FDA on mission to explain its animal biotech approval process – Agri-Pulse

The Food and Drug Administration, facing increased criticism of its regulatory process for gene-edited animals, is mounting a new effort to defend its policies to farmers, researchers and developers, but the industry is backing the Agriculture Department's push to take over some of FDA's oversight role.

FDA regulates as animal drugs any intentional genomic alterations in animals, achieved through gene editing or older genetic engineering technologies,a position roundly criticized by the animal ag and biotechnology industries. The subject has gained more attention recently with statements from FDA defending its oversight role as necessary both for the safety of animals and humans.

We havent announced most of them yet, but were going to have a series of meetings, said Laura Epstein, senior policy adviser in FDAs Center for Veterinary Medicine. FDAs presentations will include case studies examining hypothetical products.

One of the primary goals of the presentations will be to explain the process and FDAs regulatory intentions to farmers, an audience FDA acknowledges it has not communicated with very much, Epstein said.

As a result, theres a lot of confusion and misinformation out there about what we plan on doing, she said. We got word back that farmers seemed to think were going to require them to register them as drug manufacturers. We want to assure them thats absolutely not the case.

One meeting FDA will definitely be attending is the Large Animal Genetic Engineering Summit in Utah in June, said Heather Lombardi, director of FDAs Division of Animal Bioengineering and Cellular Therapies.

FDAs effort follows publication of a commentary in Nature Biotechnology by Steven Solomon, director of FDAs Center for Veterinary Medicine, asserting the importance of regulatory oversight of intentional genomic alterations in animals, even when the intended modification seeks to replicate a naturally occurring mutation.

Solomons piece accompanied an FDA analysis on how the agency was able to detect unintended alterations in genome-edited bulls, Solomon said in a statement on FDAs website.

The biotech and conventional animal ag industries have been pushing for years to get FDA to loosen its regulatory reins, arguing that FDAs development of disease-resistant animals, for example, has been unduly delayed.

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue made that point at USDAs Agricultural Outlook Forum last week, stating at a press conference that USDA is "in the process of working with FDA currently to help divide up the responsibilities, hopefully with an agreeable type of consensual memorandum of understanding with the agency over new breeding techniques. Perdue said FDA could handle oversight of food animal breeding, with FDA handling any other animals.

He pointed to the example of the nearly year-old agreement between USDA and FDA on cell-cultured technology, used to create meat that has been described as clean by supporters and fake by its opponents.

Under that agreement, the agencies said FDA would handle cell collection, cell banks, and cell growth and differentiation, with the Food Safety and Inspection Service overseeing the production and labeling of human food products derived from the cells of livestock and poultry.

Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue and FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn meet in Perdue's USDA's office.

Without an easier path to commercialization, new breeding techniques are going to go to Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China, or other countries, Perdue said, making the U.S. a follower rather than a leader in the new technologies.

Representatives of both USDA and FDA were reluctant to discuss the interagency communications. A USDA spokesperson said only, We are always in discussion with various FDA officials on a number of issues dealing with American agriculture. FDAsaid the agency "continues to engagewith our federal partners in the regulation of agriculture biotechnology products.

Referring to USDA and EPA, its other participants in the governments effort to modernize biotech regulations, FDA said each agency has a role to play within its existing statutory structure.

Interested in morecoverage and insights? Receive a free month of Agri-Pulse or Agri-Pulse West by clickinghere.

USDAs Flickr account shows Perdue did meet with new FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn only nine days before his appearance at Ag Outlook, along with Anna Abram, FDAs deputy commissioner for policy, legislation and international affairs, and Frank Yiannas, FDAs deputy commissioner for food policy and response.

The description on the Flickr site doesnt say what they talked about, but one longtime observer and participant in the animal biotech space said, I would be shocked if they had not discussed the issue. The meeting came two days after publication of Solomons commentary and the release of a statement from Hahn touting the potential of gene-editing technology for animals.

It is paramount, however, that as we move forward, we maintain standards of safety and effectiveness, Hahn said.

The Center for Food Safety agrees. The FDA has scientists that better understand genetic engineering of animals given that it has been working for more than 20 years on both GE animals for research purposes and drug testing, and now GE animals for food, CFS Policy Director Jaydee Hanson said.

USDA, he said, has refused to develop regulations for its review of GE animals and insects, despite having agreed to do so in 2011 after a review by its own inspector general.

Perdues suggestion of an MOU was welcome news to the biotech community. Dana OBrien, the Biotechnology Innovation Organizations executive vice president of food and agriculture, called Perdues words encouraging. In an opinion piece posted on Agri-Pulses site Feb. 12, OBrien said BIO had shown the White House how the President could move animal biotechnology oversight to USDA an approach championed by key livestock and scientific stakeholders.

Im all for it, Acceligen CEO Tad Sonstegard saidof Perdues remarks supporting a division of responsibilities. Acceligen is a subsidiary of Recombinetics, which uses gene editing to develop animals for the agriculture and biomedical markets.

I agree with what BIO said, Sonstegard said. We need to get FDA to come to the table.

Jack Bobo, a food industry consultant who is a former vice president at biotech company Intrexon, said Perdues statement may lead to things moving a little more quickly on the animal biotech front. However, he added, Its not clear to me that this is a detailed proposal.

Intrexon owns Aquabounty, developer of genetically engineered salmon that was approved by FDA in 2015 after a 20-year process the only GE animal to be approved thus far. Sold in Canada since 2017, the fish will be available commercially in the U.S. later this, year according to Aquabounty.

Their record stands for itself one approval, Sonstegard said.

But FDA wants to improve its process. It is touting its Veterinary Innovation Program, which Hahn said encourages development and research and supporting an efficient and predictable pathway to approval.

The latest developments on the animal biotech front were triggered by FDAs publication of a paper detailing its discovery of unintended alterations in the progeny of a gene-edited, hornless bull. That paper was published in Nature Biotechnology the same day as the commentary by FDAs Solomon.

The bull was developed by Recombinetics and its calves were monitored by Alison Van Eenennaam, who runs the Animal Genomics and Biotechnology Laboratory at UC-Davis.

Alison Van Eenennaam, UC-Davis

Van Eenennaam responded to the FDA paper and commentary by saying she was "disappointed that the FDA failed to mention that the genome-edited bulls and their offspring were followed for years by researchers at UC Davis and were hornless (polled) and healthy.

The unintended alteration, a plasmid, was not transmitted to half of the offspring, so in one generation there were animals with just the targeted edit, she said, then wondered why her explanation of the project, also published in Nature Biotechnologyback in October, was not referred to in FDAs analysis.

