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STAT+: In early trial, CAR-T results raise hope of preventing multiple myeloma in high-risk patients

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SAN DIEGO — Alison Cameron spent close to a decade fighting to keep myeloma under control. She’d been diagnosed with smoldering multiple myeloma, a precursor to cancer, and spent years receiving infusions to keep it from progressing to active multiple myeloma. Now, after receiving CAR-T therapy, an aggressive immunotherapy, while on a trial, the 54-year old anesthesiologist is hoping the risk of cancer is gone for good.

It’s a reasonable hope, given the results of that trial, which researchers presented at the American Association for Cancer Research meeting here on Monday. All 20 patients who received the trial treatment no longer had any detectable myeloma cells in their body. That’s a far deeper and more complete response than scientists typically expect when it comes to multiple myeloma, and it’s prompting some experts to consider the possibility these patients have truly had active cancer permanently averted.

Currently, there is only one approved therapy for high risk smoldering myeloma, an antibody therapy called Darzalex. Patients can remain on treatment for years, but without achieving these kinds of deep molecular responses, and many still progress within 5 years, said Ecaterina Dumbrava, a cancer researcher at MD Anderson Cancer Center who did not work on the study. “The results raise a very important question whether early immune interception can not only delay progression but redefine treatment goals. Can we talk about the word we always avoid, which is cure,” she said.

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As Duchenne innovation booms, let’s ensure it becomes real progress

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At Sarepta Therapeutics, we’ve seen it all. Here are the questions I believe we should be asking to move forward in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

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CleanAssure Launched as an ISO Class 5 Controlled Cleanroom for Sterile Single-Use Assemblies

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Freudenberg Medical, a Kaiserslautern, Germany-based contract design manufacturing partner, launched CleanAssure, a new ISO Class 5 controlled cleanroom designed to deliver clean and sterile single-use assemblies for biopharmaceutical customers, according to the company.

Freudenberg Medical manufactures silicone and thermoplastic elastomer (TPE) tubing for bioprocessing and critical fluid transfer. The company specializes in seamless, overmolded single-use assemblies used in vaccine production, cell cultivation, fluid transfer, and fill-finish operations.

The controlled cleanroom enables customers to receive ready-to-use washed, dried, and gamma sterilized single-use assemblies with the highest product quality, sterility, and process consistency, noted Rudi Gall, vp, global pharma, Freudenberg Medical.

“CleanAssure allows us to support our customers beyond component manufacturing,” he said. “By integrating controlled cleaning and sterilization into our single-use assembly services, we help reduce contamination risk, streamline validation activities, and support a reliable supply for our customers. We can now support customers with their entire component value chain and allow them to focus on their core manufacturing capability.”

Freudenberg’s cleaning process uses ultrapure water and air, operating within ISO 5 conditions. The water is produced using a multi-stage filtration process, resulting in high-purity water specifically suitable for pharmaceutical applications.

Key biopharma industry challenges

Biopharmaceutical manufacturers increasingly rely on single-use systems but face ongoing challenges related to cleaning validation, contamination risk, and production downtime. Customer-managed cleaning processes are often time-intensive, costly, and require additional resources while directly impacting supply reliability, according to Gall.

The company explained that its controlled cleaning environment addresses these challenges by reducing cross-contamination risk through tightly controlled ISO Class 5 processing; alleviating customer cleaning validation burden by delivering assemblies washed and sterilized under cGMP, validated conditions; minimizing production downtime by removing cleaning as a process step; and supporting a consistent, reliable supply of high-quality single-use assemblies.

Freudenberg will be attending INTERPHEX New York, April 21–23, Booth 1673, to exhibit its new products and services.

The post CleanAssure Launched as an ISO Class 5 Controlled Cleanroom for Sterile Single-Use Assemblies appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

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STAT+: At AACR, a provocative use of CAR-T, Merck’s new thing and cancer’s geography problem

You’re reading the web version of STAT’s popup newsletter, AACR in 30 seconds, your guide to what’s happening at the American Association of Cancer Researchers’ annual meeting. Sign up here.

We’re back with more data from the AACR meeting! Among the highlights today: a first look at a drug Merck acquired from China, a fascinating but potentially controversial use for CAR-T, and American oncology’s geography problem. Don’t forget: Tuesday night we will host a live event in San Diego, and we also have a virtual recap of the AACR conference on Thursday.

CAR-T shows deep response in smoldering myeloma

In an early phase trial, investigators at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute treated 20 high risk smoldering multiple myeloma patients with Carvykti, a BCMA directed CAR-T therapy. The idea was to use the immunotherapy on patients with the multiple myeloma precursor condition, hoping to prevent the active cancer in patients at high risk of progression.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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Published

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You’re reading the web version of STAT’s popup newsletter, AACR in 30 seconds, your guide to what’s happening at the American Association of Cancer Researchers’ annual meeting. Sign up here.

We’re back with more data from the AACR meeting! Among the highlights today: a first look at a drug Merck acquired from China, a fascinating but potentially controversial use for CAR-T, and American oncology’s geography problem. Don’t forget: Tuesday night we will host a live event in San Diego, and we also have a virtual recap of the AACR conference on Thursday.

CAR-T shows deep response in smoldering myeloma

In an early phase trial, investigators at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute treated 20 high risk smoldering multiple myeloma patients with Carvykti, a BCMA directed CAR-T therapy. The idea was to use the immunotherapy on patients with the multiple myeloma precursor condition, hoping to prevent the active cancer in patients at high risk of progression.

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

Read More

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