Gallery

Korean Pharma Company gets approval for Hunter syndrome drug

The Korean pharmaceutical company Green Cross has developed and received approval from the Korean FDA for an alternative, licensed therapeutic enzyme to treat Hunter Syndrome, a rare disease that until now had only one treatment option available.
Continue reading

Gallery

Genistein in Sanfilippo disease (Abstract, Ann Neurol)

Genistein in Sanfilippo disease: A randomized controlled crossover trial. Authors de Ruijter J, Valstar MJ, Narajczyk M, Wegrzyn G, Kulik W, Ijlst L, Wagemans T, van der Wal WM, Wijburg FA. Journal Ann Neurol. 2012 Jan;71(1):110-20. doi: 10.1002/ana.22643. Affiliation Department of Pediatrics and Amsterdam Lysosome Centre “Sphinx”, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Abstract OBJECTIVE … Continue reading

Gallery

Shire proposes Natural History study of MPS 3B

This gallery contains 3 photos.

The clinical trial plan for the U.S. natural history study for Sanfilippo Syndrome Type B has just been published in clinicaltrials.gov. It is essentially the same plan as the current Natural History study for Type A. We have reproduced it here and linked to the official clinical trials record. This is further evidence that Shire is proceeding rapidly with a plan to carry out clinical trials of enzyme replacement for MPS 3B.
Continue reading

Gallery

Ultragenyx In-Licenses Enzyme Replacement Therapy for MPS 7 from St. Louis Univ

Press release from Marketwatch, January 5, 2012. MPS 7 Patients May at Last have an Opportunity for Enzyme Replacement Therapy NOVATO, Calif., Jan. 5, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Inc., a biotechnology company focused on developing treatments for rare and ultra-rare genetic disorders, today announced it has in-licensed an enzyme replacement therapy program … Continue reading

Gallery

Shire, Atlas Venture team up to mine for rare disease therapies

Dublin-based Shire’s ($SHPGY) Human Genetic Therapies unit and venture capitalists from Atlas Venture have formed a multiyear alliance to hunt for new investments in the ripe field of treating rare diseases, Cambridge, MA-based Atlas revealed. For their part in the collaboration, Atlas’ partners plan to use their years of experience in starting new biotech companies. … Continue reading

Gallery

A noninvasive diagnostic method for MPS

Biomed Opt Express. 2011 October 1; 2(10): 2741–2748. Noninvasive diagnosis of mucopolysaccharidosis via depth-resolved optical spectroscopy of the outer ear Richa Mittal, Philip H. Schwartz, David J. Brick, and Chad A. Lieber* CHOC Research Institute, CHOC Children’s Hospital, 455 South Main St., Orange, CA 92868, USA *Email: clieber@choc.org Abstract Current diagnostics for lysosomal storage disorders … Continue reading

Gallery

Stem cell transplantation in Hurler syndrome patients

Pediatr Transplant. 2011 Dec;15(8):861-869. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3046.2011.01595.x. Variable disease progression after successful stem cell transplantation: Prospective follow-up investigations in eight patients with Hurler syndrome. Grigull L, Sykora KW, Tenger A, Bertram H, Meyer-Marcotty M, Hartmann H, Bültmann E, Beilken A, Zivicnjak M, Mynarek M, Osthaus AW, Schilke R, Kollewe K, Lücke T. Department of Paediatric IV … Continue reading

Gallery

Shire and biOasis to collaborate on method to deliver enzyme to the brain

This gallery contains 2 photos.

Shire HGT and biOasis Technologies, a Canadian-based biopharmaceutical company, have entered into an agreement to collaborate on the use of Transcend, an anti_amyloid Beta Antibody, to the brain. Continue reading

Gallery

Clinical trial information for Lysogene gene therapy trial of Sanfilippo A

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Here is the official information from the NIH Clinical Trials website on the French SAF-301 gene therapy trial. I still have not heard any information on the first children who received the injections. The NIH website says the study is currently recruiting participants, but I do not believe that is the case. The four patients … Continue reading

Oxyrane Raises $26.5M to Take Lead Enzyme Replacement Therapy Through Phase I/II


GenEngNews: UK-based Oxyrane initiates ERT therapy for Pompe Disease

Enzyme replacement therapies (ERT) firm Oxyrane raised $26.5 million in a series D round of financing. Participants in the fundraising round included Forbion Capital Partners, Morningside Groups, and existing investor New Science Ventures. Oxyrane said it will use the funds to progress its lead candidate through the completion of preclinical development to the end of Phase I/II trials, and also to continue preclinical development of other ERTs. Pompe disease is a potentially fatal lysosomal storage disease caused by alpha-glucosidase enzyme deficiency, which leads to glycogen accumulation and nerve cell damage.

U.K.-based Oxyrane is exploiting a Yarrowia lipolytica yeast-based glycoengineering platform to develop novel and biosuperior versions of ERTs for lysosomal storage diseases. The firm claims that in comparison with current commercial processes, its yeast platform enables the production of human lysosomal enzymes with 3–15 times the amount of mannose 6-phosphate, the targeting sugar that facilitates effective enzyme uptake and localization.

This increase in the levels of targeting results in an over 20-fold improvement in cellular uptake without altering the naturally occurring protein enzyme, Oxyrane says. The firm has already been carrying out 1,000 liter production using a simple batch process, and believes it can scale up manufacturing to 100,000 liters.

Gallery

Geneva, Switzerland International MPS Conference, Dec 8-10, 2011

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Geneva International Conference Center, December 8-10: 2011 The Sanfilippo Foundation Switzerland wishes you to join them on December 8-10, 2011 for an international meeting focusing on innovative research to treat MPS. We aim to unite researchers in academia and industry together with medical professionals and families living with MPS in the beautiful global city of … Continue reading