Takeda sees cell, gene therapy in its future. Is it too late? – BioPharma Dive
By daniellenierenberg
Thanks to a $62 billion acquisition of Shire, Takeda is one of the world's largest developers of rare disease drugs.
Despite that, the 238-year-old Japanese pharmaceutical company lacks any mid- or late-stage cell or gene therapies, two technologies that figure to play a large role in how many rare cancers and inherited diseases will eventually be treated.
It's a mismatch Takedais putting substantial effort into addressing. Last week, executives made cell and gene therapy a notable focus of the company's first R&D day since closing its Shire deal.
"We have a world-class gene therapy platform," Dan Curran, head of Takeda's rare disease therapeutic area unit, told investors and Wall Street analysts gathered in New York city.
"We intend to build on that over the next five years. Because as we look to lead in the second half of [next]decade, we believe patients will demand and we can deliver transformative and curative therapies to patients globally."
But right now that's just an ambition. While Takedahas begun to explore how it can improve on current gene therapies, its candidates are early stage and lag their would-be competitors.
"Our heme A program we're behind. Our heme B program we're behind," admitted Curran in an interview. "But we're behind the first generation and when has there only been one generation of anything?"
Takeda's hemophilia A program is currently in Phase 1, with the hemophilia B candidate about to join it in human testing well back from leaders BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Spark Therapeutics and SangamoTherapeutics in hemophilia A and UniQure in hemophilia B.
Curran laid out three priorities for Takeda'spush: exploring whether gene therapy, typically pitched as a one-time treatment, can be re-dosed; lowering the doses currently used for first-generation therapies; and developing alternative gene delivery vehicles than the adeno-associatedand lentiviralvectors that are predominant today.
"We need to figure out how to re-dose AAVvectors if we want to provide functional cures for patients for the rest of their lives."
How long a gene therapy's benefit lasts is a critical question. In theory, it could last decades or potentially for life, depending on the treatment's target.
But clinical evidence presented to date suggests that benefit for some therapies could wane over time. BioMarin, for example, presented data this year that it argued is proof its gene therapy could raise Factor VIII expression levels in patients with hemophilia A above the threshold for mild disease for at least eight years a long time, to be sure, but not life-long.
Still, it's an unusual objective. Much of gene therapy's promise lies in the potential for it to be given just once and still deliver lasting benefits. And the therapies that have reached market most notably Spark Therapeutics' Luxturna, Novartis' Zolgensma and Bluebird bio's Zynteglo are among the most expensive drugs to ever reach market. Were a gene therapy to be re-dosed, the current value proposition those drugmakers describe would need to be re-evaluated.
Curran recognizes that bringing down costs substantially will be essential to any attempt to advance a multi-use gene therapy. But Takeda might have an advantage. In buying Shire, the pharma inherited a viral vector manufacturing plant, originally built by Baxalta, that Curran calls the company's "best kept secret."
"It's an enormous competitive advantage," he said, adding that Takeda believes it's among the industry's top three facilities by production capacity. "Roche trying to acquire Spark, Novartis and AveXis a significant component of value of those transactions was that these companies had actually invested in manufacturing capabilities."
Curran emphasized that Takeda's ambitions in gene therapy will require it to partner with academic leaders in the field, a playbook that it's followed over the past three years as it's worked to expand into cell therapy.
"In the cell space, there's more innovation you can bring up into proof of principle milestones in academia," said Andy Plump,Takeda'shead of R&D, in an interview.
"An academic can manipulate a cell, but it's very hard in an academic setting to optimize a small molecule," he added. "This is a space where Novartis, and now we, have been quite successful in creating those relationships."
Takeda has put partnerships in place with Japan's Center for iPS Cell Research and Application, GammaDelta, Noile-Immune Biotech, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and, just this month, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
That last collaboration gives Takeda access to a chimeric antigen receptor-directed natural killer, or NK, cell therapy.The drugmaker believes NK cells could offer advantages over the T cells modified to create the currently available cell therapies Kymriah and Yescarta.
Most notably, MD Anderson's approach uses NK cells isolated from umbilical cord blood, rather than extracting T cells from each individual patient a time-consuming and expensive process that has complicated the market launch of Kymriah and Yescarta. Cord blood-derived NK cells are designed to be allogeneic, or administered "off the shelf."
