The Bio Report

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 250:55:10
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Sinopsis

The Bio Report podcast, hosted by veteran journalist Daniel Levine, focuses on the intersection of biotechnology with business, science, and policy.

Episodios

  • The Case for Chasing Unpopular Indications

    28/07/2016 Duración: 28min

    Neglected diseases and drugs to counter addiction represent unmet medical needs, but they have been areas that pharmaceutical companies have been reluctant to pursue. Savant HWP is in clinical development on an experimental drug that targets both of these indications. We spoke to Stephen Hurst, CEO of Savant HWP about the company’s strategy, the unique compound that can address two seemingly unrealated indications, and the role priority review vouchers can play in providing drug developers with incentives to pursue indications that might otherwise be ignored.

  • Improving Drug Development through Better Use of Biomarkers

    21/07/2016 Duración: 23min

    The use of biomarkers has long held the promise accelerating drug development and producing safer and more targeted drugs to meet the needs of patients. The explosion of genetic, proteomic, and metabolomic data, as well as the emergence of the human microbiome, is rapidly growing the world of biomarkers, but with that comes challenges for researchers and drug developers about knowing what’s available and how well validated these biomarkers may be. We spoke to John Audette, president and co-founder of Amplion, about the company’s database, which seeks to make biomarker information accessible to researchers, the role biomarkers can play in improving the drug development process, and how their increased use can bring about a long anticipated era of precision medicine.

  • Measuring the Value of Incubators and Accelerators

    14/07/2016 Duración: 23min

    Incubators and accelerators have been proliferating in California, but little has been done to track their activities and analyze their performance. The California Business Incubation Alliance recently released a study of the performance of incubators and accelerators in California, the contribution they make to the state’s economy, and whether they deliver value to the entrepreneurs that use them. We spoke to Matt Gardner, CEO of the California Technology Council and lead author of the report, about its findings, why gathering data about incubators and accelerators is so challenging, and why the findings include a word of caution to entrepreneurs. As a matter of full disclosure, Matt is a friend, client, and partner and I served as an editor on this report.

  • Enlisting New and Old Tools to Combat Antibiotic Resistance

    07/07/2016 Duración: 26min

    The growing problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and the evolution of next-generation sequencing technology is giving rise to new approaches to combat what’s become a serious global health threat. Epibiome, which describes itself as a precision microbiome engineering company, is working to develop cocktails of bacteriophages to use in animal and human health. We spoke to Nick Conley, CEO of Epibiome, about the urgent need for new therapeutics, the renewed interest in phages, and Epibiome’s unique approach to address the problem.

  • Advancing Cancer Care with New Diagnostic Tools

    30/06/2016 Duración: 18min

    The ability to find and tumor cells and DNA fragments shed by tumors circulating in the blood has given rise to liquid biopsies. This emerging area of diagnostics promises to improve cancer care, better monitor patient response to a therapy, personalize care, and provide earlier evidence of recurrence. We spoke to Andre de Fusco, CEO of Cynvenio, about the company’s liquid biopsy rare cell isolation platform, and its implications for changing how cancer patients

  • A Biotech Reinvents Itself and How to Price Drugs

    23/06/2016 Duración: 20min

    KaloBios, a biotech best known for a series of disastrous events including failed clinical trials, a bankruptcy filing, lawsuits, and the arrest of its CEO, is being reborn. In the process, it may provide a valuable contribution to the ongoing discussion over drug pricing. In April, the development-stage company unveiled a pricing plan based on transparency, affordability, and reasonable profit. We spoke to Cameron Durrant, CEO of KaloBios, about his efforts to clean up the mess he inherited, turnaround the fortunes of the company, and introduce an innovate pricing model that could reshape the way industry thinks about pricing its products.

  • Using Technology to Modernize Preclinical Development

    16/06/2016 Duración: 19min

    Despite a rapid advance of technology there’s been little change in the preclinical drug development process. Vium is hoping to change that by using sensors, automation, and bioinformatics to change the way data is gathered in the preclinical process to fuel better and faster decisions about the potential value of an experimental drug. We spoke to Tim Robertson, co-founder and CEO of Vium and Joe Betts-Lacroix, co-founder and CTO of Vium, about the company, how its hoping to change the preclinical drug development process, and why that’s essential.

