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S&S On Biotech

S&S On Biotech

S&S Ltd.

Conversations on the science and business of Biotechnology with Andy Smith and Cormac Sheridan. 

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31 - 3.9 The slow rise of TCR-T therapy
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  • 31 - 3.9 The slow rise of TCR-T therapy

    When the first chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy was approved in 2017, there was a general expectation that T-cell receptor T-cell (TCR-T) therapies would follow shortly afterwards and would greatly expand the range of addressable antigens. Despite considerable efforts, CAR-T therapies are still limited to haematological cancers expressing extracellular antigens, such as CD19 or B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA). Autologous TCR-T therapies can be engineered to target intrac...

    Mon, 29 Jul 2024
  • 30 - 3.8 Innovation in Myasthenia Gravis: The leap from poison arrows to targeted therapy

    In 1934, Mary Walker, a pioneering Scottish physician, successfully, albeit transiently, treated a myasthenia gravis patient with physostigmine, a traditional remedy for treating poisoning with curare. She had noticed that the signs and symptoms of myasthenia gravis resembled those caused by curare, a preparation of plant alkaloids used to arm poison arrows by some indigenous peoples in Central and South America. Her clinical observations were extraordinarily accurate. At a molecular level, c...

    Mon, 15 Jul 2024
  • 29 - 3.7 Melanoma: At the frontier of cancer immunotherapy

    Melanoma has been at the very centre of the cancer immunotherapy revolution over the past decade and a half. The CTLA-4 inhibitor Yervoy (ipilimumab), which gained approval in 2011, was the first agent to demonstrate a survival improvement in a phase 3 trial for metastatic melanoma. It was also the first immune checkpoint inhibitor to gain approval, and it kick-started a whole new era in cancer therapy, based on jamming the cancer’s immunosuppressive signals to enable patients’ T-cells to att...

    Tue, 02 Jul 2024
  • 28 - 3.6 Brain Cancer – The unkindest cancer of all?

    This is a sobering episode that traces the history of the treatment of brain cancer – principally malignant glioma, since it is the most common diagnosis in a thankfully rare oncology indication – and how, unlike many of the indications we have discussed, the treatment options have been limited. The diagnosis of brain cancer often takes too long, partly because headaches and behavioural changes divert patient referrals to other specialities before patients end up at the door of a neurosurgeon...

    Tue, 18 Jun 2024
  • 27 - 3.5 Eyes on the prize: Developing therapies for ophthalmic disease

    Ophthalmology has long been a fruitful area for biotechnology innovation. In highly prevalent conditions associated with ageing, such as age-related macular degeneration, or with chronic disease, such as diabetic macular oedema, vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitors have made important contributions to stabilizing vision over the past two decades. Incremental innovation has steadily improved efficacy while lowering the frequency of injections. And newer targets, such as components of ...

    Sun, 09 Jun 2024
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