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Saturday, July 10, 2021

Biomaterial vaccines ward off broad range of bacterial infections and septic shock

 Current clinical interventions for infectious diseases are facing increasing challenges due to the ever-rising number of drug-resistant microbial infections, epidemic outbreaks of pathogenic bacteria, and the continued possibility of new biothreats that might emerge in the future. Effective vaccines could act as a bulwark to prevent many bacterial infections and some of their most severe consequences, including sepsis. According to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (DCD), "each year, at least 1.7 million adults in America develop sepsis. Nearly 270,000 Americans die as a result of sepsis [and] 1 in 3 patients who dies in a hospital has sepsis." However, for the most common bacterial pathogens that cause sepsis and many other diseases, still no vaccines are available.

Now, as reported in Nature Biomedical Engineering, a multi-disciplinary team of researchers at Harvard's Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering and John A. Paulson School for Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) developed a biomaterial-based infection vaccine (ciVAX) approach as a solution that could be broadly applied to this pervasive problem. ciVAX vaccines combine two technologies that are currently in clinical development for other applications, and that together enable the capture of immunogenic antigens from a broad spectrum of pathogens and their incorporation into immune cell-recruiting biomaterial scaffolds. Injected or implanted under the skin, ciVAX vaccines then reprogram the immune system to take action against pathogens.

"The protective powers of the vaccines that we have designed and tested so far and the immune responses they stimulated are extremely encouraging, and open up a wide range of potential vaccine applications ranging from sepsis prophylaxis to rapid measures against future pandemic threats and biothreats, as well as new solutions to some of the challenges in veterinary medicine," said corresponding author David Mooney, Ph.D, who is a Founding Core Faculty member at the Wyss Institute and leads the Institute's Immuno-Materials Platform. He also the Robert P. Pinkas Family Professor of Bioengineering at SEAS.

In their study, the researchers successfully tested ciVAX technology as a protective measure against the most common causes of sepsis, including Gram-positive S. aureus and Gram-negative E. coli strains. Highlighting the technology's potential, they found that a prophylactic ciVAX vaccine, protected all vaccinated mice against a lethal attack with an antibiotic-resistant E. coli strain, while only 9% of unvaccinated control animals survived. In a pig model of septic shock induced by a different human E. coli isolate, a ciVAX vaccine prevented the development of sepsis in all four animals, while four unvaccinated animals developed severe and sudden sepsis within 12 hours. Finally, using an approach that mimicked a ring vaccination protocol in human or animal populations, a CiVax vaccine, when loaded with pathogen-derived material isolated from animals infected with one lethal E.coli strain, was able to cross-protect animals against a different lethal E. coli strain.

"Our method captures the majority of glycoprotein (and glycolipid) antigens from the pathogens, and presents these in their native form to the immune system, giving us access to a much larger spectrum of potential antigens than vaccines consisting of single or mixtures of recombinant antigens," said co-first author and Wyss Lead Senior Staff Scientist Michael Super, Ph.D. "ciVAX vaccines against known pathogens can be fabricated and stored, but additionally, all components except the bacterial antigens can be pre-assembled from shelf-stable cGMP products. The complete vaccines can then be assembled in less than an hour once the antigens are available, which gives this technology unique advantages over other vaccine approaches when rapid responses are called for." Super conceived the ciVAX concept with co-first author Edward Doherty, who as a former Lead Senior Staff Scientist worked with Mooney on the Wyss' Immuno-Material platform on biomaterials-based vaccines for cancer applications.

Super and Wyss Founding Director Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., who also authored the study, previously developed the pathogen capture technology used in ciVAX, which is based on a native human pathogen-binding opsonin -- Mannose Binding Lectin (MBL) -- that they fused to the Fc portion of an Immunoglobulin to generate FcMBL. Recombinant FcMBL binds to more than 120 different pathogen species and toxins, including bacteria, fungi, viruses and parasites. In earlier efforts, the team applied FcMBL to multiple diagnostic problems, and the technology is currently being tested in a clinical trial by the Wyss startup BOA Biomedical as part of a new sepsis treatment.

