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Accelerating Organoid Adoption Set to Transform Cancer Drugs
Since the FDA’s April 2025 announcement to phase out required animal testing in favor of human-first preclinical models for monoclonal antibody therapies and other drugs, the adoption of organoids that mimic the structure, function, and cellular complexity of native tissues has been on the rise. These ex vivo systems provide a more physiologically relevant platform for evaluating drug efficacy and toxicity, with the potential to improve clinical outcomes for patients.
The momentum behind this regulatory shift was underscored last October by the first FDA investigational new drug (IND) approval in oncology based exclusively on efficacy data from human vascularized organoids, generated using a platform developed by Qureator.
In cancer research, organoid biobanks that capture diverse genetic backgrounds, ethnicities, ages, and other patient-specific variables are opening new avenues for precision medicine.
Yet Hans Clevers, MD, PhD, renowned stem cell biologist and the “father of organoids,” explains that replacing decades of infrastructure reliant on animal models is not an easy feat.
“In Dutch, we call this koudwatervrees—cold water fear,” said Clevers during his keynote session at GEN’s Spotlight on Organoids, which streamed in March. “During my seven years with Roche, I learned there are thousands of individual technologies in drug development proven over decades. You cannot simply discard those without providing the same level of evidence.”
Today’s organoid companies underscore proof points in the ability to model complex human biology with high fidelity. At the same time, the government’s evolving regulatory stance is serving as a critical catalyst, providing both validation and momentum to accelerate widespread adoption of these platforms.
Organoid intelligence
When asked about the biggest obstacles preventing organoids from reaching their full potential, Alif Saleh, CEO of 28bio, emphasizes that adoption, not technology, is the primary hurdle, particularly in drug discovery, where a staggering 95% failure rate is accepted as the norm.
“The risk of failure is built in all the way to Wall Street,” said Saleh. “If everybody accepts that risk, there’s very little incentive to change.” He states that achieving a large cultural shift for widespread organoid adoption will likely require either regulatory pressure or an organoid-powered commercial success.
28bio builds human brain organoids at scale that model memory and learning improvement in neurodegenerative disease. The platform grows tissue in the lab programmed for key neurological cell types, including both microglia and oligodendrocytes, by starting from primary or induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs).
These brain organoids predict drug efficacy and toxicity in both the central and peripheral nervous systems. In cancer research, the model provides a valuable tool for screening antibody drug conjugate (ADC) neurotoxicity.
Saleh says organoids are “becoming smarter and smarter.” 28bio’s neural interface measures the effects of different compounds on memory and task performance by recording what it calls “organoid intelligence.” The platform trains brain organoids to play simple games such as Pac-Man, providing stimulation that rewards successful behaviors (e.g., “eating” fruit) and discourages failures (e.g., colliding with ghosts). By quantifying learning and performance changes in response to drug exposure, the system provides a functional readout of neurological impact in vitro.

28bio is not the only player in the brain organoid space. BrainStorm Therapeutics is building AI models that develop gene maps of brain diseases, which then identify promising targets for new drugs and clinical biomarkers. The company’s organoid platform tackles both rare brain diseases, such as Rett Syndrome and CDKL5 deficiency disorder, and common neurodegenerative conditions, like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. The platform screens thousands of drug molecules per day on the model’s human brain cells.
“It doesn’t matter in the end, how well designed your drug is,” said Maya Gosztyla, PhD, co-founder and CSO at BrainStorm, at GEN’s Spotlight on Organoids. “When we brought AI into our platform, we tried to take a biology-first approach that trains models on the richest and most accurate datasets directly from human patient-derived brain organoid models.”
BrainStorm is a member of NVIDIA Inception, a program that guides AI startups through the NVIDIA ecosystem of compute technologies. The company’s brain organoids generate single-cell sequencing data to fine-tune foundation models available through NVIDIA’s BioNeMo Framework, including the Geneformer model for gene expression analysis.
Can’t ignore the immune system
“Have you ever bet $3 billion on a single number in roulette? That’s essentially drug discovery,” said Robert DiFazio, PhD, co-founder at Parallel Bio, in response to pharma’s high failure rates. “Pharma needs to recognize that animal testing is a problem.”

