene delivery, often being leveraged to carry genetic material into the target cells to cure or treat a disease.

For the study, the researchers chose CD4-targeting CAR due to the aggressive nature of CD4+ leukemia and lymphoma, which often dont respond to chemotherapy.

Initial preclinical studies of CAR T cells for targeting CD4+ tumors are encouraging, but to date, no standard care has been developed, explained the group. Furthermore, CD4 + cells are the major latent reservoir of HIV, posing a challenge for HIV eradication; therapies targeting CD4+ cells can also be translated into HIV treatment and treatments for other infectious diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis and psoriasis.

The researchers noted that there was a complete CD4+ depletion in the mice, which raises concerns about the possible effects in the long term or clinical setting, as long-term CD4 helper T-cell depletion can cause on-target, off-tumor toxicities and immunodeficiency.

Reference

Nawaz W, Huang B, Xu S, et al. AAV-mediated in vivo CAR gene therapy for targeting human T-cell leukemia. Blood Cancer J. 2021;11(6):119. doi:10.1038/s41408-021-00508-1

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Longeveron’s Cell Therapy Shows Mixed Results in Aging Frailty – BioSpace

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

Lomecel-B, Longeverons proprietary off-the-shelf cell therapy for aging frailty, failed the six-minute walk test (6MWT) endpoint of a Phase IIb study, according to a statement published by the Miami-based biotech on Friday. Despite the apparent flop, the company noted Lomecel-B led to a significant dose-response curve in the 6MWT compared with placebo at 180 days.

Investors have responded positively to the results of the Phase IIb trial, with shares in the company increasing by over 10% premarket Friday morning.

Longeverons Lomecel-B cell therapy is an allogeneic product consisting of medicinal signaling cells (MSCs) derived from adult bone marrow that has been culture-expanded in the companys cell-processing facility.

In the Phase IIb trial of the drug, researchers assessed the efficacy and safety of a peripheral intravenous infusion of four doses of the therapy: 25 million cells (n=37), 50 million cells (n=31), 100 million cells (n=34), and 200 million cells (n=16). Another 30 patients were randomized to receive placebo. The active therapy was compared with placebo in terms of signs and symptoms of aging frailty, such as exercise tolerance and mobility.

Patients in the study were between 70 and 85 years of age and were required to have a 6MWT of 200 to 400 meters at screening. Additionally, patients were required to have a Canadian Health and Safety Assessment (CHSA) Clinical Frailty Scale score of 5 (mildly frail) or 6 (moderately frail) to be considered for entry.

The primary analysis compared the baseline change in 6MWT distance for each of the four dose cohorts with placebo at day 180. According to the company, researchers observed statistically significant increases in the 6MWT distance among patients randomly assigned to 50 million, 100 million and 200 million cells. In contrast, there was no significant change for the placebo group or the lowest Lomecel-B dose group.

In an adjusted analysis corrected for comparisons using the Hochberg method, however, the four different doses of Lomecel-B did not demonstrate a significant placebo-adjusted difference (25 million =-0.2, p=0.9902; 50 million =27.7, p=0.1279; 100 million =16.8, p=0.3472; 200 million =41.3, p=0.0635).

In the secondary analysis, which was used to assess a dose-response relationship for the 6MWT, researchers found a statistically significant dose-response curve at the 180-day follow-up period. Significant differences were also observed from placebo at day 270, a pre-specified exploratory endpoint.

Improving physical function in older adults with frailty is one of the primary goals in geriatric medicine, according to a statement made by Dr. Jorge G. Ruiz, M.D, geriatrician at the Miami Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center (GRECC), a site involved in the study. I would consider these results clinically significant and relevant for the older veteran population since one third of American Veterans older than 65 years have frailty.

Longeverons chief executive officer, Geoff Green, emphasized the positive findings that showed a significant dose-response curve with the therapy. Furthermore, the safety profile of Lomecel-B continues to look very good, he added, with no Lomecel-B related serious adverse events reported in this study, which is consistent with previous clinical trial data.

The company says a team of independent frailty experts will soon review the study data during an upcoming steering committee. Findings from the meeting will be used to plan next steps for the program. Longeveron also plans to present the trial data on September 29 at the 2021 International Conference on Frailty and Sarcopenia Research (ICFSR).