The second technology component of ciVAX component, the biomaterials-based vaccine technology, was developed as a conceptually new type of cancer immunotherapy by Mooney and his group at the Wyss Institute and SEAS, together with clinical collaborators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Validated in a clinical trial in human cancer patients, a specifically designed cancer vaccine stimulated significant anti-tumor immune responses. Novartis is currently working to commercialize the vaccine technology for certain cancer applications, and a related biomaterials-based vaccine approach is being pursued by the Wyss startup Attivare Therapeutics, with Doherty and former Wyss researchers Benjamin Seiler and Fernanda Langellotto, Ph.D., who also co-authored this study, as founding members.

To assemble ciVAX vaccines, the team used FcMBL on magnetic beads to capture inactivated bacterial carbohydrate-containing molecules, known as Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMPs), from the pathogen of choice, and then simply mixed the complexes with particles of mesoporous silica (MPS) and immune cell-recruiting and activating factors. Under the skin, MPS forms a permeable, biodegradable scaffold that recruits dendritic cells (DCs) of the immune system, reprograms them to present fragments of the captured PAMPs, and releases them again. The DCs then migrate to nearby draining lymph nodes where they orchestrate a broad immune response against the bacterial pathogen. The team found that ciVAX vaccines rapidly enhanced the accumulation and activation of DCs at injection sites and the numbers of DCs, antibody-producing B cells, and different T cell types in draining lymph nodes, and thereby engineered effective pathogen-directed immune responses.

"Beyond the potential of reducing the risk for sepsis in and out of hospitals, our ciVAX vaccine technology has the potential to save the lives of many individuals threatened by a multitude of pathogens, in addition to potentially preventing the spread of infections in animal populations or livestock before they reach humans. It is a terrific example how Wyss researchers from different disciplines and experiences self-assemble around medical problems that urgently need to be solved to create powerful new approaches," said Ingber who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at HMS and Boston Children's Hospital, and Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard. Original written by Benjamin Boettner. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Michael Super, Edward J. Doherty, Mark J. Cartwright, Benjamin T. Seiler, Fernanda Langellotto, Nikolaos Dimitrakakis, Des A. White, Alexander G. Stafford, Mohan Karkada, Amanda R. Graveline, Caitlin L. Horgan, Kayla R. Lightbown, Frank R. Urena, Chyenne D. Yeager, Sami A. Rifai, Maxence O. Dellacherie, Aileen W. Li, Collin Leese-Thompson, Hamza Ijaz, Amanda R. Jiang, Vasanth Chandrasekhar, Justin M. Scott, Shanda L. Lightbown, Donald E. Ingber, David J. Mooney. Biomaterial vaccines capturing pathogen-associated molecular patterns protect against bacterial infections and septic shockNature Biomedical Engineering, 2021; DOI: 10.1038/s41551-021-00756-3


SARS-CoV-2 RBD-Tetanus Toxoid Conjugate Vaccine Induces Strong Neutralizing Immunity in Preclinical Studies

 Yury Valdes-Balbin*

  • Yury Valdes-Balbin
    Finlay Vaccine Institute, 200 and 21 Street, Havana 11600, Cuba
    *E-mail: yvbalbin@finlay.edu.cu
  • Darielys Santana-Mederos
  • Lauren Quintero
  • Sonsire Fernández
  • Laura Rodriguez
  • Belinda Sanchez Ramirez
  • Rocmira Perez-Nicado
  • Claudia Acosta
  • Yanira Méndez
  • Manuel G. Ricardo
  • Tays Hernandez
  • Gretchen Bergado
  • Franciscary Pi
  • Annet Valdes
  • Tania Carmenate
  • Ubel Ramirez
  • Reinaldo Oliva
  • Jean-Pierre Soubal
  • Raine Garrido
  • Felix Cardoso
  • Mario Landys
  • Humberto Gonzalez
  • Mildrey Farinas
  • Juliet Enriquez
  • Enrique Noa
  • Anamary Suarez
  • Cheng Fang
  • Luis A. Espinosa
  • Yassel Ramos
  • Luis Javier González
  • Yanet Climent
  • Gertrudis Rojas
  • Ernesto Relova-Hernández
  • Yanelys Cabrera Infante
  • Sum Lai Losada
  • Tammy Boggiano
  • Eduardo Ojito
  • Kalet León
  • Fabrizio Chiodo
  • Françoise Paquet
  • Guang-Wu Chen
  • Daniel G. Rivera
  • Dagmar Garcia-Rivera*
  • , and 
  • Vicente Verez Bencomo*



