Common metabolic enzyme could predict cancer immunotherapy benefits—and help more patients respond
medicalxpress - Immunotherapies have transformed cancer treatment by helping the immune system recognize and attack tumors. They work for only about 20% of patients, though, and doctors still struggle to predict who will benefit.
AI Summary: New research identifies a common metabolic enzyme as a potential biomarker predicting benefit from cancer immunotherapy, and investigators propose that controlling intracellular metabolite routing could enhance responses. Together, these findings suggest metabolic pathways are both useful predictors and actionable targets to convert non‑responders into responders.
- Metabolic signals predict and boost immunotherapy responses (5)
- Other related research and expert commentary (8)
- Scaling CAR‑T: access, effects, and biomarker collaborations (3)
- Unmasking tumors: epigenetic and immune reprogramming strategies (4)
- All Other Stories
Metabolic signals predict and boost immunotherapy responses
Other related research and expert commentary
Scaling CAR‑T: access, effects, and biomarker collaborations
Unmasking tumors: epigenetic and immune reprogramming strategies
All Other Stories
Rabi Hanna: First-in-Human CRISPR/Cas12a Therapy in Sickle Cell Disease
oncodaily - Rabi Hanna, Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Program Director, and Chairman at the Department of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology and BMT at Cleveland Clinic, shared a post on LinkedIn: “I am excited […]
AI Summary: A first‑in‑human CRISPR/Cas12a therapy for sickle cell disease has treated initial patients, building on preclinical gene‑editing successes that reversed severe disease in models. The advance underscores rapid translation from lab to clinic and renews hope for durable cures—while reminding everyone that the safety and long‑term durability questions remain firmly on the table.
Bowelbabe Fund celebrates raising £20m by announcing the Bowelbabe Vaccine
Sophie Wedekind / cancerresearchuk - The Bowelbabe Fund has raised more that £20 million and has announced the next wave of funded projects, including the Bowelbabe Vaccine.The post Bowelbabe Fund celebrates raising £20m by announcing the Bowelbabe Vaccine appeared first on Cancer Research U…
AI Summary: The Bowelbabe Fund celebrated a £20 million fundraising milestone and unveiled plans for a Bowelbabe Vaccine initiative, drawing high‑profile support. Organizers framed the cash infusion as a catalyst for prevention and research efforts, while public endorsements highlighted momentum — and the fundraising thermometer that finally stopped making them blush.
FDA identifies eight deaths tied to Amgen's Tavneos
Max Bayer / endpoints - The FDA on Tuesday flagged more than 70 cases of severe liver injury and eight deaths associated with Amgen’s autoimmune treatment Tavneos, but the company said it previously notified the agency about the risk of ...
AI Summary: The FDA has tied eight patient deaths to Amgen’s drug Tavneos, prompting heightened regulatory review and industry concern. Reports outline safety signals and agency actions as clinicians and manufacturers reassess risk‑benefit profiles, while regulators weigh labeling, monitoring or other interventions to protect patients.
Biogen to acquire Apellis for $5.6B
Elizabeth Cairns / endpoints - Biogen has made a $5.6 billion deal to acquire Apellis Pharmaceuticals, the companies announced Tuesday. The deal will allow Biogen to get hold of the kidney disease drug Empaveli and the eye disease therapy Syfovre ...
AI Summary: Biogen agreed to acquire Apellis Pharmaceuticals for $5.6 billion, a deal pitched as a strategic move to broaden Biogen’s pipeline and bolster its biopharma foothold. Analysts and company spokespeople framed the purchase as value‑accretive, even as skeptics question integration risks and the price tag in a cautious market.