Innovations in oncology explode as new treatments gain approval
Author: Michelle Fay Cortez and Caroline Chen
Last week was historic in the fight against cancer. Novartis got approval for the first treatment in a revolutionary new class of drugs, shortly after Gilead Sciences spent $11.9bn on a biotech company working in the field.
Neither can rest on their laurels. Research in the field is moving so fast that today’s breakthroughs can easily become tomorrow’s has-beens.
“I can’t think of any other therapies in oncology that have seen such rapid development,” said Rachel Webster, senior director of oncology at Decision Resources Group, a healthcare research and consulting firm in London. “In the coming months and years, with the new therapies that are brought to the market, the best will be the ones that win, not necessarily the first.” The novel cell therapies that reprogramme the body’s own immune system to attack tumours are just now coming of age, but their developers are already bracing for challengers. Unlike many traditional drugs, being first isn’t enough. Rival products could eliminate the laborious, expensive process needed to make each treatment from scratch.
And equipment manufacturers are developing technology to let hospitals and researchers produce the therapies called chimeric antigen receptors T-cell (CAR-T) themselves, side-stepping the drug companies’ laboratories.
“CAR-T therapy is in open water, vastly uncharted,” said Jay Bradner, president of Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, which is leading cell-therapy development at the Swiss drug maker. “We have to make bold bets on where we can make the biggest impact.” Many competitors Part of the reason why the first CAR-T products will be so vulnerable to newcomers comes from the complex, boutique process behind the treatments. Unlike mass-produced pills, the one-time treatments are tailored for each patient through an intricate, weeks-long process that involves extracting infection-fighting cells from blood; sending them to a centralised manufacturing plant to get reprogrammed; and shipping them back to be re-infused into the patient at medical centres.
Competition will come from a wide array of innovations that could simplify the process: from ready-to-use vials of donated cells that could be stored in hospitals, to equipment the size of a large espresso machine that could create CAR-T therapies on-site. Companies developing technologies that could disrupt the CAR-T model range from biotech startups to giants like Johnson & Johnson and General Electric’s healthcare unit.
Among the most promising products on the horizon are off-the-shelf versions of CAR-T. The off-the-shelf versions use infection-fighting T-cells from healthy donors, rather than the patient’s own, meaning they could be made in large batches and be readily available. The current leader, Cellectis, hopes to have a product in the next two to three years, and companies including J&J are looking into such therapies, known as allogeneic transplants.
‘The way to go’ Cellectis’s product is licensed to Pfizer and privately held Servier Laboratories from France. The companies have presented data on their first seven patients, including two patients dubbed the “London babies” who responded to treatment under a compassionate use programme.
“You can give these immediately to the patients, without having to wait for manufacturing,” said Andre Choulika, chief executive officer and co-founder of Cellectis. “This is the way to go.” Novartis is also experimenting with allogeneic therapies, and Kite Pharma, the California company being acquired by Gilead for $11.9bn, is watching the space. Gilead CEO John Milligan said Kite had what he called a “pathway” to allogeneic, but pointed to the risks inherent to grafts, including infections carried by donors and rejection.
‘Crying out’ for efficiency
Also emerging are manufacturing advances that would allow hospitals and researchers to produce CAR-T therapies themselves, bypassing drugmakers. Existing technology requires specialised clinicians and scientists to re-engineer infection-fighting cells, a costly, complex process. That won’t be sustainable as the drugs get approved for more types of cancer and they’re needed in far greater quantities, said Ger Brophy, GM of GE Healthcare’s cell therapy business.
“We have to make sure hospitals globally have access so the potential of the therapy can be realised,” Brophy said. “This is a space that’s crying out for operational efficiency.” Then there are innovators like Miltenyi Biotec, a German maker an all-in-one system about the size of an espresso machine that can handle every step of the CAR-T manufacturing process. Researchers hang a bag of cells above the machine — like a hanging IV bags in the hospital — which takes about two weeks to genetically alter them.
Cancer patients in the US and Europe have received experimental therapies made with the product, which costs about $185,000.
“Our vision is to decentralise the manufacturing, so that the cells don’t have to be shipped all around the world and can be made close to where the patients are,” said Andrew Kaiser, R&D manager of immunotherapy and gene engineering at Miltenyi. “The idea for us is to enable people to focus much more on the treatment and medical care and worry less about the hassle of the manufacturing.” Just the beginning Fifteen years after researchers began to make strides in the field, the future of the treatments is still being decided, said Bruce Levine, who helped develop CAR-Ts and is a professor of cancer gene therapy at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine.
“What I see is convergence among different fields, in the robotics and automation industries, that is filtering into biotechnology and cell processing and gene therapy,” said Levine, who pioneered the manufacturing of CAR-T cells. “The trajectory is clearly up.”
Source: Business Day