Alexis Norris, a bioinformatician in FDAs Division of Animal Bioengineering and Cellular Therapies, said there was no deliberate attempt to ignore Van Eenennaams paper. FDA submitted its paper to Nature Biotechnology before hers was released, she said. Hers was in revision when ours was submitted to Bio. It was just a timing issue.

Van Eenennaam has been critical of FDAs process. There is nothing fundamentally hazardous about genetic variation in food, and suggesting intentional alterations are equivalent to drugs will frighten consumers who might logically infer the presence of drugs in their food, she wrote on the Nature Research Bioengineering Community blog in a piece entitled Responsible Science Takes Time.

"It's just DNA, man," said Sonstegard.We eat it in every food except vegetable oil.

For more news, go to http://www.Agri-Pulse.com

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FDA on mission to explain its animal biotech approval process - Agri-Pulse

Puma Biotechnology to Participate in Panel Discussion at Citi’s Biotech Conference – Business Wire (press release)

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Puma Biotechnology, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBYI), a biopharmaceutical company, announced that Alan H. Auerbach, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, President and Founder of Puma, will participate in a panel discussion on breast cancer at 9:00 a.m. EDT on Wednesday, September 6, at Citis 12th Annual Biotech Conference in Boston.

A live webcast of the panel discussion will be available on the Companys website at http://www.pumabiotechnology.com. The discussion will be archived on the website and available for 30 days.

About Puma Biotechnology

Puma Biotechnology, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company with a focus on the development and commercialization of innovative products to enhance cancer care. The Company in-licenses the global development and commercialization rights to three drug candidates PB272 (neratinib (oral)), PB272 (neratinib (intravenous)) and PB357. NERLYNX (neratinib) is approved for commercial use by prescription in the United States as extended adjuvant therapy for early stage HER2-positive breast cancer following adjuvant trastuzumab-based therapy and is marketed as NERLYNX. Neratinib is a potent irreversible tyrosine kinase inhibitor that blocks signal transduction through the epidermal growth factor receptors, HER1, HER2 and HER4. Currently, the Company is primarily focused on the commercialization of NERLYNX and the continued development of its other advanced drug candidates directed at the treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer. The Company believes that NERLYNX has clinical application in the potential treatment of several other cancers that over-express or have a mutation in HER2.

Further information about Puma Biotechnology may be found at http://www.pumabiotechnology.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release and the webcast of the panel discussion contain forward-looking statements, including statements regarding the benefits of NERLYNX and neratinib, the Companys clinical trials and the announcement of data relative to those trials. All forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause the Companys actual results to differ materially from the anticipated results and expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and actual outcomes and results could differ materially from these statements due to a number of factors, which include, but are not limited to, the risk factors disclosed in the periodic and current reports filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time, including the Companys Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2017. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. The Company assumes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements, except as required by law.

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Puma Biotechnology to Participate in Panel Discussion at Citi's Biotech Conference - Business Wire (press release)

Plant Biology Conference | Plant Biotechnology Conference …

Past Conference Information

GlobalConference onPlant ScienceandMolecular Biology2017Report:

Magnus Grouptakes a great pride in declaring the GlobalConference on Plant Science and Molecular Biology (GPMB 2017) which was held in Valencia, Spain, during September 11-13, 2017.

Plant Science Conference 2017witnessed an amalgamation of outstanding speakers who enlightened the crowd with their knowledge and confabulated on various new-fangled topics related to the field of Plant Science and Molecular Biology. The extremely well-known conference hosted by Magnus Group was marked with the attendance of young and brilliant researchers, business delegates and talented student communities representing diverse countries around the world.

For GPMB 2017 Final Program:Click Here

The theme of the conference is Accentuate Innovations and Emerging Novel Research in Plant Sciences. The meeting captivated a vicinity of utilitarian discussions on novel subjects like Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, Plant Biotechnology, Plant Pathology: Mechanisms Of Disease, Applications In Plant Sciences And Plant Research, to mention a few. The three days event implanted a firm relation of upcoming strategies in the field of Plant Science and Molecular Biology with the scientific community. The conceptual and pertinent knowledge shared, will correspondingly foster organizational collaborations to nurture scientific accelerations.

For GPMB 2017 Gallery:Click Here

GPMB 2017Organizing Committee

Prof. Ammann Klaus, University of Bern, Switzerland

Prof. Leif Sundheim, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Norway

Prof. Cornelia Butler Flora, Kansas State University, USA

Dr. Monica Ruffini Castiglione, University of Pisa, Italy

Dr. Samir C. Debnath, St. Johns Research and Development Centre, Canada

The Organizing Committee would like to thank the moderatorsDr. Victoria A Piunova, IBM Almaden Research Center, United States, Dr. Selcuk Aslan, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Germany and Dr. Susan Yvonne Jaconis, CSIRO Agriculture, Australia for their contributions which ensued in smooth functioning of the conference.

The highlights of the conference were the keynote forum by prominent scientists,Prof. Klaus Ammann, University of Bern, Switzerland; Prof. Cornelia Butler Flora, Kansas State University, USA; Dr. Monica Ruffini Castiglione, University of Pisa, Italy; Prof. Leif Sundheim, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Norway; Dr. Samir C. Debnath, St. Johns Research and Development Centre, Canada; Dr. Goutam Gupta, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA; Dr. Elena Rakosy-Tican, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania; Dr. Ivica Djalovic, Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, Serbia; gave their fruitful contributions in the form of very informative presentations and made the conference a top notch one.

Magnus Groupis privileged to thank the Organizing Committee Members, Keynote speakers, Session chairs on transcribing the sessions, in a varied and variegate manner to make this conference a desirable artifact.

Speakers of GPMB 2017

Day 1: Speakers

Antonova Galina Feodosievna, VN Sukachev Institute of Forest Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federation

Cezary Piotr Sempruch, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Poland

Ivan Paponov, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Norway

Malgorzata Adamiec, Adam Mickiewicz University, Institute of Experimental Biology, Poland

Michael Handford, Universidad de Chile, Chile

Natalia Repkina, Institute of Biology Karelian Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia

Elide Formentin, University of Padova, Italy

Magdalena Opalinska, University of Wroclaw, Poland

Moses Kwame Aidoo, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Yuke He, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, China

Sameera Omar Bafeel, King Abdulaziz University, Science college, Saudi Arabia

Joerg Fettke, University of Potsdam, Germany

Siti Nor Akmar Abdullah, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia

Alberto Guillen Bas, University of Valencia, Spain

Carmen Quinonero Lopez, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Laura Fattorini, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

Meltem Bayraktar, Ahi Evran University, Turkey

Victoria Cristea, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Selcuk Aslan, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Germany