https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.1c00272

PDF: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/acschembio.1c00272

Abstract

Abstract Image

Controlling the global COVID-19 pandemic depends, among other measures, on developing preventive vaccines at an unprecedented pace. Vaccines approved for use and those in development intend to elicit neutralizing antibodies to block viral sites binding to the host’s cellular receptors. Virus infection is mediated by the spike glycoprotein trimer on the virion surface via its receptor binding domain (RBD). Antibody response to this domain is an important outcome of immunization and correlates well with viral neutralization. Here, we show that macromolecular constructs with recombinant RBD conjugated to tetanus toxoid (TT) induce a potent immune response in laboratory animals. Some advantages of immunization with RBD-TT conjugates include a predominant IgG immune response due to affinity maturation and long-term specific B-memory cells. These result demonstrate the potential of the conjugate COVID-19 vaccine candidates and enable their advance to clinical evaluation under the name SOBERANA02, paving the way for other antiviral conjugate vaccines.

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acschembio.1c00272

Are Biopharma Stocks Poised for Q2 Beats?

 The COVID-19 pandemic took its heavy toll on many industries and market sectors, and diversified biopharmaceutical companies were not among those to come out clean.

Hospitals across the country prioritized COVID-19 patients and pushed back non-vital treatments of longer lead time diagnoses, such as cancer and complex chronic diseases. Consumers did their part and kept the pockets tight as economic uncertainty loomed and unemployment hit record highs. Unsurprisingly, the quarterly performance of “non-covid” names took a hit and the market noticed – shares of big biopharmaceutical companies were some of the least impressive large-cap performers of 2020.

But all bad things must come to an end, right? We’ve just wrapped up Q2 21 and the world is very different compared to what it looked like at this time of last year. Both domestic and international economies seem to be on a good trajectory, hospitals are no longer over capacity and the public is ready to pull out their wallets, as evidenced by growing consumer confidence and spending, both of which are nearing pre-pandemic levels.

So, with the headwinds out of the way, but estimates and valuations still at cautious pandemic levels for most of biopharma names, can their Q2 Reports bring out some very pleasant surprises?

SVB Leerink analyst Geoffrey Porges most certainly believes that. In his recent update on the healthcare sector, he writes: “Diversified biopharma stocks have been languishing for much of the last year, with multiples heavily discounted compared to the market, prior history, and other healthcare sectors, based on fears of drug pricing regulation and lackluster operating results. While it’s too early to say the coast is clear on pricing risks, we believe the operating performance of the industry is likely to be much better in Q2 than in Q1.”

There’s plenty of reasoning behind his optimism. For one, COVID-10 aside, Q1 has historically been a challenging quarter for biopharmaceuticals, which under current circumstances likely led to further valuation depression. Porges goes on to point out: “Q1 results are disrupted by slowing renewals and starts for new medicines, increased gross to net discounts due to commercial co-pay contributions, patient discontinuations due to their re-started deductible contributions, increased discounts to distributors and PBMs.”

This time around, he believes the natural Q2 rebound will be coupled and greatly facilitated by beats and further raises over conservative, covid-era guidance.

“Management teams that were very cautious in their initial guidance for the year are likely to increase their guidance for the year, based on a more positive outlook in the US and selected international markets," he adds. The analyst expects that stocks will “react positively to these results, with strong double-digit EPS estimate revisions reflected in positive share price responses.”

The analyst models strong recovery in vaccines, headache medicines, skin and joint treatments as well aesthetics product and services, while anticipating a more gradual pick up in long lead times disease therapies. He also points to positive FX headwinds for US based companies, given the 9% weakness in US dollar on when compared to Q1.

Based on the above, SVB Leerink is revising their Q2 Sales Estimates across the entire large cap universe: “Our analysis suggests that most large caps in our coverage could beat consensus estimates on revenue and EPS, with strongest revenue beats indicated for REGN, ALXN, SNY, GILD, and ABBV.”