  • Can the Biotech Industry Stay on Track through Innovative Pricing

    08/06/2016 Duración: 21min

    The biotechnology industry continued to post record numbers, attract significant investment, and won approval for a solid number of new drugs in 2015. Nevertheless, EY in its new Beyond Borders report warns that there’s a deceleration within the industry that points to threats that could undermine the robust growth it has enjoyed. We spoke to Glen Giovannetti, EY Global Biotechnology Leader, about the new report, the need for the industry to innovate pricing models for new drugs, and why as companies seeks to demonstrate the value of a product they will need to consider the unique perspective of each payer.

  • Wall Street Turns Its Eyes to ASCO

    02/06/2016 Duración: 18min

    Wall Street’s attention will turn to Chicago as the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology gets underway June 3 to June 7. Though this is a scientific conference, it is one closely watched by investors, who have been pouring through the abstracts that have been available and keeping an eye open for late-breakers that could move stocks. We spoke to Jon Gardner, deputy news editor for EP Vantage, about the ASCO meeting, what the early abstracts say, and who will likely be making headlines at this year’s meeting.

  • Understanding the Disease It Never Was on House

    26/05/2016 Duración: 19min

    Lupus is an often misunderstood and misdiagnosed autoimmune disease. While some 1.5 million people—mostly women—have lupus, it can take years for someone with the disease to get a correct diagnosis. We spoke to Susan Manzi, medical director of the Lupus Foundation of America and Co-founder and director of the Lupus Center of Excellence at Allegheny Health Network, about the disease, why there are so few treatments available today, and why she holds out hope for the pipeline of new therapies moving through the clinic.

  • Why the State of Innovation Is Encouraging

    19/05/2016 Duración: 37min

    Global innovation activity experienced broad gains across industry sectors last year, according to Thompson Reuters newly released 2016 State of Innovation report. We spoke to Anthony Trippe, senior patent analyst for Thomson Reuters about the report, its upbeat outlook, and what it says about the direction of innovation in the biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and medical device sectors.

  • Can Market Forces Fix Drug Pricing

    12/05/2016 Duración: 16min

    The Campaign for Sustainable Rx Pricing, a coalition of healthcare stakeholders, thinks that the rising cost of prescription drugs can be addressed through a series of market-based solutions that will strike a balance between preserving innovation and ensuring affordability. Its recently released plan outlines steps to increase transparency, competition, and value. We spoke to John Rother, executive director of the Campaign for Sustainable Rx Pricing, about the organization, its focus on market-based solutions, and what it will take to make them a reality.

  • Digital Health Device Seeks to Push Beyond Cannabis to Test Food, Air, and Water

    05/05/2016 Duración: 21min

    The emergence of smartphones at the center of a growing universe of digital health devices is giving rise to new ways to monitor and measure our bodies in real time. MyDx, one of the latest entrants into this area, is working to enable consumers to test the food they eat, the water they drink, and the air they breathe to ensure they’re safe. Its first offering allows cannabis users to analyze samples for THC content, the presence of pesticides, and their potential effects on users. We spoke to Daniel Yazbeck, chairman and CEO of MyDx, about his handheld analyzer, how it works, and how he expects it to both enable and be fueled by changing consumer behavior in the emerging world of the quantified self.

  • Why the Cancer Moonshot Offers a Chance to Rethink Funding Priorities

    28/04/2016 Duración: 19min

    The Obama Adminstration’s Cancer Moonshot initiative is a boost to cancer researchers, but Bruce Zetter says in order for it be as effective as possible, it must not repeat the same funding priorities of the past and instead should support innovative projects and research against the deadliest cancers. In a recent commentary in Politico, Zetter, a professor of cancer biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital, notes that researchers follow the money and that the cancers with which we have made the least progress still seem to get the least amount of funding. We spoke to Zetter about his commentary, the opportunities being created by the Cancer Moonshot, and how he thinks cancer funding needs to change.

