Latest News
& Press Releases
Browse the latest news from BioSpace, and press releases from around the industry. Want to filter by date, keyword, and more? Search here.
TOP STORIES
A cloudy ophthalmic space got a little clearer Wednesday with the two collaborations by Visus Therapeutics and Outlook Therapeutics, now preparing for FDA approval.
Genentech and privately-held Arsenal Biosciences forged a multi-year collaboration to identify critical success circuits in T cell-based therapies for solid tumors.
Pheon Therapeutics launched with $63 million in Series A financing and a vision of ushering in the next generation of antibody-drug conjugates.
TCR2 Therapeutics announced promising Phase I data for gavo-cel in mesothelin-expression that points toward effects in multiple solid tumors, especially ovarian cancer.
The anti-amyloid approach to treating Alzheimer’s disease is seeing new life after Eisai and Biogen announced that lecanemab slowed progression of disease in a Phase III study.
Funding initiatives this week saw money flow into cancer, rare liver diseases, respiratory depression, chemotherapy-related toxicities and a cutting-edge machine learning platform.
FUJIFILM Dyosynth Biotechnologies, Taysha Gene Therapies, Veravas highlight innovation stemming from the Lone Star state. BioSpace takes a deep dive into these and other Texas innovators.
Shares of Exicure, Inc. are falling after the company announced a strategic initiative that casts doubts on its future developmental programs.
The FDA ordered Avidity Biosciences to halt clinical trial enrollment after a patient suffered a “serious adverse event” testing the company’s candidate drug for myotonic dystrophy type 1.
The FDA has granted a rolling review to CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex’s exa-cel, a potential one-time treatment for sickle cell disease and transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia.
During an R&D presentation Tuesday, Transgene executives and oncology experts highlighted promising therapeutic progress in its programs - focusing on its developmental cancer vaccines.
Colossal started the “de-extinction” of the thylacine, commonly known as the Tasmania tiger. Now with a $30 million investment, this technology is gaining more traction.