Sofia Kourmpetli, Cranfield Soil and AgriFoodInstitute, UK

Seanna Hewitt, Washington State University, USA

Javier Terol Alcayde, Centro de Genomica, IVIA , Spain

Susan Yvonne Jaconis, CSIRO Agriculture, Australia

Magdalena Szechynska-Hebda, Institute of Plant Physiology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Australia

Acga Cheng, University of Malaya, Malaysia

Henrik Toft Simonsen, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

Yeyun Xin, China National Hybrid Rice Research and Development Center, China

Sandhya Mehrotra, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, India

Gustavo Souza, Federal University of Pernambuco Bioscience Center, Brazil

Rachel Swee-Suak Ko, Academia Sinica, ABRC/BCST, Taiwan, Province of China

Yougasphree Naidoo, School of Life Sciences, South africa

Julian Witjaksono, The Assessment Institute for Agricultural Technology of Souhteast Sulawesi, Indonesia

Day-1 Posters

Lingling Shang, The Faculty of Agriculture and Food Sciences, Laval University, Canada

Nahaa Miqad Alotaibi, Swansea University, United Kingdom

Layla Al Hijab, West of England Universtiy, United Kingdom

Tomasz Goral, Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute NRI, Poland

Mikhail Oliveira Leastro, Instituto Biologico de Sao Paulo, Brazil

Michael Handford, Universidad de Chile, Chile

Polzella Antonella, University of Molise, Italy

Wisniewska Halina, Institute of Plant Genetics Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

Costel Sarbu, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Benjamin Dubois, Walloon Agricultural Research Center (CRA-W), Belgium

Sandra Cichorz, Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute - NRI, Poland

Elzbieta Kochanska-Czembor, Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute, Poland

Woo Taek Kim, Yonsei University, Republic of Korea

Prashanth Tamizhselvan, Masaryk University, CEITEC MU, Czech Republic

Yun Hee Kim, Gyeongsang National University, Republic of Korea

Nada Bezic, University of Split, Croatia

Havrlentova Michaela, Research Institute for Plant Productio, Slovakia

Seok Keun Cho, Yonsei University, Republic of Korea

Prasanna Angel Deva, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Kebede Mesfin Haile, Kangwon National University, Korea

Lidia Kowalska, Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute, Poland

Motyleva Svetlana Mikhailivna, FSBSI ARHIBAN, Russian Federation

Paulina Drozdz, Forest Research Institute, Poland

Chul Han An, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Republic of Korea

Jurga Jankauskiene, Nature Research Centre, Lithuania

Day 2: Speakers

Victoria A Piunova, IBM Almaden Research Center, United States

Miroslava Cuperlovic-Culf, National Research Council Canada, Canada

Paola Leonetti, IPSP-CNR, Italy

Giulia Chitarrini, Fondazione Edmund Mach, Italy

Antonio Domenech-Carbo, University of Valencia, Spain

Nurshafika Mohd Sakeh, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia

Adel Saleh Hussein Al-Abed, National Center for Agricultural Research and Extension, Jordan

Manju Sharma, Amity Institute of Biotechnology, India

Sergio Molinari, IPSP-CNR, Italy

Jaroslava Ovesna, Crop Research institute, czech Rpublic

John B. Carrigan, RebelBio SOSV, Ireland

Bardouki Haido, VIORYL S.A., Greece

Natalia Tomas Marques, Universidade do Algarve, Portugal

Azza M. Salama, Cairo University, Egypt

Chang-Yoon JI, University of Science & Technology, Korea

Kgabo Martha Pofu, Agricultural Research Council, South Africa

Siegfried Zerche, Leibniz-Institute of Vegetable- & Ornamental Crops, Germany

Piergiorgio Stevanato, University of Padova, Italy

Seong Wook Yang, Yonsei University, Republic of Korea

Alexander Hahn, Max Planck Institute for Biophysic, Germany

Klaus Harter, University of Tuebingen, Center for Plant Molecular Biology, Germany

Laigeng Li, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, China

Thomas C Mueller, University of Tennessee, United States

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Plant Biology Conference | Plant Biotechnology Conference ...

B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network AG Just Released Its Full-Year Results And Analysts Are Updating Their Estimates – Yahoo…

B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network AG (ETR:BNN) just released its yearly report and things are looking bullish. Results overall were solid, with revenues arriving 9.7% better than analyst forecasts at 40m. Higher revenues also resulted in substantially lower statutory losses which, at 0.58 per share, were 9.7% smaller than analysts expected. This is an important time for investors, as they can track a company's performance in its report, look at what top analysts are forecasting for next year, and see if there has been any change to expectations for the business. So we gathered the latest post-earnings forecasts to see what analysts' statutory forecasts suggest is in store for next year.

Check out our latest analysis for B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network

XTRA:BNN Past and Future Earnings, January 18th 2020

Following the latest results, B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network's four analysts are now forecasting revenues of 43.5m in 2020. This would be a solid 8.6% improvement in sales compared to the last 12 months. Per-share statutory losses are expected to see a sharp uptick, reaching 0.47. Before this earnings announcement, analysts had been forecasting revenues of 40.0m and losses of 0.29 per share in 2020. While next year's revenue estimates increased, there was also a large cut to EPS expectations, suggesting the consensus has a bit of a mixed view of these results.

There was no major change to the consensus price target of 17.80, with growing revenues seemingly enough to offset the concern of growing losses. It could also be instructive to look at the range of analyst estimates, to evaluate how different the outlier opinions are from the mean. There are some variant perceptions on B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network, with the most bullish analyst valuing it at 24.00 and the most bearish at 9.50 per share. This is a fairly broad spread of estimates, suggesting that analysts are forecasting a wide range of possible outcomes for the business.

Zooming out to look at the bigger picture now, one of the ways we can make sense of these forecasts is to see how they measure up both against past performance, and against industry growth estimates. We would highlight that B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network's revenue growth is expected to slow, with forecast 8.6% increase next year well below the historical 15%p.a. growth over the last five years. By way of comparison, other companies in this market with analyst coverage, are forecast to grow their revenue at 3.8% next year. So it's pretty clear that, while B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network's revenue growth is expected to slow, it's still expected to grow faster than the market itself.

Pleasantly, analysts also upgraded their revenue estimates, and their forecasts suggest the business is expected to grow faster than the wider market. The consensus price target held steady at 17.80, with the latest estimates not enough to have an impact on analysts' estimated valuations.

Still, the long-term prospects of the business are much more relevant than next year's earnings. We have forecasts for B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network going out to 2024, and you can see them free on our platform here.

Story continues

Another thing to consider is whether management and directors have been buying or selling stock recently. We provide an overview of all open market stock trades for the last twelve months on our platform, here.