Additionally, CAR NK cells haven't been associated (yet) with cytokine release syndrome or neurotoxicity, two significant side effects often associated with CAR-T cell therapies. That could help Takeda position its cell therapies as an outpatient option.
"Even if we were a company that entered a little bit later into the immuno-oncology space, we've very much tried to turn this into an advantage," said Chris Arendt, head of Takeda's oncology drug discovery unit, at the company's event.
"We believe we have a chance to establish a leadership position rather than jumping on the bandwagon and being a follower."
While Takeda's choice to pursue NK cell therapy stands out, its choice of target does not. TAK-007, a drug candidate from MD Anderson that is now Takeda's lead cell therapy program, is aimed at a cell surface protein called CD19 that's found in leukemias and lymphomas.
Both Yescarta and Kymriah target CD19, and a recent count by the Cancer Research Institute tracked 181 cell therapy projects aimed at the antigen.
Takeda is planning to advance TAK-007 into pivotal studies in two types of lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia by 2021, with a potential filing for approval in 2023.
By then, Kymriah and Yescarta will have been on the market for six years and current bottlenecks in cell therapy treatment could be solved, helping both Takeda's potential entry as well as the host of competitors it will likely face.
Next year will be a test of how productive Takeda'scell therapy unit can be. In addition to TAK-007, the pharmaexpects to have four other CAR-T and gamma delta cell therapies in the clinic, two of which will target solid tumors.
Cell and gene therapy are part of what Takeda calls its "second wave" of R&D projects, a group of early-stage drugs and programs that it sees as progressing to regulatory stages by 2025 or later.
In the nearer term, the drugmakeris advancing a "first wave" of clinical candidates that it told investors will deliver 14 new molecular entities by 2024. Five of those will come in rare disease, with the others spread across oncology, neuroscience, gastro-enterology and vaccines.
"We think the cascade of news coming forward on these programs will transform how people view Takeda," Curran said.
More importantly to the investors gathered in New York, Takeda expects these experimental drugs will eventually earn $10 billion in peak annual sales, which would represent a sizable addition to a business that generated $30 billion in sales last year.
See the rest here:
Takeda sees cell, gene therapy in its future. Is it too late? - BioPharma Dive
- Toward Personalized Cell Therapies by Using Stem Cells 2013: BioMed Research International - Wiley Online Library - November 15th, 2024
- Cell therapy for heart disease and therapeutic cloning: will embryos re-enter the stem cell race? - Genethique - November 15th, 2024
- Cutting-edge stem cell therapy proves safe, but will it ever be ... - AAAS - November 6th, 2024
- Induced pluripotent stem cell - Wikipedia - October 21st, 2024
- What are iPS cells? | For the Public | CiRA | Center for iPS Cell ... - October 21st, 2024
- Nobel Winner Shinya Yamanaka: Cell Therapy Is Very Promising For Cancer, Parkinsons, More - Forbes - October 13th, 2024
- iPSCs Manufacturing for Cell-Based Therapies: A Market Analysis of Cell Types, Therapeutic Applications, Ma... - WhaTech - August 4th, 2024
- Abu Dhabi Stem Cells Center partners with Japan-based Kyoto University and Rege Nephro - ZAWYA - January 14th, 2024
- Eterna Therapeutics Enters Into Option and License Agreement with Lineage Cell Therapeutics to Develop Hypoimmune Pluripotent Cell Lines for Multiple... - March 1st, 2023
- What is an Intrusion Prevention System? Definition ... - Fortinet - January 27th, 2023
- What is an IPS Monitor? Monitor Panel Types Explained ... - January 27th, 2023
- IPS panel - Wikipedia - January 27th, 2023
- Cell and gene therapy products: what is an ATMP? - The Niche - January 3rd, 2023
- Cell Therapy - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics - November 22nd, 2022
- Ayala Pharmaceuticals Reports Third Quarter 2022 Financial Results and Provides Corporate Update - November 6th, 2022
- Aligos Therapeutics Presents Clinical Data for its Capsid Assembly Modulator, ALG-000184, at AASLD’s The Liver Meeting® 2022 - November 6th, 2022
