Abbott Laboratories reported it achieved new major milestones to support the company's growing suite of pulsed field ablation (PFA) solutions in electrophysiology: early completion of enrollment in the VOLT-AF IDE study supporting the Volt PFA system, and the launch of the Focalflex trial to assess the company's Tactiflex Duo ablation catheter, sensor enabled, which will be used in the treatment of patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation.
The Japanese government is throwing full weight behind the Bioeconomy Strategy initiative to position Japan’s biopharmaceutical industry as both a key driver of economic growth and global drug discovery hub.
With confidence dropping in doing business with China-affiliated life sciences companies due to the Biosecure Act, one of the companies explicitly named in the U.S. legislation is fighting back. Raising the possibility of a constitutional challenge to the bill, Rade Drmanac, co-founder and chief scientific officer of Complete Genomics Inc., wrote to congressional leaders to urge them to remove the California-based subsidiary of MGI from the bill.
The U.S. FDA has issued yet another complete response letter (CRL) for dasiglucagon, a glucagon receptor agonist, being developed by Zealand Pharma A/S for treating congenital hyperinsulinism, an ultra-rare disease that is also being targeted by at least two other companies. This CRL is pegged to the timing of a third-party manufacturing facility reinspection that was done in August and September. The agency also wants some additional clinical analysis from the phase III study.
The U.S. FDA gave the 510(k) green light to Echo IQ Ltd.’s Echosolv AS for its AI-enabled software as a medical device to be used as a decision support aid in detecting severe aortic stenosis.
Antag Therapeutics ApS has received IND clearance from the FDA for lead molecule, AT-7687. A phase I trial will evaluate AT-7687 in healthy lean and healthy obese subjects, including as monotherapy and in combination with semaglutide in the healthy obese individuals.
Stealth Biotherapeutics Inc. had hoped the U.S. FDA would have approved its lead candidate, elamipretide, as the first treatment for Barth syndrome by now. Instead, it’s headed to a meet-up with the agency’s Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee (CRDAC) Oct. 10. The discussion and vote at that meeting could be make-or-break for patients with the ultra-rare debilitating mitochondrial disease that has no approved therapies. “Barring support from CRDAC, the future of elamipretide for Barth syndrome in the U.S. is tenuous," Stealth CEO Reenie McCarthy told BioWorld.
Gene and cell therapies will drive innovation for the next 10 years, Claus Zieler, the chief commercial officer at Astellas Pharma Inc., said in the newest episode of the BioWorld Insider podcast. Developers are on the cusp of breakthroughs because a gene can now be replaced “and that means we can potentially cure a disease rather than intervening in a disease.”