If you spot an error that warrants correction, please contact the editor at editorial-team@simplywallst.com. This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. Simply Wall St has no position in the stocks mentioned.

We aim to bring you long-term focused research analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Thank you for reading.

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B.R.A.I.N. Biotechnology Research and Information Network AG Just Released Its Full-Year Results And Analysts Are Updating Their Estimates - Yahoo...

Global Biotechnology Congress 2017 – Student Registration: Boston … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Global Biotechnology Congress 2017 - (5th in the Series) Student" conference to their offering.

The 'Global Biotechnology Congress 2017' would provide eminent scientists the opportunity to present their cutting edge researches in the field of biotechnology and its applications in medicine. A number of Nobel Laureates and leading researchers are expected to participate in this important conference.

This unique international conference provides a platform for researchers and decision makers in biotechnology to present their latest findings and learn about all the important developments in biotechnology. Many Nobel Laureates and world's renowned experts will participate in the conference.

The conference will cover the translational nature of biotechnological research, with emphasis on both the basic science as well as its applications in industry and academia. Presentations will include major research advances in biotechnology, business development, strategic alliances, partnering trends, product opportunities, growth business models and strategies, licensing and pharmaceutical biotechnology (e.g. vaccines, CNS, cancer, antibodies), medical biotechnology, industrial biotechnology, bioprocess engineering, protein engineering, plant and environmental technologies, transgenic plant and crops, bioremediation, and microbial diversity research.

Throughout the course of the four day conference, you will have the opportunity to both network and hear leaders from the international academic and corporate biotechnology communities.

Benefits of Attending

- Exchange ideas and network with leading biotechnologists and decision makers.

- Bring together top international biotechnology professionals presenting cutting-edge discoveries, research and opportunities for new biotech business practices and partnerships.

- Participants can gain direct access to a core audience of biotechnology professionals and decision makers, and have increased visibility through branding and networking at the conference.

- Obtain a global roundup of Pharmaceutical research capabilities and opportunities.

- The conference will feature a commercial exhibition and poster sessions.

For more information about this conference visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/3859jd/global

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Global Biotechnology Congress 2017 - Student Registration: Boston ... - Business Wire (press release)

Why Puma Biotechnology Inc Jumped Higher Today – Motley Fool

Documents from the FDA suggest the agency is open to the possibility of approving neratinib. What happened

Shares ofPuma Biotechnology(NASDAQ:PBYI) are up 44% at 12:12 p.m., having been up as much as 84% today, as investors digest the Food and Drug Administration documentsposted ahead of Wednesday's advisory committee meeting to review the approvability of Puma's breast cancer drug neratinib.

Today's jump wasn't because of surprisingly good data but rather a relative lack of negative opinions of neratinib by the FDA reviewers.

Puma Biotechnology is trying to get neratinib approved as an extended treatment for breast cancer after the patient has received surgery followed by Herceptin and chemotherapy. The clinical trial showed that adding neratinib to that standard of care decreased the reoccurrence of breast cancer compared to placebo after a year of treatment with neratinib. But the drug causes severe diarrhea in many patients, which leads to patients reducing the dose or stopping the drug altogether.

Good efficacy with poor tolerability has led investors to worry about the approvability of the drug. The company'snegotiatingwith the FDA over which patients to include in the analysis didn't help, although that issue appears to be mostlyworked out. Today's review was fairly neutral, with the documents for the advisory committee noting that the efficacy analysis was basically the same using either set of data, "supporting an effect of neratinib" while also pointing out that "the tolerability of neratinib in this patient population is a concern."

Image source: Getty Images.

The lack of a negative review is good news for Puma Biotechnology, but given the fairly neutral stance, the committee of outside experts could have a big influence on the FDA's final decision when they meet on Wednesday. The biggest thing for investors to watch is the committee's opinion of the diarrhea side effect and whether the members think treating with an antidiarrheal prophylaxisis an acceptable way to combat it. The doctors' opinions on neratinib relative to other post-surgery treatments will also be important because a negative opinion relative to the other treatments could foretell poor neratinib sales even if the drug is approved.

Brian Orelli has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Dr. Orelli is a Senior Biotech Specialist. He has written about biotech, pharmaceutical, and medical device companies for The Motley Fool since 2007.

Originally posted here:
Why Puma Biotechnology Inc Jumped Higher Today - Motley Fool

Biotechnology: navigating a minefield – Cordis News

When it comes to getting biotechnology innovations to market, with commercial protection, it can be tough. Around three quarters of patent applications normally fail to cut it. Although biotechnology is recognised as being important for the economy and society, it can also be highly controversial attracting public protests

The European Patent Office (EPO) has faced opposition in the past, for instance, over patents relating to processes for re-engineering genes, for use in medical research into cancer treatment. These processes could apply to various animals, including great apes and that became a magnet for criticism from animal rights campaigners.

The number of patent filings for biotechnology increased by 0.3 percent in 2016, to 5,744 making it the tenth largest sector in its field.

Youris.com spoke to Benoit Battistelli, President of the EPO, about the role of patent protection and how it can aid biotechnology innovation and the wider bioeconomy despite the obstacles faced by some.

How much of a focus is the bioeconomy for patents and what are some of the key developments?

Biosciences play an important role in patent applications at the EPO, given the growing convergence of technologies, which is widely responsible for technical progress in a wide number of sectors. Such inventions are mainly found in industrial biotechnology, for instance, in the development of novel products such as new detergents, functional food or even new eco-friendly material in construction, such as pollution-eating concrete and self-healing concrete.

The area of clean energy production is also very important. For example, when it comes to using biomass as an energy source [editors note: In 2011, a Danish inventor won a European Inventor Award organised by the EPO for developing a system which increases the types of biomass fuels that can be used. Typically, biomass materials have to be dried before they can be used as fuel, but Jens Dall Bentzens furnace design can also burn materials with a moisture content of up to 60 percent. Hes since reported to have attracted interest from Europe and the US, selling the furnace to an American manufacturer, as well as building two others for use in Denmark].

Is the bioeconomy an increasing sector?

Biotech is among our top ten technical fields and it has increased. At the end of the patent granting process, its about 50 percent on average that become a patent. Its only 26 or 27 percent in the case of biotech. Why? Because it is a very sensitive issue and we are applying the patentability criteria very rigorously. There are huge European capacities in biotech and we have seen that we must find a good balance between the regulatory constraints and the economic capacities that this sector represents.

The position of the EPO is very clear and simple. There is an EU directive concerning biotech, which we respect and which we have integrated in our own legal framework, the European Patent Convention. Then you have the interpretations of the Directive by the European Court of Justice and we adapt our practice to these judgements.

Overall, how complicated is it to obtain a patent, and is it expensive?