We look forward to engaging with our experts and potentially regulatory authorities to review the data and to advance into the next trial, said Green. He noted that the company expects to begin a Phase I/II HERA trial sometime this quarter. This study will assess the effect of Lomecel-B on immune response to the influenza vaccination in patients with aging frailty. Another Phase II Japanese Aging Frailty trial is also expected to launch this year.

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Artiva Biotherapeutics Establishes U.S. Research and Manufacturing Facility for NK Cell Therapy Pipeline Development and Clinical Supply – Business…

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Artiva Biotherapeutics, Inc. (Artiva), an oncology company focused on developing and commercializing primary allogeneic natural killer (NK) cell therapies to treat cancer, today announced the expansion of the Companys U.S. facilities in San Diego. The new 52,000-square-foot facility will include research and process development laboratories and a multi-suite custom-built Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) manufacturing center to support NK and CAR-NK cell production for Artivas pipeline development and clinical trial supply. The new facility and capabilities will be in addition to Artivas continued research and GMP manufacturing at its partner GC LabCells state-of-the-art 300,000-square-foot Cell Center, which comprises research labs, process development labs, and a 50,000-square-foot GMP cell therapy manufacturing facility in the Republic of Korea.

Artivas new San Diego R&D and manufacturing facility is an important element of the Companys expansion and will support research and development for our evolving pipeline of optimized NK and CAR-NK cell therapies for the treatment of cancer, said Peter Flynn, PhD, COO of Artiva. The custom-built manufacturing center will produce clinical product and position Artiva for pivotal studies and potential commercial supply.

Artivas manufacturing-first approach, leveraging more than 10 years of pioneering NK cell therapy R&D by GC LabCell, has enabled us to successfully initiate clinical trials of our first allogeneic, cryopreserved, off-the-shelf NK cell therapy and positions us to file INDs on two novel and distinct CAR-NK cell therapy programs in 2022, added Fred Aslan, M.D., CEO of Artiva. Now with our new facility, we continue to expand and build on our leadership position in the evolving field of allogeneic cell therapies.

Artivas San Diego NK cell therapy research and GMP manufacturing facility will be located at 5505 Morehouse Drive, a building being newly redeveloped by Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. The facility build-out is already underway and is anticipated to be completed in 2022.

We are honored that Artiva approached us to partner on the build-out of this critical new research and manufacturing center that will support the company in its mission to develop and deliver safe, effective and versatile cancer therapies, said Daniel Ryan, Co-Chief Investment Officer and San Diego Regional Market Director of Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc.

Artivas cell therapies are designed to leverage the innate anti-tumor biology and safety features of NK cells. The therapies are further optimized using Artivas AlloNK platform for targeted anti-cancer activity by either genetically expressing chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) to drive tumor cell engagement or combining with therapeutic antibodies or innate-cell engagers for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) enhancement. Artivas manufacturing platform supports large-scale production and cryopreservation of off-the-shelf allogeneic NK cell therapies and proprietary CAR-NK and NK-specific gene-editing technologies to augment therapeutic activity.

Artivas Pipeline of NK Cell Therapies for Cancer

Artivas pipeline includes AB-101, an ADCC enhancer NK-cell therapy for use in combination with monoclonal antibodies or innate-cell engagers. The company is currently advancing a Phase 1/2 clinical trial of AB-101 in combination with rituximab for the treatment of relapsed or refractory B-cell lymphomas. The companys CAR-NK programs include AB-201, a novel HER2-specific CAR-NK cell therapy for the treatment of HER2+ solid tumors, and AB-202, a CD19-specific CAR-NK cell therapy for the treatment of B-cell malignancies, both with plans to file INDs in 2022.

About Artiva Biotherapeutics

Artivas mission is to deliver highly effective, off-the-shelf, allogeneic natural killer (NK) cell-based therapies that are safe and accessible to cancer patients. The company has entered into therapeutic NK cell collaborations and/or license agreements with Merck and with Affimed N.V. Artivas AlloNK platform incorporates cell expansion, activation and engineering technology developed by the Companys corporate partner, GC LabCell, a member of the GC family of companies, one of the Republic of Koreas leading biopharmaceutical groups. Artiva is headquartered in San Diego. For more information, visit http://www.artivabio.com.

