Stem cells have potent potential for diabetes treatment
medicalxpress - Humans have around 30 trillion cells in our adult bodies. Amazingly, each of these cells came from a handful of about 100 stem cells in the earliest days of development. The ability of these embryonic stem cells to turn into any cell type makes them pluri…
AI Summary: Researchers report stem cell–based approaches can replenish insulin‑producing cells and restore glycemic control in diabetes models, offering a potential path beyond daily insulin injections. Early findings suggest significant therapeutic promise, but scientists stress that safety, durability, and immune‑rejection hurdles must be cleared before these techniques graduate from experimental hope to standard care.
Biogen, Denali to drop drug in non-genetic Parkinson’s after mid-stage study flop
Ayisha Sharma / endpoints - Biogen and Denali Therapeutics’ LRRK2 inhibitor has flunked a Phase 2b trial in early Parkinson’s disease, leading the companies to drop the program in certain patients. The small-molecule drug, known as BIIB122, missed the study’s ...
AI Summary: After disappointing mid‑stage results, developers have stopped advancement of a candidate Parkinson’s therapy for non‑genetic forms of the disease. The setback underscores the challenges of translating promising mechanisms into clinical benefit and will force sponsors to reassess pipelines and patient selection strategies.
FDA grants Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca’s Datroway a key breast cancer approval
Lei Lei Wu / endpoints - The FDA has approved the TROP2-directed antibody-drug conjugate Datroway as a first-line option for triple-negative breast cancer, giving Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca a leg up over their competitor Gilead. The approval marks Datroway’s third, after ...
AI Summary: Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca’s breast cancer therapy Datroway has cleared key regulatory hurdles, winning FDA approval and earning backing from European regulators. The approvals validate pivotal trial results and pave the way for clinical adoption in the indicated patient population, prompting clinicians to prepare for integration into treatment pathways and health systems to weigh formulary and access decisions.
- Clinicians weigh Datroway’s role in TNBC care (3)
- FDA win and market stakes for Datroway (3)
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Clinicians weigh Datroway’s role in TNBC care
FDA win and market stakes for Datroway
All Other Stories
BioMarin's rare disease therapy shows no clinical benefit in Phase 3 test
Reynald Castaneda / endpoints - BioMarin’s enzyme replacement therapy for a rare genetic disorder called ENPP1 deficiency delivered mixed results in a late-stage study. Patients with the condition don't produce enough of the ENPP1 enzyme, which generates plasma inorganic pyrophosphate .…
AI Summary: BioMarin reported a Phase 3 trial that failed to show clinical benefit for a rare‑disease therapy, undermining prior optimism and clouding the drug’s development pathway. The mixed late‑stage results force a strategic reassessment, cooling investor expectations and leaving researchers and patients waiting for next steps or alternative approaches.