Parallel Bio seeks to model the complex immune system by developing replicas of human lymph nodes that demonstrate biological behavior, such as swelling during inflammation and the formation of germinal centers. These transient microstructures are critical to immune response and allow antigen-activated B cells to proliferate and differentiate into high-affinity memory B cells and plasma cells. The company aims to fuel immunotherapies for autoimmune disease and cancer.
Juliana Hilliard, PhD, co-founder at Parallel Bio, states that a dual organoid approach, where systemic immunity is paired with other tissues, such as cancer tumors, provides a more representative model for human disease.
The company’s organoids can capture immune suppression, checkpoint activity, cytokine dynamics, immune cell infiltration, and tumor cell killing factors that are often absent in other preclinical models. By exploring immune-cancer interactions at high resolution, the platform can support patient stratification, informed drug design for defined populations, and prediction of immuno-oncology drug efficacy prior to clinical trials.
“COVID was the first time you saw a rush of pharma companies trying to hire immunologists because they couldn’t ignore the immune system anymore,” said Hilliard. With increasing evidence that organoids can successfully flag drug failures before Phase I clinical trials, she foresees human-first drug discovery as inevitable.
“Eventually, pharma won’t be able to develop drugs in animals,” Hilliard says.
Ludovico Buti, PhD, senior research leader at Charles River Laboratories, affirms that the immune system is critical for modeling complex cancer biology. He emphasizes that cancer organoids have historically focused on the epithelial components of the tumor. Gaps remain when recapitulating the stroma and immune components.
“We have been able to circumvent this challenge by co-culturing organoids with immune cells that come from the same donor, if you’re lucky, or from different donors, but this was always considered a transitory solution,” Buti explained. “We want the resident immune cells already embedded in the organoids. That’s how we now see the technology evolving today.”
Capture the microenvironment
Homing in on cancer, Henriette Lanz, PhD, VP of biology at MIMETAS, affirms that patient-derived tumor organoids (PDOs) have already taken flight in recent years prior to the FDA’s announcements. She explains that initiatives, such as the Organoids Platform within the Oncode Accelerator program in the Netherlands, were launched several years ago to accelerate the development of new cancer therapies for the benefit of patients of all ages. The group is also investing in a large PDO biobank that is accessible to drug developers.
PDOs maintain heterogeneity of the original tumor tissue while capturing inter-patient variability. Yet, these models are limited by the lack of a tumor microenvironment, which is composed of immune cells, vasculature, and supporting cell types, such as fibroblasts.
To address this gap, MIMETAS’ OrganoPlate Graft UniFlow technology creates vascularized co-cultures to support immune-competent tumors-on-chip with unidirectional perfusion. The system simplifies operation by eliminating the requirement for external pumps and supports up to 512 chips in a single setup for large-scale screening. Additionally, MIMETAS has a colon organoid tubular model on the market for toxicity prediction and a kidney organoid tubular model under early access.
Lorna Ewart, PhD, CSO of Emulate, affirms that the publication of the FDA’s April 2025 roadmap signals a move toward using animals as “the exception rather than the norm.” Reduced perceived regulatory risk has led to increased use of organ-on-a-chip technologies that use microfluidic devices to precisely control the cellular microenvironment and model tumor biology.

She says these regulatory changes encourage end users in pharmaceutical companies and beyond to evaluate the decision-quality of the data as a critical next step to incorporate into their regular workflows, with the ultimate goal of impacting patients.
“It is widely appreciated that the earlier a patient is diagnosed and correctly treated, the higher their chances of progression-free or overall survival are likely to be,” said Ewart. “What excites me most about the future of organ-on-a-chip research in cancer is the ability to improve patient care.”
To model tumor biology, Emulate’s platform introduces stromal contents by tuning the extracellular matrix stiffness and composition, as well as recreating essential gradients. The method captures dynamic processes, such as immune cell recruitment and drug exposure, to assist in the testing of therapeutic candidates.