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Dr. Vose on Future Research Efforts With CAR T-Cell Therapy in Lymphoma – OncLive

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

Julie M. Vose, MD, MBA, discusses future research efforts with CAR T-cell therapy in lymphoma.

Julie M. Vose, MD, MBA, Neumann M. and Mildred E. Harris Professor, chief, Division of Oncology and Hematology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, discusses future research efforts with CAR T-cell therapy in lymphoma.

Ongoing clinical trials are evaluating CAR T-cell therapies, as well as other types of treatment, for patients with lymphoma, Vose says. Moreover, some studies are investigating different designs of CAR T-cell therapies, utilizing CAR T-cell therapy in various subtypes of lymphoma, and potentially incorporating the cellular therapy into earlier lines of treatment, Vose says.These efforts may yield opportunities to decrease CAR T-cell therapyrelated toxicities for patients, Vose explains.

Additionally, research efforts are evaluating whether combination regimens with CAR T-cell therapies and other agents, such as BTK inhibitors, are feasible for patients with lymphoma, Vose says. It may also be possible to utilize pre- and post-CAR T-cell therapy radiation to try to enhance efficacy, Vose continues. Additionally, evaluating different types of monoclonalantibodies, bispecific antibodies, or other new agents alone or in combination with CAR T-cell therapy could lend future treatment options for patients, Vose concludes.

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Using CAR T Therapy for Relapsed/Refractory Myeloma – OncLive

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Nina, lets move on to the granddaddy of BCMA-targeted agents, which is CAR T therapy, with chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Lets set the stage. Tell the audience where were at with CAR T therapy, particularly with respect to FDA approvals.

Nina Shah, MD: With BCMA and CAR T-cell therapy, theres 1 product approved, which is IDE-CEL [idecabtagene vicleucel]. Thats approved for patients with at least 4 prior lines of therapy. The data that led to approval was the PRIMA study, which showed a progression-free survival [PFS] of 8.3 months, and 8.7 months, but in the 450-mg dosewhich is going forward, the FDA-approved dosethe PFS was 12 months and 20 months if youve gotten a CR [complete response]. Thats the first approved product. There are other products coming down the line. Were hoping to see how we might be able to transition from a research thing to a standard-of-care thing, much as our lymphoma colleagues did.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: If I understand it correctly, its approved only for people whove had at least 4 lines of prior therapy?

Nina Shah, MD: Correct.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Do you think thats fair, or do you think the FDA was harsh on that company with that?

Nina Shah, MD: They were a little harsh considering that the clinical trial enrollment criteria were at least 3 prior lines, but what ended up happening is that the patients were so sick, they went on the trial, did so well, and that made the FDA say, If youre going to have any risks for a therapy, it has to match the benefit, and it looks like your fourth-line people are doing as well as the third lines. In fact, there was an analysis this year to look at that. It showed that. So they figured it was OK to use IDE-CEL [idecabtagene vicleucel] in the later lines because the patients would still benefit from it. Its going to be hard for us to get there. Youre going to be using daratumumabRVd [lenalidomide, bortezomib, dexamethasone] up front, and then youre going to use carfilzomib second, selinexor, melphalanI dont know whats going to happen. But theres going to be a single-agent dexamethasone going onto the fourth line.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Youre going to end up using 4 drugs, plus data, and rather than maintenance when we fail, youre going to go to the CME [continuing medical education]. Thats my guess.

Nina Shah, MD: Yeah. If the insurance company loves it. Correct.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: If the insurance company eventually loves it, and if its up to date. Youre right. Christina, what about adverse effects? Weve heard that these can be quite toxic therapies. Whats your experience with toxicity?

Cristina Gasparetto, MD: Yeah. Fortunately, the majority of patients will adapt, but to develop CRS, cytokine release syndrome, also with cortisol, we learned how to manage this type of toxicity over the last few years. If you look at the toxicity profile, we dont see a lot of the grade 3 and 4. Its more manageable with the tocilizumab [Actemra] intervention. In neurotoxicity as well, to learn to mitigate, theres an association between higher neurotoxicity with a high tumor burden. The study tried to bridge patients, to decrease the tumor burden, to minimize. Thats very important as well. In early intervention, it looks like theres also a link between prior CRS and neurotoxicity. So early intervention with tocilizumab or steroids, and were learning how to use the CAR T-cell as well.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Joe, todays theme, as were learning, is how to manage this. Do you have any sense of CAR T in the same theme emerging?