Further, they’re making upward EPS revisions across the board “all of the large-cap diversified biopharmas except GSK could beat consensus on EPS, with strongest beats indicated for REGN, SNY, VRTX, and ALXN.”

https://www.streetinsider.com/Analyst+Comments/Are+Biopharma+Stocks+Poised+for+Q2+Beats%3F/18661318.html

FTC expanding its antitrust powers under new chair

 Less than a month since her Senate confirmation, the new, young and staunchly progressive Federal Trade Commission chair Lina Khan is ready to up the pressure on unfair business practices, including at the largest pharma companies. To do that, Khan is rolling back restrictions on antitrust investigations and potentially opening the flood gates on Big Pharma M&A.


Earloer this month, Khan led a vote to approve a series of resolutions that direct agency staff to ramp up its investigations, via subpoenas or otherwise, around seven specific enforcement priorities, including pharma companies, PBMs, and hospitals. While the commission has historically required its antitrust staff to obtain the full commission’s approval to begin such investigations, the FTC will now be able to open investigations or issue subpoenas with only one commissioner’s approval, and that includes investigations into pharma companies.


“These targeted resolutions would streamline investigations that fall within these subject areas, enabling more expeditious investigatory process. This is particularly important given that we are in the midst of a massive merger boom,” Khan said in remarks at one of the first public meetings for FTC’s commissioners in decades. The FTC in March set up an international working group to more closely evaluate pharma company mergers in light of concerns around drug pricing and anticompetitive behavior.


Khan also led the withdrawal of a prior statement from the FTC from 2015, which she said will recommit the commission to its mandate to police unfair methods of competition even if they are outside the ambit of two antitrust laws, known as the Sherman or Clayton Acts. The FTC’s two Republicans opposed all of the measures passed on Thursday, and Khan’s positioning shows how the FTC will be a more partisan agency than in the past. Amazon has already sought to recuse Khan from antitrust investigations because of her past comments on the online retail giant.



One of the three Democratic commissioners, Rohit Chopra, is still awaiting Senate confirmation to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau thanks to a Biden nomination, but his departure and the FTC’s even partisan split that’s coming (before Biden nominates another FTC commissioner) will not hamper any investigations that Democrats want to open as a change made Thursday will mean Republican commissioners won’t be able to block such investigations.


And while Khan, just 32 years old, pushes ahead with the strengthening of FTC’s ability to go after bad actors, including with a rulemaking fix on Thursday, a recent Supreme Court decision hamstrung the commission’s ability to secure billions of dollars in relief for consumers in a wide variety of cases, leaving the door open for biopharma companies to quickly end certain cases involving anticompetitive practices.


“While rulemaking is no substitute for a permanent fix to our Section 13(b) authority to obtain monetary relief, trade rules can help ensure that businesses will no longer be able to take advantage of consumers and cement their market position by engaging in practices that do people real harm until we catch them and take them to court the first time,” Democratic commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter wrote in a related statement.

https://endpts.com/pharma-in-the-crosshairs-how-the-ftc-is-expanding-its-antitrust-powers-under-its-new-chair/

Aiming to rebound from blunders years ago, Celldex touts Phase Ib win, sights set on Xolair

 Following multiple high-profile missteps several years ago, the folks over at Celldex Therapeutics began charting a path to redemption that would take on Roche and Novartis’ blockbuster Xolair franchise. That path got a boost Friday with a data readout the company says positions it well against the pharma giants.


Celldex reported results from a Phase Ib study for their monoclonal antibody CDX-0159 to treat two conditions that cause severe and debilitating hives. The Hampton, NJ-based biotech said that among 19 patients who received a full dose of the antibody, 18 achieved a complete response and the 19th saw a partial response.


That stands in stark contrast to some of the response rates Celldex says patients see on Xolair, which fall around the 40% to 50% range. Those with such conditions also need to take multiple doses of Xolair, while Celldex’s data come from patients taking only one dose of CDX-0159, CEO Anthony Marucci emphasized.


“We’ve been antibody developers for a long time, both in oncology and non-oncology assets,” Marucci told Endpoints News. “Looking at this target and where we believed it worked, naturally the science took us to inflammation. That’s not to say we’ve abandoned oncology … but this target and the way we designed the molecule, to reduce infusion reactions and improve its half life, the data in our minds [are] spectacular even in the early stages.”


In the wake of the announcement, Celldex $CLDX shares were up more than 35% in post-market trading Friday evening.