I would not say that it is complicated, but it is a difficult process, because we always start from the basis that a patent is an exception to the principle of free trade, free industry, free competition. Globally, for around 20 to 25,000 euros, you can obtain a patent as the EPO. For this amount, 5,000 euros are the EPO fees and the rest is the fees of those who helped to draft a patent and then discuss it with the patent office.

So, with a patent, you are giving the holder the exclusive right of commercially exploiting his invention, for a certain period of time, a maximum 20 years.

By Damon Embling

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Biotechnology: navigating a minefield - Cordis News

Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology Market 2017 … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology" report to their offering.

The market for bioseparation systems is growing rapidly across all regions. Bioseparation purifies biological products on a large-scale. The report focuses on the global market of bioseparation systems and provides an updated review, including basic design and its applications, in various arenas of biomedical and life science research.

The bioseparation techniques that are covered in this report are chromatography, centrifugation, electrophoresis, membrane filtration, flow cytometry, microarray, lab-on-a-chip, biochip, and magnetic separation. Among chromatography techniques, liquid chromatography is the most active market.

Also included in the report are relevant patent analysis and comprehensive profiles of companies that lead the bioseparation systems market. Key players include Thermo Fisher Scientific, Agilent Technologies Inc., Bio-Rad Laboratories, Danaher Corp., Qiagen N.V., Merck KGaA GmbH, and Waters Corp. among others.

Key Topics Covered:

1: Introduction

2: Summary and highlights

3: Overview

- History of biotechnology

- Classification of biomolecular separation systems in biotechnology

- New methods of biomolecular separations

- Molecular classes of biomolecular separation

- End users of biotechnology separation systems

4: New Developments

- Mergers and acquisitions

5: Market Analysis

- Market by type

- Market by region

6: Industry Structure

- Chromatography

- Centrifugation

- Electrophoresis

- Membrane filtration

- Flow cytometry

- Magnetic separation

- Microarrays

- Biochip

- Lab-on-a-chip

7: Patent Analysis

- Patents by year

- Patents by type

- Patents by company

- Patents by country

- Patents by assignee

8: Current Situation

- Factors affecting bioseparation system market

- Market opportunities

9: Company Profiles

- 3M Company

- Abaxis Inc.

- Abtech Scientific Inc.

- Agilent Technologies Inc.

- Alfa Laval Group

- Alfa Wassermann Separation Technologies

- Arrayit Corp.

- BD BioSciences (Becton, Dickinson and Company)

- Biocept Inc.

- Biodot Inc.

- BioMerieux SA

- Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc.

- Boston Microfluidics

- Customarray Inc.

- Danaher Corp.

- DNAmicroarray Inc.

- Falcon Genomics Inc.

- Flottweg Separation Technology

- GE Healthcare Life Sciences

- Hitachi Koki Co. Ltd.

- Illumina Inc.

- Luminex Corp.

- Merck KGaA

- Microarray Inc.

- Nanostring Technologies Inc.

- Novasep Inc.

- PerkinElmer

- Qiagen Gmbh

- Randox Laboratories Ltd.

- Sartorius Corp.

- Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

- Spectrum Chemical Manufacturing Corp.

- Sysmex Partec Gmbh

- Thermo Fisher Scientific

- W. R. Grace & Company

For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/npn5zk/separation

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Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology Market 2017 ... - Business Wire (press release)

Funding From Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation Advances M3 Biotechnology Toward Human Trials – GlobeNewswire (press release)

April 13, 2017 20:00 ET | Source: M3 Biotechnology

SEATTLE, April 13, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As the first investor in M3 Biotechnology, the Alzheimers Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) helped validate the therapeutic potential of M3s drug candidate for Alzheimers disease. With a second investment of $1.4 million, the ADDF is now providing key funds to support the launch of human trials this year.

While current drugs for Alzheimers disease only provide symptomatic relief, M3s small molecule therapeutics have the potential to be truly disease-modifying. By re-establishing lost connections between brain cells, these therapies may halt the course of the disease. M3 is now in the process of planning a first-in-humans Phase 1a clinical trial for its lead candidate, NDX-1017, to evaluate its safety and determine optimal dosing range.

ADDFs first investment spurred others, including many private investors and Washington state-based venture groups W Fund and WRF Capital. These investments evidenced the faith in our potential, which helped us make it past the valley of death for drug development and raise nearly $14 million in additional funding, said Leen Kawas, M3s CEO.

The most noteworthy new investor in M3 is Dolby Family Ventures, which invests in technology and life sciences. The fund makes early stage investments in the most promising Alzheimer's-specific therapeutics which require funding for the critical phase of translating successful animal therapies to human clinical trials. The fund honors the late inventor, Ray Dolby, who died in 2013 and who lived with Alzheimer's disease.

The relationship with the ADDF has been vital to our progress as they have fostered a dynamic, collaborative biotech ecosystem, Kawas said. By providing early funding and connecting us with potential partners and investors, the ADDF has helped us reach the clinic.

Howard Fillit, MD, Founding Executive Director and Chief Science Officer of the ADDF, says, We are excited by the promising therapeutic approach of Dr. Kawas and her team at M3 Biotechnology. By helping neurons survive, NDX-1017 may restore cognitive function for Alzheimers patients. The ADDF looks forward to the results from this first human trial.

Alzheimers Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) Founded in 1998 by Leonard A. and Ronald S. Lauder, ADDF is dedicated to accelerating the discovery of drugs to prevent, treat and cure Alzheimers disease. The ADDF is a public charity solely focused on funding the development of drugs for Alzheimers, employing a venture philanthropy model to support research in academia and the biotech industry. Through the generosity of its donors, ADDF has awarded over $100 million to fund more than 500 Alzheimers programs in 18 countries.

M3 Biotechnology, Inc. M3 Biotechnology is a therapeutics company with a novel platform of disease-modifying regenerative small molecules, particularly relevant to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimers. M3s lead asset is being advanced as a first-in-class, disease-modifying treatment with the potential to restore lost connections between brain cells, turning degeneration into regeneration. Total financing of $14M to-date is used to prepare for and conduct Phase I clinical trials.

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Funding From Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation Advances M3 Biotechnology Toward Human Trials - GlobeNewswire (press release)

Funding From Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation Advances M3 … – Yahoo Finance

SEATTLE, April 13, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As the first investor in M3 Biotechnology, the Alzheimers Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) helped validate the therapeutic potential of M3s drug candidate for Alzheimers disease. With a second investment of $1.4 million, the ADDF is now providing key funds to support the launch of human trials this year.