Joseph Mikhael, MD: Yeah, I absolutely do. Were not discussing the detail, but lets unfortunately remember that some of the earliest CAR T trials in myeloma left a significant fraction of patients with real, very significant toxicity and even death. So I agree. You know, we have groups around the world that are convening to enhance our management of CRS, of the neurological toxicities that can emerge, and even cytopenia. Theres a deliberate learning curve. Even within the KarMMa trial that Nina described, there was a learning curve. Were becoming more aggressive in using, as Cristina said, the tocilizumab early up front, so it will become significantly safer. Theres always going to be a boutique component to it, Keith. Right? At least until we can start doing AlloCAR T [allogeneic CAR T-cell therapy] or over-the-counter AlloCAR T. Its still going to involve someone having their T cells collected, weeks to do manufacturing, etc, but its going to become considerably safer. It will be safer earlier in the disease course when people arent as beaten down by their myeloma therapy.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Joe, who would be there? If I work in a community, I want to know who to send to you for CAR T therapy. Whom should I be sending?

Joseph Mikhael, MD: Aligned to the criteria, its interesting. This triple-class refractory space is becoming quite congested. We have selinexor [Xpovio], we have belantamab mafodotin, we have melphalan flufenamidethe artist formerly known as Melflufenand now we have CAR T. Any of those are legitimate medications in that space. We tend to move toward CAR T as quickly as we can because the response rates are double the response rates of any of the other drugs, to be respectful but true. Were seeing response rates over 60%, 70%, and evenas were going to discuss in a moment90%. When you have a patient that you feel can go through the process, which is a little less onerous compared with transplant, with the exception of renal function. Right now, if someone has compromised renal function, were still working through how to do that. But if theyre going to have access to a transplant-like centertheyre the ones that are basically doing CAR TId be favor looking into CAR T-cell therapy after those 4 lines of prior therapy. We hope, with time, that well have indications for CAR T that can allow us to do the therapy earlier.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Sagar, what about the health of the patient? Is this for everybody? Is it only for the young? Where do you draw the line for this?

Sagar Lonial, MD, FACP: If you draw the line at, Could I take them through the transplant or not? then youre probably missing a lot of people whom you could give CAR T cells to because, in general, its better tolerated than that. Its the frail patient who cant get through it, but dont let age or anything else make that determination. Its harder to make this determination than it is for transplant eligibility.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: We talked about belantamab mafodotin a moment ago. If you saw a patient referred who failed everything in the community, would you use belantamab mafodotin or CAR T?

Sagar Lonial, MD, FACP: Are you asking me?

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Yeah.

Sagar Lonial, MD, FACP: To me, you go through the potential risks and benefits of each of the 2 treatments and lay it out for the patient. There are patients who say, I dont want to go into the hospital for whatever youre going to do to me. That takes CAR T cells away. You describe CRS to them, even though its mild in most patients, but they dont want to be put through that risk. There are other patients to whom any concern about loss of the ability to read or to drive is a deal breaker. For those folks, you know the BLMF is not necessarily going to be the right answer either. Theres a little more to this.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Let me ask you the same exact question. A patient comes in who was referredand they want some kind of BCMA-targeted therapy. Which of the 2 would you steer the patient toward, or is it individualized? Does cost factor in?

Nina Shah, MD: Yeah. All things are equal. For example, if the patient has support and desire to come to the center, I would pick CAR T-cell therapy because its 1 and done, and has a higher overall response rate and, at this time, a higher PFS. But thats not always the case or isnt always possible because there may be different factors that go into this. But if theyre coming to me, Id like to be able to offer it. The next question is: Can we offer it? Will the commercial scale up be enough to do that? That will be another question for the patients.

Keith Stewart, MD, ChB, MBA: Very good.

