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This week in Drug Discovery (13 – 17 April)

News round-up for 13 – 17 April by Bruno Quinney, Content Team at DDW.
This week, breakthroughs have emerged in cancer research. Elsewhere, regulatory reforms have accelerated clinical trial set up in the UK.
The top stories:
Novel therapy could slow tumour growth
A novel cancer therapy targeting tumour acidity could boost immune response and slow cancer growth, studies show.
B7-H4-targeted ADC shows 62% response rate in ovarian cancer
The global Phase I BEHOLD-1 clinical trial for mocertatug rezetecan (Mo-Rez) has shown confirmed objective response rates (cORR) of 62% in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer (PROC) and 67% in recurrent or advanced endometrial cancer (EC).
Immunopeptide could delay inflammatory arthritis, study says
Scientists investigating the naturally occurring immunopeptide PEPITEM (Peptide Inhibitor of Trans-Endothelial Migration) have shown reductions in arthritic joint swelling to a degree comparable to the current standard of care, reducing inflammatory changes that cause joint damage.
Speech overlooked as clinical marker, biotech says
SynaptixBio, which became the only company to commercialise a treatment for the rare disease H-ABC, is set to launch a study into speech as a non-invasive, digital clinical marker in neurodegenerative disease research.
Read more…
Regulatory reforms accelerate UK clinical trial set up
NHS patients are accessing groundbreaking treatments faster as the UK government fulfils its promise for a 150-day clinical trial target.
Read more…
The post This week in Drug Discovery (13 – 17 April) appeared first on Drug Discovery World (DDW).
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#AAN26: Roche’s multiple sclerosis pill delays relapse, but liver toxicity could need monitoring
Roche’s multiple sclerosis pill more than doubled patients’ relapse-free interval compared with Sanofi’s marketed MS pill Aubagio, according to data presented late on Tuesday.
The drug, a BTK inhibitor called fenebrutinib, demonstrated “the lowest relapse …
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STAT+: From Revolution Medicines, more strong data on KRAS drug and a glimpse of a ‘novel class’ beyond it
SAN DIEGO — Revolution Medicines is already cooking up the next iteration of RAS inhibiting drugs.
At the American Association of Cancer Research annual meeting here, the company is the talk of the town for the clinical trial success of daraxonrasib, their next generation targeted therapy, in advanced pancreatic cancer. And while the company presented more data on that drug on Tuesday, showing promising first line and combination data on daraxonrasib, scientists also showed in another session intriguing preclinical data on a completely new compound that may represent what comes after their current lineup.
That drug, currently called RM-055, is what RevMed’s CEO Mark Goldsmith is calling an entirely “novel class of catalytic inhibitors.” These are targeted therapies that not only block the RAS signaling that drives cancer, but molecularly turn the cancer protein off.
SAN DIEGO — Revolution Medicines is already cooking up the next iteration of RAS inhibiting drugs.
At the American Association of Cancer Research annual meeting here, the company is the talk of the town for the clinical trial success of daraxonrasib, their next generation targeted therapy, in advanced pancreatic cancer. And while the company presented more data on that drug on Tuesday, showing promising first line and combination data on daraxonrasib, scientists also showed in another session intriguing preclinical data on a completely new compound that may represent what comes after their current lineup.
That drug, currently called RM-055, is what RevMed’s CEO Mark Goldsmith is calling an entirely “novel class of catalytic inhibitors.” These are targeted therapies that not only block the RAS signaling that drives cancer, but molecularly turn the cancer protein off.
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STAT+: Key GOP senators push back on Trump’s plan to cut NIH, reorganize HHS
WASHINGTON — Both Democratic and Republican Senators who oversee federal spending seemed skeptical of proposed cuts to health research and public health in the White House’s budget, potentially teeing up a congressional package that ignores many of the administration’s most dramatic proposals for a second year.
During a Senate appropriations health subcommittee hearing Tuesday, lawmakers questioned health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on how his department could tackle chronic disease, smoking cessation, and cancer research with a proposed 2027 fiscal budget that would cut the department by 12%.
The request, which is broadly similar to what was proposed last year, includes deep cuts to the National Institutes of Health, the elimination of a health research agency, and the creation of a new agency devoted to chronic diseases called the Administration for a Healthy America.
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