While current drugs for Alzheimers disease only provide symptomatic relief, M3s small molecule therapeutics have the potential to be truly disease-modifying. By re-establishing lost connections between brain cells, these therapies may halt the course of the disease. M3 is now in the process of planning a first-in-humans Phase 1a clinical trial for its lead candidate, NDX-1017, to evaluate its safety and determine optimal dosing range.

ADDFs first investment spurred others, including many private investors and Washington state-based venture groups W Fund and WRF Capital. These investments evidenced the faith in our potential, which helped us make it past the valley of death for drug development and raise nearly $14 million in additional funding, said Leen Kawas, M3s CEO.

The most noteworthy new investor in M3 is Dolby Family Ventures, which invests in technology and life sciences. The fund makes early stage investments in the most promising Alzheimer's-specific therapeutics which require funding for the critical phase of translating successful animal therapies to human clinical trials. The fund honors the late inventor, Ray Dolby, who died in 2013 and who lived with Alzheimer's disease.

The relationship with the ADDF has been vital to our progress as they have fostered a dynamic, collaborative biotech ecosystem, Kawas said. By providing early funding and connecting us with potential partners and investors, the ADDF has helped us reach the clinic.

Howard Fillit, MD, Founding Executive Director and Chief Science Officer of the ADDF, says, We are excited by the promising therapeutic approach of Dr. Kawas and her team at M3 Biotechnology. By helping neurons survive, NDX-1017 may restore cognitive function for Alzheimers patients. The ADDF looks forward to the results from this first human trial.

Alzheimers Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) Founded in 1998 by Leonard A. and Ronald S. Lauder, ADDF is dedicated to accelerating the discovery of drugs to prevent, treat and cure Alzheimers disease. The ADDF is a public charity solely focused on funding the development of drugs for Alzheimers, employing a venture philanthropy model to support research in academia and the biotech industry. Through the generosity of its donors, ADDF has awarded over $100 million to fund more than 500 Alzheimers programs in 18 countries.

M3 Biotechnology, Inc. M3 Biotechnology is a therapeutics company with a novel platform of disease-modifying regenerative small molecules, particularly relevant to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimers. M3s lead asset is being advanced as a first-in-class, disease-modifying treatment with the potential to restore lost connections between brain cells, turning degeneration into regeneration. Total financing of $14M to-date is used to prepare for and conduct Phase I clinical trials.

The rest is here:
Funding From Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation Advances M3 ... - Yahoo Finance

Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology Market 2017 … – Yahoo Finance

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology" report to their offering.

The market for bioseparation systems is growing rapidly across all regions. Bioseparation purifies biological products on a large-scale. The report focuses on the global market of bioseparation systems and provides an updated review, including basic design and its applications, in various arenas of biomedical and life science research.

The bioseparation techniques that are covered in this report are chromatography, centrifugation, electrophoresis, membrane filtration, flow cytometry, microarray, lab-on-a-chip, biochip, and magnetic separation. Among chromatography techniques, liquid chromatography is the most active market.

Also included in the report are relevant patent analysis and comprehensive profiles of companies that lead the bioseparation systems market. Key players include Thermo Fisher Scientific, Agilent Technologies Inc., Bio-Rad Laboratories, Danaher Corp., Qiagen N.V., Merck KGaA GmbH, and Waters Corp. among others.

Key Topics Covered:

1: Introduction

2: Summary and highlights

3: Overview

- History of biotechnology

- Classification of biomolecular separation systems in biotechnology

- New methods of biomolecular separations

- Molecular classes of biomolecular separation

- End users of biotechnology separation systems

4: New Developments

- Mergers and acquisitions

5: Market Analysis

- Market by type

- Market by region

6: Industry Structure

- Chromatography

- Centrifugation

- Electrophoresis

- Membrane filtration

- Flow cytometry

- Magnetic separation

- Microarrays

- Biochip

- Lab-on-a-chip

7: Patent Analysis

- Patents by year

- Patents by type

- Patents by company

- Patents by country

- Patents by assignee

8: Current Situation

- Factors affecting bioseparation system market

- Market opportunities

9: Company Profiles

- 3M Company

- Abaxis Inc.

- Abtech Scientific Inc.

- Agilent Technologies Inc.

- Alfa Laval Group

- Alfa Wassermann Separation Technologies

- Arrayit Corp.

- BD BioSciences (Becton, Dickinson and Company)

- Biocept Inc.

- Biodot Inc.

- BioMerieux SA

- Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc.

- Boston Microfluidics

- Customarray Inc.

- Danaher Corp.

- DNAmicroarray Inc.

- Falcon Genomics Inc.

- Flottweg Separation Technology

- GE Healthcare Life Sciences

- Hitachi Koki Co. Ltd.

- Illumina Inc.

- Luminex Corp.

- Merck KGaA

- Microarray Inc.

- Nanostring Technologies Inc.

- Novasep Inc.

- PerkinElmer

- Qiagen Gmbh

- Randox Laboratories Ltd.

- Sartorius Corp.

- Shimadzu Scientific Instruments

- Spectrum Chemical Manufacturing Corp.

- Sysmex Partec Gmbh

- Thermo Fisher Scientific

- W. R. Grace & Company

For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/npn5zk/separation

View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170414005169/en/

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Separation Systems for Commercial Biotechnology Market 2017 ... - Yahoo Finance

Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center begins long-awaited expansion … – Bucks County Courier Times

The Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center on Wednesday broke ground on a long-awaited expansion that will add laboratories, office space and at least 100 new jobs to its campus in Buckingham.

"This has become a real state resource," said biotechnology center President Timothy Block. "We can't exist in these two buildings anymore. We need to grow."

Created more than 10 years ago through a partnership between the Hepatitis B Foundation and Delaware Valley University, the Biotechnology Center has grown to become an economic powerhouse in the region, contributing an estimated $1.8 billion to the local economy and supporting more than 700 jobs, half of those within the center itself.

Because of the center's success, it's been a draw for scientists and entrepreneurs throughout the region. Lab space is at a premium, and there's a waiting list for tenants. The new wing is already 40 percent leased, Block said.

The first tenant, contract research organization FlowMetric Inc., credits the center with its growth. The company now has three dozen employees.

"I could have set up my company in New Jersey. But there was no place that was quite like this, and that has continued for us," said CEO Ren Capocasale.

"This center is why I do what I do."

While construction likely won't begin until the summer, biotech center officials chose Wednesday for the ceremonial groundbreaking in part because it also happened to be the 96th birthday of Joshua Feldstein, a longtime supporter for whom a wing of the center is named.

Feldstein was on hand for Wednesday's event, seated among a variety of state and local dignitaries that included state Rep. Marguerite Quinn, R-143, Doylestown, and state Sen. Chuck McIlhinney, R-10, Doylestown both longtime supporters of the center and Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, R-8, Middletown.