- Correcting and Replacing: CinCor Reports Third Quarter Financial Results and Provides Corporate Update - November 6th, 2022
- NGM Bio Announces Poster Presentation Featuring Preclinical Characterization of NGM936 at Upcoming 2022 ASH Annual Meeting - November 6th, 2022
- Assembly Biosciences Presents New Data at AASLD The Liver Meeting® Highlighting Breadth of Virology Portfolio and Potential of Next-Generation Core... - November 6th, 2022
- CymaBay Therapeutics Presents Additional Analyses from Clinical Studies of Seladelpar for Patients with Primary Biliary Cholangitis at The Liver... - November 6th, 2022
- Immutep Announces Abstract Highlighting Eftilagimod Alpha Selected for SITC 2022 Annual Meeting Press Conference - November 6th, 2022
- Osteal Therapeutics, Inc. Completes Enrollment in APEX Phase 2 Clinical Trial of VT-X7 for Periprosthetic Joint Infection - November 6th, 2022
- PMV Pharmaceuticals Appoints Industry Veteran Dr. Carol Gallagher to Board of Directors - November 6th, 2022
- ORYZON to Give Updates on Corporate Progress in November - November 6th, 2022
- Terns Pharmaceuticals Highlights Results from Phase 1 Clinical Trial of TERN-501 at AASLD The Liver Meeting® 2022 - November 6th, 2022
- Aligos Therapeutics Presents Clinical Data for its NASH Program and Nonclinical Data for its Chronic Hepatitis B Portfolio at AASLD’s The Liver... - November 6th, 2022
- First U.S. patient receives autologous stem cell therapy to treat dry ... - October 29th, 2022
- BREAKTHROUGH TECHNOLOGY FOR IPS-DERIVED CELL THERAPIES TURNED INTO GMP PLATFORM BY TREEFROG THERAPEUTICS & INVETECH - Yahoo Finance - October 13th, 2022
- iPS-Cell Based Cell Therapies for Genetic Skin Disease - October 5th, 2022
- Jcr Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd. and Sysmex Establish A Joint Venture in the Field of Regenerative Medicine and Cell Therapy - Marketscreener.com - October 5th, 2022
- MeiraGTx Announces the Upcoming Presentation of 15 Abstracts at the European Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ESGCT) 2022 Annual Congress - Yahoo... - October 5th, 2022
- Stem Cells Market Size Expected to Reach USD 19.31 Billion by 2028: Increasing Number of Clinical Trials Across the Globe - Digital Journal - September 27th, 2022
- Implanting a Patient's Own Reprogrammed Stem Cells Shows Early Positive Results for Treating Dry AMD - Everyday Health - September 19th, 2022
- Current status of umbilical cord blood storage and provision to private biobanks by institutions handling childbirth in Japan - BMC Medical Ethics -... - September 19th, 2022
- Global Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market (2022 to 2027) - Growth, Trends, Covid-19 Impact and Forecasts - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire - September 11th, 2022
- Clinical translation of stem cell therapy for spinal cord injury still premature: results from a single-arm meta-analysis based on 62 clinical trials... - September 11th, 2022
- Improving the differentiation potential of pluripotent stem cells by optimizing culture conditions | Scientific Reports - Nature.com - August 26th, 2022
- New research digs into the genetic drivers of heart failure, with an eye to precision treatments - STAT - August 10th, 2022
- Creative Biolabs Leads the Forefront of iPSC Technology - Digital Journal - August 10th, 2022
- The zinc link: Unraveling the mechanism of methionine-mediated pluripotency regulation - EurekAlert - July 25th, 2022
- Live Cell Metabolic Analysis Paving the Way for Metabolic Research and Cell & Gene Therapy, Upcoming Webinar Hosted by Xtalks - Benzinga - July 16th, 2022
- PROMISING STEM CELL THERAPY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF HIV & AIDS | BTT - Dove Medical Press - July 8th, 2022
- Gene & Cell Therapy FAQs | ASGCT - American Society of Gene & Cell ... - June 30th, 2022
- The benefits and risks of stem cell technology - PMC - June 30th, 2022
- The Future of Parkinson Disease Therapies and the Challenges With Stem Cell Therapies - Neurology Live - June 20th, 2022
- Umoja Biopharma and TreeFrog Therapeutics Announce Collaboration to Address Current Challenges Facing Ex Vivo Allogeneic Therapies in Immuno-Oncology... - June 11th, 2022
