Vision Care Group CEO Masayo Takahashi led the world's first clinical study of a retinal cell transplant derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells) in 2014 when she led the Laboratory for Retinal Regeneration at Japan’s Riken Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research. In 2019, she founded Vision Care and subsequently founded two subsidiary companies dedicated to developing cell and gene therapies.
The hearing has returned for the first person who has received gene therapy for treating genetic hearing loss in the U.S. Initial results from Akouos Inc.’s phase I/II study showed that within 30 days of receiving AK-OTOF-101, pharmacologic hearing was restored to an 11-year-old who had profound hearing loss from birth.
Kriya Therapeutics Inc.’s unveiling of its new gene therapy program for thyroid eye disease (TED), KRIYA-586, added yet another player to the burgeoning space, where a handful of developers have reached the phase III stage.
Putting into jeopardy what was on track to be the first approved therapy in Europe for geographic atrophy (GA), an advanced form of age-related macular degeneration that causes blindness, Apellis Pharmaceuticals Inc. learned of a negative trend vote by the EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) on its MAA for intravitreal pegcetacoplan.
Positive top-line data from Eyepoint Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s phase II study of EYP-1901 and the selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor vorolanib for treating wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is challenging Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s recently approved Eylea (aflibercept).
As expected, Aldeyra Therapeutics Inc. received a complete response letter (CRL) from the U.S. FDA regarding its NDA for reproxalap in dry eye disease, with the agency requiring “at least one” additional study to prove efficacy of the reactive aldehyde species, or RASP, modulator.
Oxurion NV, which had spent much of 2023 scraping together funding in hopes of a positive readout for its bicyclic peptide, THR-149, in diabetic macular edema (DME), now faces a bankruptcy filing after the drug failed to best established anti-VEGF therapy aflibercept (Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.) in improving vision in part B of the phase II Kalahari study.
Lianbio Co. Ltd. announced mixed phase III top-line results on Oct. 30 for its in-licensed Demodex blepharitis treatment called TP-03, with the U.S. FDA-approved eyedrop hitting just one co-primary endpoint in the Libra trial on Chinese patients.
Investors awaiting the announcement of a partnering deal for RASP modulator reproxalap ahead of the drug’s Nov. 23 PDUFA date were in for a rude awakening, as Aldeyra Therapeutics Inc. disclosed that the U.S. FDA had raised issues with the NDA, putting its imminent approval in dry eye disease in doubt. The update, disclosed in an SEC filing, sent shares (NASDAQ:ALDX) sinking 66%, or $3.60, to close Oct. 16 at $1.83.
The NDA for the formerly named Nyxol is now an open and shut case for Ocuphire Pharma Inc. and Viatris Inc. The U.S. FDA has approved Ryzumvi (phentolamine ophthalmic solution) for treating pharmacologically induced mydriasis, better known as dilating the pupil. Ryzumvi, a small-molecule eye drop, reduces the pupil’s diameter after it is dilated with adrenergic agonists such as phenylephrine or parasympatholytic agents such as tropicamide. The treatment reduces pupil size by acting on the iris dilator muscle.