"This is not a Republican or Democrat thing," said Quinn. "We've had support from both sides of the aisle, recognizing what you do here: jobs, cures and research. Well-paying jobs and phenomenal research."

First proposed in 2015, the expansion project stalled during a dispute between the Hepatitis B Foundation and Delaware Valley University. Unhappy with how the foundation was running the center's day-to-day operations, the university refused to sign off on the expansion plans.

The dispute ended in October, when the Hepatitis B Foundation agreed to pay $2 million to buy DelVal's interests in the center.

The final project will cost between $12 million and $13 million, center officials said. That will be offset by a $4.6 million grant from the federal government and a $2 million state grant. The rest will be financed with a conventional loan awarded by Univest Bank.

Officials on Wednesday, however, weren't just celebrating the expansion. They were thinking about the future.

"We need to be thinking about what the next thing we're going to put the shovel in the ground (for) here with what's happening here," said Bucks County Commissioner Rob Loughery.

Block envisions a biotechnology hub within Bucks County one that equals the well-known Kendall Square area of Boston.

"There is a resource in Bucks County as vital and powerful, with as much potential, as the shale under the earth here," Block said. "That's what we're going to tap into."

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Pennsylvania Biotechnology Center begins long-awaited expansion ... - Bucks County Courier Times

Biotechnology Education vs Industry Requirements: Where – BSI bureau (press release)

Dr Vinay Rale shares his thoughts with BioSpectrum on current biotech education and the academia-industry gap

Dr Vinay Rale, Director, Symbiosis School of Biomedical Sciences (SSBS)

Brief recapitulation of genesis of Biotechnology in India A quick recapitulation of the genesis of Biotechnology in India will not be out of place to apprise the lay public. We essentially (and blindly) followed the USA in 1985 in initiating Biotechnology programs at Master's level at six select universities across India. In the 1970s, the ability to modify DNA molecules and the realization of the power of genetic engineering led prominent universities in the US to convince their Government to allocate huge funds to start

Biotechnology' - a term newly coined by them. The Indian model, first at Masters level, to cater to the need for trained manpower for the anticipated boom in the Biotechnology industry was supported by the Department of Biotechnology (DBT). Very soon a large number of institutions both in private and public sector followed suit to attract students. The wildfire spread to undergraduate programs equally rapidly. However, this led to two major disadvantages - the relegation of basic courses in Life Sciences such as Microbiology, Biochemistry, Zoology and Botany and severely inadequate infrastructure and untrained faculty. As a matter of fact, the first Masters programs supported by DBT at six prominent institutions in the country were turned to the advantage of the then faculty expertise, e.g., developmental biology turning a blind eye to the basic essentials that the students have to be proficient in.

A rough estimate of the students enrolled in Biotechnology at undergraduate and postgraduate levels suggests a number exceeding 100,000 at any given time. Also, some institutions offer a bouquet of 8 to 9 allied courses in Biotechnology. Naturally the demand-supply ratio is skewed. The curricula in Biotechnology tries to accommodate' as many subsets as possible with little attention to the fundamentals - especially at the undergraduate levels. Moreover, to overcome the infrastructure deficiency, a good number of students (especially at postgraduate level) are encouraged to bank upon either research institutes or industries to undertake dissertations.

Unfortunately, both categories of organizations take little interest in the welfare of such dissertation research; more so due to the unavailability of mentors from either side. Therefore-, little research done at such levels goes unnoticed. As a consequence-, it is estimated that well over 70 percent of Biotechnology students are considered as unemployable by industries. This is the net result of a large number of factors contributing to the creation of unfit student mass. Reliable sources indicate that industries now prefer to hire students trained in conventional Life Sciences like Microbiology and Biochemistry (also Chemistry) to meet their stringent requirements. The general complaint is that the Biotechnology students lack fundamentals. This is also the observation of this author over the decades.

Considering the seriousness of the Government to increase funding for the DBT and the intiative of the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC) coupled with those of SIDBI and MSME to strengthen research in academia and foster strategic alliances between academia and industry, one can only expect better things to happen. However, like Biotechnology, Microbiology and Biochemistry programs too need nourishment.

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Biotechnology Education vs Industry Requirements: Where - BSI bureau (press release)

Trump Administration should unshackle further innovation in ag biotechnology by rolling back undue regulations – Fence Post

WASHINGTON Overly cautious regulations that contravene decades of academic research and ignore the lessons from massive real-world experience are stifling innovation in plant and animal improvement, said the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation.

The Trump administration should roll back overly precautionary regulations to encourage much-needed innovations that produce safer and more sustainable crops and livestock while still preventing unreasonable risks to public and environmental welfare, argues the science- and tech-policy think tank in a recently released report.

"From reducing the need for pesticides to increasing crop yields, genetically modified crops have already made farming more safe and environmentally friendly," said L. Val Giddings, a senior fellow at ITIF and the report's author. "Researchers are discovering ever more precise, predictable, and easy-to-use techniques derived directly from nature. But despite decades of evidence on the safety of genetically improved crops, unfounded fears and politically driven opposition have led to regulations that chill innovation. It's time to rethink these policies and allow and enable a new generation of discoveries that can feed the world even more safely and sustainably."

Giddings explains that in the 1980s, the U.S. government decided to regulate biotech-improved crops using the same principles and methods it would for any other crops, because expert bodies repeatedly found no unique or novel hazards that made these crops and livestock any different than those derived from the classical plant and animal breeding that has occurred for millennia. But since then, Giddings says the disparity between the minimal risk associated with these innovations and the major regulatory hurdles they must clear has widened from a gap to a chasm.

This discordance between the degree of regulatory oversight and the actual hazards is posing economic and environmental costs, as innovative new products are delayed from reaching the market, Giddings said. To overcome these barriers and unleash a new generation of innovation in agricultural biotechnology, the report recommends that:

The Trump administration should enforce the mandate from the Office of Science and Technology Policy that agencies update their regulations and policies for innovative agricultural-biotechnology products, and that the revised regulations should be effective in preventing unreasonable risks while still encouraging and enabling innovation;

The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service should set aside its proposal for process-based revisions to existing regulations;

The Food and Drug Administration should enforce the federal law prohibiting misleading food labels;

The FDA should revise its current proposal for regulating gene-edited animals, withdraw its proposal for gene-edited plants, and develop new proposals to exercise its discretion in preventing unreasonable risks;

The Environmental Protection Agency should not prematurely obstruct gene-silencing technologies;

The Fish and Wildlife Service should immediately withdraw the prohibition on planting biotech-improved seeds on national refuge lands; and

The Trump administration should pursue efforts through the World Trade Organization to hold China and the European Union accountable for continuing to discriminate against crops improved through biotechnology, despite being obligated otherwise.