- Newsletter April 2022 - Progress in Cline's cell lab and in the stem cell therapy field - Marketscreener.com - April 29th, 2022
- Healios K K : Joint Research with the Division of Regenerative Medicine, the Institute of Medical Science for Developing a Mass Production Method of... - April 3rd, 2022
- A combat with the YAP/TAZ-TEAD oncoproteins for cancer therapy - March 22nd, 2022
- The Pipeline for of iPSC-Derived Cell Therapeutics in 2022 ... - March 22nd, 2022
- Cell Therapy Processing Market CAGR of 27.80% Share, Scope, Stake, Trends, Industry Size, Sales & Revenue, Growth, Opportunities and Demand with... - January 3rd, 2022
- Stem cell therapy for diabetes - PubMed Central (PMC) - November 22nd, 2021
- Stem cells: Therapy, controversy, and research - October 5th, 2021
- How much does stem cell therapy cost in 2021? - The Niche - October 5th, 2021
- "Stem cell-based therapeutics poised to become mainstream option - BSA bureau - October 5th, 2021
- Exclusive Report on Stem Cell Therapy in Cancer Market | Analysis and Opportunity Assessment from 2021-2028 |Aelan Cell Technologies, Baylx, Benitec... - August 6th, 2021
- Asia-Pacific Cell Therapy Market 2021-2028 - Opportunities in the Approval of Kymriah and Yescarta - PRNewswire - August 6th, 2021
- Base Editing as Therapy for Common Inherited Lung and Liver Disease Shows Promise - Clinical OMICs News - July 22nd, 2021
- MoHAP, EHS reveal immunotherapy for cancer, viral infections at Arab Health 2021 - WAM EN - June 25th, 2021
- Kiromic Announces Expansion of In-House Cell therapy cGMP Manufacturing Facility and the Appointment of Industry Veteran Ignacio Nez as Chief... - June 8th, 2021
- Cryopreservation Media helps in Development of a Cell Therapy for Parkinson's Disease - Microbioz India - June 8th, 2021
- Accelerated Biosciences' Immune-Privileged Human Trophoblast Stem Cells (hTSCs) Offer Breakthrough Opportunities in Cancer-Targeting Therapeutics and... - May 15th, 2021
- Factor Bioscience to Deliver Six Digital Presentations at the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) 24th Annual Meeting - PRNewswire - May 15th, 2021
- St. Jude's $11.5B, six-year plan aims to improve global outcomes for children with cancer and catastrophic diseases - The Cancer Letter - May 15th, 2021
- Synthego Launches Eclipse Platform to Accelerate Research and Development of Next-generation Medicines - The Scientist - April 19th, 2021
- The Google Play video app will leave Roku, Vizio, LG and Samsung's TV platforms - Yahoo Canada Finance - April 19th, 2021
- New Controversy for Stem Cell Therapy That Repairs Spinal Cords - The Great Courses Daily News - March 8th, 2021
- Brentuximab Vedotin Plus Chemotherapy Works as a Primary Option for Hodgkin Lymphoma - Targeted Oncology - March 8th, 2021
- Induction of muscle-regenerative multipotent stem cells from human adipocytes by PDGF-AB and 5-azacytidine - Science Advances - January 14th, 2021
- A Potential Therapy for One of the Leading Causes of Heart Disease - PRNewswire - December 10th, 2020
- Evotec and Sartorius Partner with Start-Up Curexsys on IPSC-Based Therapeutic Exosome Approach - BioSpace - December 9th, 2020
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell (iPS Cell) Applications in 2020 - November 28th, 2020
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell - an overview ... - November 28th, 2020
- The Stem Cell-Derived Cells market to Scale new heights in the next decade - Khabar South Asia - November 28th, 2020
- Stem Cells Market 2020: Rising with Immense Development Trends across the Globe by 2027 - The Market Feed - November 25th, 2020
- The Stem Cell-Derived Cells Market to witness explicit growth from 2019 and 2029 - The Haitian-Caribbean News Network - November 23rd, 2020
- Stem Cells Market Research Provides an In-Depth Analysis on the Future Growth Prospects and Industry Trends Adopted by the Competitors | (2020-2027),... - November 23rd, 2020
- The Stem Cell-Derived Cells market to go the astute way from 2019 to 2029 - TechnoWeekly - November 3rd, 2020
- Global Stem Cells Market 2020 Industry Demand, Share, Global Trend, Top Key Players Update, Business Statistics And Research Methodology By Forecast... - November 3rd, 2020
- Regenerative Medicine in Cosmetic Dermatology | MDedge ... - October 30th, 2020