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Daily Newsletter

22 September 2023

Daily Newsletter

22 September 2023

Yale and Transcend wins US DoD grant for PTSD therapy

The Department of Defense grant is to study methylone for the rapid and long-lasting treatment of PTSD.

Phalguni Deswal September 22 2023

The US Department of Defense has awarded a collaborative grant to Transcend Therapeutics and Yale University (US).

The grant is to fund the preclinical research of Transcend’s lead candidate, methylone for treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The funding builds on Yale University’s $1m Department of Defense (DoD) grant to study the mechanism of action of methylone and midomafetamine (MDMA) in PTSD.

Methylone (TSND-201) is a rapid-acting neuroplastogen (a biological substrate not a therapeutic).

Transcend is conducting a placebo-controlled Phase I/II trial (NCT05741710) in the UK to evaluate the safety and efficacy of methylone in treating patients with severe PTSD.

Part A of the study was an open-label study and was expected to enrol up to 15 participants with PTSD. Top-line data from this part is expected by the end of this year. Part B of the trial will be a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study enrolling up to 64 patients.

Transcend’s co-founder and medical adviser for the US Department of Veterans Affairs National Center for PTSD stated: “There is a tremendous demand, especially among veterans, for new and effective treatments for PTSD."

Multiple PTSD treatments currently in development include Halucenex’s synthetic psilocybin, which showed a 40% reduction in PTSD symptoms in the Phase II trial. Bionomics is expected to announce the Phase IIb trial (NCT04951076) results for BNC210 in Q3 2023. BNC210 is a negative allosteric modulator of the α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and has received a fast track designation from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating PTSD.

The US DoD has also sponsored a PTSD Phase II trial (NCT05422612) for the combination therapy of Idorsia Pharmaceuticals’ Quviviq (daridorexant), fluoxetine and vilazodone hydrochloride. 

Multiple Myeloma (MM) pipeline dominated by CAR-T cells

The success of CAR-Ts in MM has fueled R&D investment into this class of therapy, with more CAR-Ts in development than all other cell and gene therapy classes combined. The approval of the autologous CAR-T cell therapies Abecma and Carvykti sees the CAR-T pipeline mostly constituted of autologous drugs. However, there are also multiple allogeneic CAR-Ts in the pipeline, with these therapies having an “off-the-shelf” advantage over autologous therapies.

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