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The Medicine Maker / Issues / 2020 / Articles / Mar / Advanced Medicine In Brief
Manufacture Advanced Medicine

Advanced Medicine In Brief

The world’s largest cell and gene CDMO, an exciting new TCR, and the global CAR-T picture… We examine what’s going on in advanced medicine

By James Strachan 03/16/2020 0 min read Quick Read (pre 2022)

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  • Meet what some are calling the world’s largest cell and gene CDMO. The new Center for Breakthrough Medicines facility will claim 680,000 square feet of the Discovery Labs complex, based in the King of Prussia area of Pennsylvania. Through $1.2 billion of funding by MLP Ventures, the new CDMO will employ 2,000 scientists, manufacturing experts, lab technicians, and support staff. The aim? To crack the production capacity problem.
  • In a study that has received widespread media coverage, researchers used genome-wide CRISPR–Cas9 screening to uncover a TCR able to recognize and kill most human cancer types via the monomorphic MHC class I-related protein, MR1, while remaining inert to noncancerous cells. The new TCR was successful in mice and in vitro human cancer models. 
  • Citing Cancer Research Institute figures, a recent review offered insight into the global landscape of CAR-T cell therapy. As of February 2018, there were 404 CAR-Ts in the clinic, with the USA and China accounting for 80 percent of the total with 171 and 152, respectively. In terms of targets, both countries were focused on CD19 (over 40 percent), but in the USA, the second most common target of CAR-T cell clinical trials is BCMA; meanwhile, Chinese researchers are tackling CD20, CD22, and GPC3.

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About the Author(s)

James Strachan

Over the course of my Biomedical Sciences degree it dawned on me that my goal of becoming a scientist didn’t quite mesh with my lack of affinity for lab work. Thinking on my decision to pursue biology rather than English at age 15 – despite an aptitude for the latter – I realized that science writing was a way to combine what I loved with what I was good at. From there I set out to gather as much freelancing experience as I could, spending 2 years developing scientific content for International Innovation, before completing an MSc in Science Communication. After gaining invaluable experience in supporting the communications efforts of CERN and IN-PART, I joined Texere – where I am focused on producing consistently engaging, cutting-edge and innovative content for our specialist audiences around the world.

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