  • Medtronic Advances Toward an Artificial Pancreas

    21/04/2016 Duración: 22min

    For people with type I diabetes, the day-to-day management of the disease can be a full-time job involving the monitoring blood glucose levels and injection of insulin. The medical device giant Medtronic has been working toward the development of what it’s called an artificial pancreas, a steady improvement of pump and sensor technology to free type I diabetes patients and allow them to think less about the management of their disease. We spoke to Fran Kaufman, chief medical officer of Medtronic Diabetes, about the progress the company has made, its newest technology that is moving towards the market, and how close it is to realizing its vision of an artificial pancreas.

  • Using Real-Time Data to Detect HIV Outbreaks

    14/04/2016 Duración: 19min

    By using data from routine testing about the genetic evolution of the HIV /AIDS virus in the Canadian province of British Columbia, researchers have shown they are able to identify emerging outbreaks of the disease in near real-time and intervene to control its spread. The first-of-its-kind system is the focus of a study in an April edition of The Lancet HIV. We spoke to Art Poon, Associate Research Scientist for the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and lead author of the study, about the monitoring system, the impact it has had, and whether such an approach is transferable to other regions and other disease outbreaks.

  • Why Pharma Needs to Forge New Drug Pricing Models

    07/04/2016 Duración: 28min

    As pricing pressure grow on the pharmaceutical industry, a recent article in Invivo argues that drugmakers must look to a variety of new pricing models built around collaborations with payers and providers. Such an approach, the authors argue, would minimize conflicts between stakeholders, close the information gap about the real-world value of new drugs, and allow for a more evidence-based approach to pricing. We spoke to Susan Garfield, a principal in EY's Life Sciences Advisory Services practice and co-author of the Invivo article, about the need for new approaches to pricing, why the existing unit price approach is too one-dimensional, and what’s at stake for the industry if it fails to innovate new models.

  • Gensight Targets Gene Therapy on Diseases that Blind

    31/03/2016 Duración: 22min

    The France-based biotech Gensight Biologics is developing gene therapy treatments for rare, mitochondrial, and neurodegenerative diseases of the eye. Its lead therapeutic candidate is in late-stage trials for Leber’s Hereditary optic neurophathy, a sudden condition that afflicts young adults and leaves almost all of them blind. We spoke to Gensight’s CEO Bernard Gilly about the company, the challenges and promises of gene therapy, and why eye disease is a particularly attractive target for this emerging area of treatment.

  • A Vial Problem: How We Waste $3 Billion of Cancer Drugs a Year

    24/03/2016 Duración: 17min

    Nearly $3 billion a year is wasted on cancer drugs because of the way they are packaged, according to a study in BMJ. These expensive drugs that are injected or infused come in fixed size vials and patients often require less drug than what is sold as a single dose. Because of restrictions on the ability to use leftover drug, the result is that it is usually thrown out. Nevertheless, drugmakers have little incentive to do things differently because the waste enhances their profitability. We spoke to Leonard Saltz, an oncologist with Sloan Kettering Memorial Cancer Center and coauthor of the study, about the findings, why Europe doesn’t have the same problem, and what can be done to stop the waste.

  • The Havoc-Wreaking Zombies Lurking in Life Sciences Boardrooms

    17/03/2016 Duración: 19min

    The walking dead live, but it's value, not brains, they are eating. So-called zombie funds, life sciences venture capital funds that are fully invested and unable to raise new money, still maintain their board seats. But Outcome Capital’s Managing Directors Oded Ben-Joseph and Arnie Freeman say their divergent interest from their fellow board members often lead to disputes that can end the life of promising technologies and lead to acquisitions that leave much value on the table. We spoke to Ben-Joseph and Freeman about the boardroom dynamics were zombies lurk, the consequence of this board misalignment, and how acquirers may seek to leverage the situation

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