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Q&A: Intellia CEO talks first Phase 3 CRISPR readout and what’s next

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Intellia Therapeutics reported this morning on the Phase 3 success of a gene editing treatment for hereditary angioedema, a disease that causes unpredictable, disfiguring and potentially dangerous swelling attacks. The biotech aims to have its …

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Pennsylvania sues AI chatbot company for posing as a licensed doctor

Pennsylvania sues AI chatbot company for posing as a licensed doctor

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The state of Pennsylvania has sued Character.AI, a startup that lets users chat with different AI-generated personas, for illegally presenting a chatbot as a licensed doctor in the state.

This is the first lawsuit brought …​ ​Read More

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Sarepta says to ‘exercise prudence’ in setting expectations for Elevidys’ recovery

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Sarepta Therapeutics has put in place several initiatives to help its gene therapy Elevidys return to growth, but recovery will take a long time, according to company executives.

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STAT+: FDA to reconsider treatment for rare cancer after its surprise rejection

Two companies developing a therapy for a rare blood cancer have reached an agreement with the Food and Drug Administration that walked back the agency’s main reason for rejecting the drug in January. 

Pierre Fabre Pharmaceuticals and Atara Biotherapeutics, makers of the drug called Ebvallo, said Thursday that a meeting held in late April with FDA officials ended with the agency agreeing that their already completed, single-arm clinical trial was sufficient to support a review and potential approval. 

When the FDA rejected Ebvallo, the agency said the same study was flawed and the data produced from it was “insufficient” to support the drug’s approval. The drug’s review was conducted by the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, led at the time by Vinay Prasad. He departed the agency at the end of April. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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Two companies developing a therapy for a rare blood cancer have reached an agreement with the Food and Drug Administration that walked back the agency’s main reason for rejecting the drug in January. 

Pierre Fabre Pharmaceuticals and Atara Biotherapeutics, makers of the drug called Ebvallo, said Thursday that a meeting held in late April with FDA officials ended with the agency agreeing that their already completed, single-arm clinical trial was sufficient to support a review and potential approval. 

When the FDA rejected Ebvallo, the agency said the same study was flawed and the data produced from it was “insufficient” to support the drug’s approval. The drug’s review was conducted by the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, led at the time by Vinay Prasad. He departed the agency at the end of April. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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