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ASGCT Q1 Landscape Report Paints Positive Picture for Gene and RNA Therapy

ASGCT Q1 Landscape Report Paints Positive Picture for Gene and RNA Therapy

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BOSTON – The CEO of the American Society for Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT), David Barrett, JD, presented highlights from the Society’s latest Landscape Report on Cell, Gene and RNA Therapy for the first quarter (Q1) of 2026.

The ASGCT report is developed in conjunction with Citeline, a subsidiary of Norstella (a pharmaceutical intelligence provider covering drug development from preclinical to commercialization).

Barrett said there are currently 42 gene therapies approved worldwide, along with 38 RNA therapies and 76 (non-genetically modified) cell therapies, which are steadily growing the field. Two cell therapies were approved in Japan in Q1.

There was a small increase in deal-making, and a significant 30% increase in startup funding compared to the same period in 2025. “I think that signals and underscores a rebounding sector,” said Barrett.

Of the eight gene therapies approved over the past 12 months, half were in the United States, with three more in China. “The regulatory pace is starting to pick up, another strong indicator for the future of our field,” Barrett said. It is a similar picture in RNA therapies. “We see a steady uptick over the course of the last year,” he added.

Zooming out, Barrett estimated that there are more than 4,200 therapies currently in development, from preclinical through pre-registration. The vast majority of those (more than 4,130) are gene and genetically modified cell therapies, including about 1,300 RNA therapies.

In the field of gene-modified cell therapies, CAR T continues to lead the pipeline for ex vivo gene therapies, with natural killer (NK) and T-cell receptors gaining traction. Not surprisingly, genetically modified cell therapy overwhelmingly targets cancers, but Barrett noted growth in the percentage of these therapies targeting immunological diseases, including lupus, multiple sclerosis, and HIV.

Pipeline growth

Barrett also noted growth and “a promising future” in the clinical trials pipeline. There are currently 350 Phase I, 319 Phase II, and 41 Phase III trials in gene therapy (up from 35 a year ago). “Hopefully, we will see a number of completed trials and FDA decisions in the near term,” said Barrett. A growing proportion of gene therapy trials (exceeding 60 percent) is for non-oncology indications.

In the RNA space, “RNAi therapies are jumping,” said Barrett. The same cannot be said, however, for mRNA. “Unsurprisingly, mRNA therapies continue to slide quarter over quarter,” a symptom of “shaken confidence” in that space, he continued. RNA therapies are targeting primarily non-oncology indications, especially in rare diseases.

Upcoming catalysts

On the business front, Barrett noted there has been “a nice uptick” in Q1 in start-up funding compared to the same quarter last year, which he deemed “a really promising indication.” The number of start-ups historically has tended to hover between 5-20. For Q1, that number was 26.

The Q1 report tracks various business catalysts anticipated through the end of 2027, including increased interest and uptake in expedited review designations—fast track, RMAT, orphan drug breakthroughs and other accelerated approval pathways.

“FDA is getting a lot done… and hopefully we’ll see the same moving forward,” Barrett said.

 

The full Landscape Report is available online from the ASGCT website.

The post ASGCT Q1 Landscape Report Paints Positive Picture for Gene and RNA Therapy appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

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SonoThera Raises $125M to Develop Ultrasound-Mediated Genetic Medicines

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Biotechnology company SonoThera has raised $125 million in an oversubscribed Series B financing round. The financing was led by Vida Ventures, with participation from ARK Invest, CureDuchenne Ventures, Leaps by Bayer, Otsuka Pharmaceutical, SymBiosis, UCB Ventures SA, Vivo Capital, and existing investors ARCH Venture Partners, Alexandria Venture Investments, Duquesne Family Office, Illumina Ventures, Johnson & Johnson Innovation – JJDC, Medical Excellence Capital, RA Capital, and Vertex Ventures HC.

SonoThera will use the funds to advance its lead programs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) in the clinic. The funds will also support efforts to expand its pipeline of targeted redosable genetic medicines across multiple organ systems and scale its proprietary platform technologies for safe, targeted therapy delivery.

The company’s platform combines a proprietary ultrasound-mediated delivery technology dubbed RIPPLE™, with a payload engineering platform dubbed PORE™. The platforms are designed to support the development of DNA and RNA therapeutics, gene editing, and gene silencing approaches. SonoThera is using its tech to develop genetic medicines that it claims will address key limitations of conventional gene therapies including delivery challenges, payload size constraints, immune responses, safety events, and difficulties with redosing. 

As Kenneth Greenberd, PhD, SonoThera’s co-founder and CEO, stated “we founded SonoThera to take a fundamentally different approach, with a platform designed to broaden the therapeutic possibilities of the field. We believe our technology has the potential to expand the range of diseases addressable by genetic medicines while enabling more precise, durable, safer, and repeatable therapies for patients.”

SonoThera has already demonstrated the targeted delivery and expression capabilities of its platform across multiple tissues, including skeletal muscle, heart, liver, kidney, adipose, and brain. It has also shown that it can deliver large payloads such as full-length dystrophin for DMD and RNA-based payloads for gene silencing applications in preclinical studies. 

The company expects to initiate its first clinical trial in DMD in 2027.

Commenting on the financing, Rajul Jain, MD, managing director at Vida Ventures, said “we believe SonoThera, with its RIPPLE delivery and PORE payload engineering technologies, has the potential to unlock opportunities in diseases with significant unmet need that have been previously inaccessible to other genetic medicine approaches.” 

In connection with the financing, Jain and Rakhshita Dhar, MS, vice president & head of Healthcare Venture Investments at Leaps by Bayer, have joined SonoThera’s Board of Directors.

The post SonoThera Raises $125M to Develop Ultrasound-Mediated Genetic Medicines appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

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STAT+: Up and down the ladder: The latest comings and goings

Hired someone new and exciting? Promoted a rising star? Finally solved that hard-to-fill spot? Share the news with us, and we’ll share it with others. That’s right. Send us your changes, and we’ll find a home for them. Don’t be shy. Everyone wants to know who is coming and going.

And here is our regular feature in which we highlight a different person each week. This time around, we note that AstronauTx hired Michelle Mellion as chief medical officer. Previously, she held the same role at PepGen and EveryONE Medicines.

But all work and no play can make for a dull chief medical officer.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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Hired someone new and exciting? Promoted a rising star? Finally solved that hard-to-fill spot? Share the news with us, and we’ll share it with others. That’s right. Send us your changes, and we’ll find a home for them. Don’t be shy. Everyone wants to know who is coming and going.

And here is our regular feature in which we highlight a different person each week. This time around, we note that AstronauTx hired Michelle Mellion as chief medical officer. Previously, she held the same role at PepGen and EveryONE Medicines.

But all work and no play can make for a dull chief medical officer.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

Read More

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FDA imposes import alert on Indian plant after inspectors flag GMP failings

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Officials sanctioned Dabur India months after FDA inspectors found bird droppings and data integrity deficiencies during an inspection of the plant.

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