About four months after varoglutamstat failed in Alzheimer’s disease, Vivoryon Therapeutics NV disclosed data from the Viviad phase IIb study with the same compound in kidney disease that provided cause for hope – and Anne Doering, chief financial officer, said the new data “reinforce our strategic shift.”
Investors wanted more from ALX Oncology Holdings Inc.’s phase II study testing evorpacept (evo) combination therapy in gastric tumors, and the stock (NASDAQ:ALXO) tumbled 36% or $1.77 to close Aug. 1 at $3.04.
Macrogenics Inc., agreeing with an independent data monitoring committee, has discontinued dosing patients in the troubled phase II Tamarack study of vobramitamab duocarmazine as a second-line treatment for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.
The disappointments continue for Fibrogen Inc., which is terminating work on its once-promising anti-CTGF monoclonal antibody, pamrevlumab, after reporting missed endpoints in two late-stage pancreatic cancer studies, and cutting its workforce by about 75%.
Pepgen Inc. fell slightly short of its phase II dystrophin goal with PGN-EDO51 for patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) whose mutations are amenable to an exon 51-skipping approach, but Wall Street reacted in a big way, sending the Boston-based firm’s stock (NASDAQ:PEPG) down 33%, or $5.55, to close July 31 at $11.43.
In June 2024, BioWorld covered 221 clinical trial updates, compared to 298 in May. BioWorld recorded 23 phase III trial successes in June, seven failures, and one with mixed results.
With the COVID-19 pandemic still visible in the rearview mirror, the World Health Organization (WHO) is taking no chances as it preps for human avian influenza, or H5N1, a subtype of influenza A.
Succeeding where others have failed in an indication with high unmet need, Celldex Therapeutics Inc. disclosed top-line data from the phase II trial with barzolvolimab (barzo) against two common forms of chronic inducible urticaria (CIndU): cold urticaria (ColdU) and symptomatic dermographism (SD).
Phase II data showing an 11.1-month improvement in overall survival for advanced ovarian cancer patients treated with the IL-12 immunotherapy IMNN-001 drove up shares of Imunon Inc. by 181% July 30. The results “could usher in the first immune-based therapy for ovarian cancer,” said Stacy Lindborg, president and CEO of the Lawrenceville, N.J.-based company.
The first patenting to be published in the name of Wave View Imaging Inc. sees its co-founders file for additional protection of their imaging technology which can be used to monitor breast cancer treatment.