The diseases in question are two forms of chronic inducible urticaria. The first, called symptomatic dermographism, makes up more than half of cases. Patients can develop severe hives in response to little stimulation on the skin, such as putting on socks. The second condition, known as “cold urticaria,” makes up 16% of cases and causes hives outbreaks when skin is exposed below certain temperatures.


Within the Phase Ib study, nine of the 19 patients had symptomatic dermographism while the other 10 suffered from cold urticaria. Eight of the nine SD patients achieved complete response, including three who had previously been treated with Xolair, and all 10 with ColdU met their complete response.


On top of the response rates, Celldex said the treatments proved highly durable. The SD patients maintained their responses at a median of 57 days, and those with ColdU maintained the disease state for a median of 77 days.


CDX-0159 works by targeting mast cells by binding the receptor tyrosine kinase KIT. Mast cells mediate inflammatory responses in the body and KIT signaling controls mast cell differentiation. As such, Celldex’s theory involves tamping down on KIT in order to deplete the mast cells in the skin.


Celldex is continuing to study the drug in other forms of urticarias, including hives triggered by sweating in warm temperatures or from exercise, as well as urticarias that result in spontaneous hive outbreaks. Both of these datasets in the ongoing Phase Ib trial are expected in the first half of 2022.


Should everything turn out hunky dory, the program would mark a sharp turnaround for a biotech that culled multiple late-stage assets from its pipeline after Phase III failures. In 2016, a cancer vaccine program flopped a glioblastoma study, and 2018 brought a Phase IIb disaster in breast cancer — a miss that resulted in Celldex laying off about 40% of its workforce.


But now Celldex is engaging in a full court press to get CDX-0159 to patients, and Marucci hopes the company can expand the program into other diseases where mast cells are implicated. Celldex isn’t saying much yet, but researchers are looking at other indications in the respiratory, allergic, ophthalmic and GI areas.


Taking a bite out of the Xolair pie is proving to be an opportunity Celldex simply can’t pass up, Marucci said. Xolair netted about $3.3 billion in sales between Roche and Novartis in 2020 and continued to see growth in 2021’s first quarter, and analysts estimate that about $1.5 billion of that total comes from the spontaneous form of the disease.

https://endpts.com/aiming-to-rebound-from-blunders-years-ago-celldex-touts-a-phase-ib-win-with-sights-set-on-xolair/

Avoid imposing new COVID-19 restrictions - G20 presidency

 Italy's economy minister Daniele Franco said virus variants were a major source of concern for the global economy but he added that the world should avoid imposing new restrictions on people's lives to combat the pandemic.

"We all agree we should avoid introducing again any restriction on the movement of citizens and the way of life of people," Franco told a news conference at the end of a meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Venice.

Italy holds the rotating presidency of the G20 until the end of the year.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/We-should-avoid-imposing-new-COVID-19-restrictions-G20-presidency--35832117/

Abbott Lays Off Around 400 Employees As COVID-19 Test Demand Evaporates

 

  • Abbott Laboratories ABT 0.41% has begun laying off hundreds of workers at its diagnostic plants a month after it slashed its earnings forecasts for the remainder of 2021 amid diminishing demand for COVID tests as vaccination picks up.
  • According to a report from the ABC television station WMTW in Portland, Abbott is letting go 400 full-time employees at its locations in Westbrook and Scarborough, focused on the production of rapid antigen tests. 
  • The Company is cutting 300 jobs at its Westbrook manufacturing facility. Another 100 workers will lose jobs at Abbott’s Scarborough plant, WMTW-TV reported.
  • The firm’s BinaxNOW COVID-19 Ag Card was a heavy driver for early testing sales.
  • COVID-19 testing sales declined to $2.2 billion in Q1 of 2021 from $2.4 billion in Q4 of 2020.
  • However, demand dried up faster than expected. The Company said in early June after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that fully vaccinated people could skip the swabs before re-entering daily life or traveling. 
  • In addition, based on the performance of vaccines from Moderna Inc MRNA 0.01%Pfizer Inc PFE 0.97%BioNTech SE BNTX 4.55%, and Johnson & Johnson JNJ 0.33%, the CDC said people could forgo testing even after being exposed to an asymptomatic person with COVID-19 in certain situations.