Emulate’s first-generation platform, Zoë CM-2, has been used internally to assess CAR T cell recruitment, as well as externally by researchers at the Ellison Institute and Wyss Institute to model cancer cell extravasation and Barrett’s esophageal cancer, respectively. Additionally, researchers at McGill University Health Center demonstrated that the organ-on-a-chip models could predict a cancer patient’s response to chemotherapy.
Last June, Emulate launched AVA Emulation System, a self-contained, benchtop culture module that incubates and images up to 96 organ-chip samples in a single run. According to an Emulate press release, the platform cuts consumable costs fourfold and in-lab labor by half compared to current generation technologies.
While these human-first models have outperformed animal models, predicting clinical outcomes directly remains a reach. Clevers asserts that organoids are poised to become a key solution for almost all challenges in drug development, a vision that must be coordinated globally to be achieved.
“My dream is that in the next 10 years, we will make this technology a commodity,” he says. “Something where people can just push a button and it works.”
The post Accelerating Organoid Adoption Set to Transform Cancer Drugs appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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STAT+: At hospital finance conference, a call to end the friction that’s keeping costs high
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — At this week’s annual meeting of hospital finance leaders, the exhibit hall was packed with dozens of billing and collections companies. Armed with candy, tote bags, and pens, they smiled at passersby, eager to explain why their tactics would extract the most money from health insurers.
The sheer number of “revenue cycle” vendors who attended the Healthcare Financial Management Association’s annual conference in Maryland — outnumbering even the hospital attendees, according to a list shared by an organizer — was a visible reminder of the enormous industry built around just paying medical bills.
The U.S. health care industry spends roughly $200 billion annually on financial transactions: claims processing, payment, collections, and prior authorization. And yet the proliferation of billing vendors seemed to clash with the main theme of HFMA’s conference, affordability, spotlighting the need to simplify the billing process so that health care is less costly and more accessible for patients.
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — At this week’s annual meeting of hospital finance leaders, the exhibit hall was packed with dozens of billing and collections companies. Armed with candy, tote bags, and pens, they smiled at passersby, eager to explain why their tactics would extract the most money from health insurers.
The sheer number of “revenue cycle” vendors who attended the Healthcare Financial Management Association’s annual conference in Maryland — outnumbering even the hospital attendees, according to a list shared by an organizer — was a visible reminder of the enormous industry built around just paying medical bills.
The U.S. health care industry spends roughly $200 billion annually on financial transactions: claims processing, payment, collections, and prior authorization. And yet the proliferation of billing vendors seemed to clash with the main theme of HFMA’s conference, affordability, spotlighting the need to simplify the billing process so that health care is less costly and more accessible for patients.
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Beyond sunshine: Iberia’s biotech moment has arrived with developing capital networks
Strong science, lower costs and growing capital networks are putting Spain and Portugal on the biotech investment map, even as structural bottlenecks persist, according to two investors.
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Laser‑Driven Phase Contrast Enhances Cryo‑EM Resolution of Small Proteins
You know when you are at the eye doctor getting an updated prescription, and suddenly the world snaps into sharper focus? Physicists at the University of California (UC), Berkeley, have now done something similar for electron microscopy. By introducing phase contrast into a cryo‑electron microscope, they have delivered dramatically sharper images of some of biology’s smallest and most elusive proteins.
The advance comes from a new laser phase plate (LPP), described in the paper “Laser phase plate improves structure determination of small proteins by cryo‑EM,” which was published recently in Science. Led by physicist Holger Mueller, PhD, of UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the team demonstrated that a laser‑driven phase plate can overcome one of cryo‑EM’s most persistent limitations: poor contrast for small proteins.

Cryo‑EM has transformed structural biology over the past decade, earning a Nobel Prize in 2017 for enabling high‑resolution structures without crystallization. But despite its impact, the technique still struggles with proteins below ~70 kilodaltons—a size range that includes about 90% of the human proteome. “Because of signal-to-noise limitations, the majority of human and animal proteins are too small to be analyzed by these methods [cryo-EM and cryoelectron tomography]. The increase in signal-to-noise ratio provided by this laser phase plate is expected to overcome these important limitations.”
The new LPP begins to address that problem. The LPP uses an intense, continuous‑wave laser to shift the phase of the electron beam itself. This produces true phase contrast without dimming or destabilizing the beam. Mueller described the laser focus as “75 kilowatts focused to a few microns… That’s more powerful than what you use for welding. It has more power than a military laser. It builds up the brightest continuous laser focus ever.”
Installed in a custom Thermo Fisher Titan Krios, the LPP immediately improved the clarity and resolvability of small proteins, including hemoglobin, which sits at the lower limit of what today’s cryo‑EM instruments can handle. As the authors wrote in the abstract: “Here, we show that the laser phase plate (LPP)… enhances the resolution in single-particle reconstruction of small proteins by improving specimen-motion correction, recovery of information from the early frames, as well as particle visualization, 3D classification, and alignment.”

These improvements were achieved using standard defocus ranges and reconstruction workflows. “For the most challenging cases—small particles, bad specimens—the laser produces a very considerable advantage,” Mueller said.
The impact extends beyond single‑particle analysis. Cryo‑electron tomography (cryo‑ET), which assembles multiple angular views of a molecule or protein into a three-dimensional image, stands to benefit even more. “With cryo-ET, we’re looking at small, very complicated cellular material that’s incredibly crowded inside the cell,” said Bridget Carragher, PhD, founding technical director of imaging at Biohub. “It’s like a forest of trees, and you’re trying to find one leaf on one tree in there. Cryo-ET needs a dramatic step forward in contrast, so we can start to see what’s going on inside the cell. That’s what the laser phase plate promises to give us.”
Biohub is developing a dual‑laser version of the system, designed to reduce component wear and minimize aberrations. Meanwhile, Mueller’s team is pushing toward imaging proteins as small as 17 kilodaltons, a threshold that would open access to vast regions of the human proteome previously invisible to cryo‑EM.
“This technology is a step function change for biology,” said Stephani Otte, PhD, Biohub’s vice president of imaging science. “What was once invisible will become visible—and that changes everything about how we understand disease.”
“The bottom line is, if you have a large protein and a really good sample—a fresh one or one frozen without bubbles, for example—you may not need the phase plate to get a single, high-quality image. But for a small protein and a bad sample, laser-on is best,” Mueller said. “This could fill an enormous gap in our knowledge of protein structures that can’t be crystallized or are too small for today’s cryo-EM. And it will be revolutionary for cryo-ET.”
The post Laser‑Driven Phase Contrast Enhances Cryo‑EM Resolution of Small Proteins appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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