Transcript Edited for Clarity

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Using CAR T Therapy for Relapsed/Refractory Myeloma - OncLive

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Dr. Kumar on Navigating CAR T-Cell TherapyRelated Toxicities in MCL – OncLive

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

Anita Kumar, MD, discusses navigating CAR T-cell therapyrelated toxicities in mantle cell lymphoma.

Anita Kumar, MD, medical oncologist, Regional Care Network Medical Site Director, MSK Basking Ridge, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, discusses navigating CAR T-cell therapyrelated toxicities in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL).

In MCL, treatment with the CAR T-cell therapy brexucabtagene autoleucel (brexu-cel; Tecartus) is associated with a risk of adverse effects, including cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurotoxicity, Kumar says. Findings from the phase 2 ZUMA-2 trial (NCT02601313), which data led to the July 2020 FDA approval of brexu-cel, revealed that 15% and 31% of patients developed grade 3 or higher CRS and neurotoxicity, respectively.

To mitigate the toxicity risk with brexu-cel, patients should be well selected, Kumar explains. Factors such as age, comorbidities, and disease status, including tumor burden and time of initial treatment, could be potential predictors for toxicity, Kumar says. As such, the field should work toward developing a greater understanding of how to select patients to optimize efficacy and quality of life, Kumar concludes.

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Dr. Kumar on Navigating CAR T-Cell TherapyRelated Toxicities in MCL - OncLive

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Gracell Biotechnologies Signs Exclusive License Agreement with FutureGen Biopharm to Develop Engineered Immune Cell Therapies Targeting Claudin 18.2…

Posted: August 18, 2021 at 2:40 am

SUZHOU and SHANGHAI, China, and PALO ALTO, Calif., Aug. 16, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Gracell Biotechnologies Inc. (NASDAQ: GRCL) ("Gracell"), a global clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to developing highly efficacious and affordable cell therapies for the treatment of cancer, today announced an exclusive license agreement with FutureGen Biopharm ("FutureGen"), an innovative biopharmaceutical company, to develop engineered immune cell therapies targeting Claudin 18.2 ("CLDN18.2") in solid tumors.

The collaboration aims to leverage Gracell's extensive experience in immune cell therapy in synergy with FutureGen's fully human CLDN18.2 antibodies to develop, manufacture and commercialize novel immune cell therapies for the treatment of patients with CLDN18.2 positive cancers.

CLDN18.2 is a tumor-specific marker that is overexpressed in a variety of tumor tissues, including in gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancers, pancreatic cancers and esophageal cancers, but rarely expressed in normal human tissues. This feature supports the therapeutic potential of CLDN18.2 as a key target for immune cell therapies.In particular, gastric cancer (around 70%[1] CLDN18.2 expression) is among the most frequently diagnosed malignancies worldwide and the second leading cause of cancer-related death. An estimated 1,033,701 new cases and 782,685 deaths occurred in 2018[2], representing a highly unmet medical need in treating gastric cancer.

"Gracell has been making significant progress in developing innovative CAR-T therapies for solid tumors as well as hematological malignancies," Dr. William (Wei) Cao, Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Gracell said. "This partnership with FutureGen marks another key milestone in our persistent efforts for treating solid tumors. Moving forward, we expect to explore more strategic alliances to identify additional targets that maximize the value of our highly differentiated technology platforms and eventually benefit cancer patients worldwide."

"Gracell has been optimizing its proprietary Enhanced CAR technology to improve CAR-T cell persistence and efficacy in solid tumors. The preliminary clinical investigator-initiated trial data of our first generation Enhanced CAR-T for solid tumors has shown tolerability and preliminary efficacy. These initial results have been accepted to be published soon in Cellular & Molecular Immunology," said Dr. Lianjun Shen, Senior Vice President, Head of Research and Development at Gracell. "We are very excited to partner with FutureGen to develop next generation immune cell therapies against CLDN18.2-expressing malignancies, and hope to unlock significant potential of our next generation Enhanced CAR-T therapies for solid tumors, one of our founding missions."

Dr. Zhaoyu Jin, the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of FutureGen said, "The specific CLDN18.2 antibody has been developed through our innovative STEP and CAP technology platforms. The fine-tuned affinity of antibody for CAR-T application may eliminate CLDN18.2 positive tumor cells more specifically with better safety profile. We are very excited to collaborate with Gracell, a lead company in the cell and gene therapy industry, to leverage their innovative Enhanced CAR-T technology platform and experience in the field and our proprietary cutting-edge technologies to develop advanced treatments across solid tumors."

Under the terms of the agreement, FutureGen will receive an upfront payment and will be eligible to receive additional payments based on the achievement of non-clinical validation, clinical development and commercialization milestones, as well as low single-digit royalties.

About CLDN18.2

CLDN18.2, a small transmembrane protein with four transmembrane domains and two extracellular loops, is overexpressed in a significant proportion of gastric cancers and esophageal adenocarcinomas. The restricted expression makes it a promising target for the treatment of gastric or gastroesophageal junction cancers, pancreatic cancers, etc.Overall, CLDN18.2 is prevalently expressed in the cancer tissues of approximately 70% of gastric cancer patients and approximately 60% of pancreatic cancer patients. CLDN18.2-specific antibodies developed to target CLDN18.2 have exhibited anti-tumor activity in preclinical studies.[3]

About Enhanced CAR

Enhanced CAR is Gracell's proprietary technology that further strengthens the functionality of CAR-T cells, for example by overcoming the immunosuppressive tumor micro-environment (TME) and/or increasing cytokine signaling. Gracell utilizes gene editing technologies to edit some check point inhibitor(s) or/and cytokine(s) or cytokine receptor(s) on CAR-T cells to release potential suppression from tumor cells and other suppressive immune cells in tumor tissue to enhance CAR-T cells' functionality. Our second generation Enhanced CAR technology can be implemented to many other targets in several types of solid tumors.

About Gracell

Gracell Biotechnologies Inc.("Gracell") is a global clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to discovering and developing breakthrough cell therapies. Leveraging its pioneering FasTCAR and TruUCAR technology platforms, Gracell is developing a rich clinical-stage pipeline of multiple autologous and allogeneic product candidates with the potential to overcome major industry challenges that persist with conventional CAR-T therapies, including lengthy manufacturing time, suboptimal production quality, high therapy cost and lack of effective CAR-T therapies for solid tumors. For more information on Gracell, please visit http://www.gracellbio.com.Follow @GracellBio on LinkedIn.

About FutureGen

FutureGen Biopharm ("FutureGen") focuses on precise cancer immunotherapy and drives the development of novel therapeutics through the world's leading antibody engineering technology. The company has developed a Structure-based Targeted Evolution Platform ("STEP") and Cell-based Antibody Panning ("CAP") for antibody discovery and engineering with proprietary intellectual property rights, which can quickly and efficiently screen and optimize a series of candidate drugs that have the potential to be best-in-class antibodies with specific epitopes, ideal affinity and activity, and finest developability. Currently, the ADCC enhanced CLDN18.2 antibody for gastric cancer and pancreatic cancer is at the clinical trial stage, and multiple bispecific therapeutic antibodies are at pre-clinical stage. For more information on FutureGen Biopharm, please visit http://www.futuregen.com.cn/.

Cautionary Noted Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

Statements in this press release about future expectations, plans and prospects, as well as any other statements regarding matters that are not historical facts, may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements relating to the expected trading commencement and closing date of the offering. The words "anticipate," "believe," "continue," "could," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "may," "plan," "potential," "predict," "project," "should," "target," "will," "would" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors, including factors discussed in the section entitled "Risk Factors" in Gracell's most recent annual report on Form 20-F as well as discussions of potential risks, uncertainties, and other important factors in Gracell's subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Any forward-looking statements contained in this press release speak only as of the date hereof, and Gracell specifically disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Readers should not rely upon the information on this page as current or accurate after its publication date.

[1] Clinical Implications of Claudin18.2 Expression in Patients With Gastric Cancer[2]Hsu A, Chudasama R, Almhanna K, Raufi A. Targeted therapies for gastroesophageal cancers.Ann. Transl. Med. (2020) 8:1104. doi: 10.21037/atm-20-3265[3]The full-length Claudin 18.2 to accelerate antibody drug development

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Investor contactGracie Tong[emailprotected]

SOURCE Gracell Biotechnologies Inc.

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