"Biotechnology innovations have improved the lives of farmers around the world, enhanced their stewardship of the land, and benefitted consumers and the environment," Giddings said. "The principle obstacle to even greater and more widespread benefits is regulatory hurdles that aren't grounded in the facts. Setting these barriers aside will unshackle innovators to solve challenges impeding our ability to meet the food, feed and fiber needs of a growing population while reducing undesirable environmental impacts."

Read the full report at http://www2.itif.org/2017-unshackle-agricultural-innovation.pdf?_ga=1.155989245.717142650.1491235245.

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Trump Administration should unshackle further innovation in ag biotechnology by rolling back undue regulations - Fence Post

iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Plans Quarterly Dividend of $0.30 – The Cerbat Gem

iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Plans Quarterly Dividend of $0.30
The Cerbat Gem
iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index logo iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (NASDAQ:IBB) declared a quarterly dividend on Friday, March 24th. Stockholders of record on Tuesday, March 28th will be given a dividend of 0.299 per share on Thursday, ...
iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Upgraded to "Buy" by Vetr Inc.BBNS

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iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Plans Quarterly Dividend of $0.30 - The Cerbat Gem

Expert: Biotechnology will aid sustainable agricultural production – P.M. News

Biotech

Prof. Benjamin Ubi, the President, (BSN), says the adoption of biotechnology will facilitate sustainable agricultural production in the country.

Ubi made the declaration in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Thursday

He said that the adoption of biotechnology applications was the panacea to the current food challenges facing the country.

Biotechnology, including genetic engineering and production of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs), provides powerful tools for the sustainable development of agriculture, fishery and forestry, as well as meeting the food needs of the population.

GMOs currently account for about 16 per cent of the worlds crops, particularly crops like soybean, maize, cotton and canola, and there are indications that the growing trend will continue.

So, we must eat what we grow and grow what we eat. This means we ought to produce more and agricultural biotechnology is a tool for achieving this, he said.

Ubi also pledged the support of the BSN for the efforts of National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) to harness the potential of modern biotechnology.

READ: Kwara International Vocational Centre gets equipment

BSN, as a stakeholder in biosafety, will continue to support NBMA; we should all be rest assured that no biotechnology product will be imposed on anyone.

Hunger and peace work hand-in-hand, so lack of hunger consequently promotes peace; therefore, biotechnology and its derivatives should be adopted for the benefit of Nigerians, while maintaining regulatory standards.

Biotechnology and biosafety stakeholders must, therefore, work in tandem with global bodies because Nigeria is not a pariah nation; we are a responsible and respected member of the global community, he said.

Ubi urged anti-GMO campaigners not to play politics with issues that could engender food security and alleviate poverty, saying that tangible efforts should be made to enhance the availability and affordability of high-quality foods via biotechnology applications.

I assure all that modern biotechnology had been found to be safe by global certification bodies.

All the same, informed criticism is good for checks and balances but it should not be allowed to be a clog the wheel of progress, he added.

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Expert: Biotechnology will aid sustainable agricultural production - P.M. News

Vir Biotechnology Up; to Work With Biogen on Antibodies to Potentially Treat Covid-19 – Morningstar.com

By Michael Dabaie

Vir Biotechnology Inc. shares were up 10% to $37.06 in heavier-than-average volume.

Before the market open, the company said it signed a letter of intent to collaborate with Biogen Inc. on manufacturing of antibodies to potentially treat Covid-19.

Vir said that because of the urgency of the situation, the companies have begun work while a clinical development and manufacturing agreement is being negotiated.

Subject to the completion of a definitive agreement, Biogen would continue cell line development, process development, and clinical manufacturing activities in order to advance the development of Vir's proprietary antibodies.

Vir said it has identified monoclonal antibodies that bind to SARS-CoV-2, which were isolated from individuals who had survived a severe acute respiratory syndrome infection. The company said it is conducting research to determine if its antibodies, or additional antibodies that it may be able to identify, can be effective as treatment and prophylaxis against SARS-CoV-2.

Write to Michael Dabaie at michael.dabaie@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

March 12, 2020 12:48 ET (16:48 GMT)

Excerpt from:
Vir Biotechnology Up; to Work With Biogen on Antibodies to Potentially Treat Covid-19 - Morningstar.com

Vir Biotechnology Announces Research Collaboration with the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center on Antibodies Against Coronaviruses…

Joint research project to include SARS-CoV-2

SAN FRANCISCO, March 11, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Vir Biotechnology, Inc.(VIR) today announced a research collaboration agreement with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), Vaccine Research Center (VRC) to advance characterization and development of human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease COVID-19. The joint project, which will begin this week, will augment ongoing efforts by both parties to identify antibodies that can be used to prevent or treat infection with existing and emerging viruses and help inform the development of vaccines.

Under the terms of the agreement, Vir and NIAID will work together to identify and optimize combinations of antibodies against coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-2, SARS and MERS, as well as antibodies that may be effective across additional types of coronaviruses. The two parties will exchange antibodies and other materials for testing in combination and individually and, by mutual agreement, will perform in vivo animal studies to analyze immune responses.

This collaboration expands Virs efforts to characterize and develop antibody therapies against coronaviruses by allowing us to access the VRCs significant and broad research experience with coronaviruses, which is complementary to ours, said Herbert Skip Virgin, M.D., Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, Vir. This is one of multiple approaches we are taking to rapidly identify and test potential prophylactics and therapeutics for COVID-19 and we expect it to allow us to accelerate finding solutions to this urgent public health need.

Vir has identified a number of monoclonal antibodies that bind to SARS-CoV-2. These antibodies were isolated from individuals who had survived a SARS infection. The company is conducting research to determine if its antibodies, or additional antibodies that it may be able to identify from COVID-19 survivors, can be effective as treatment and/or prophylaxis against SARS-CoV-2.

NIAID-funded scientists are exploring ways to treat and prevent human coronavirus infections by working to develop new antibodies, drugs, and vaccines that block entry to cells, enhance the immune system response, or block viral replication. To date, this research has focused on the coronavirus spike protein and includes development of neutralization assays and competition assays that are used to characterize antibodies.

About Virs Antibody Platform

Vir has a robust method for capitalizing on unusually successful immune responses naturally occurring in people who are protected from, or have recovered from, infectious diseases. The platform is used to identify rare antibodies from survivors that have the potential to treat and prevent rapidly evolving and/or previously untreatable pathogens via direct pathogen neutralization and immune system stimulation. Vir engineers the fully human antibodies that it discovers to enhance their therapeutic potential. This platform has been used to identify and develop antibodies for pathogens including Ebola (mAb114, currently in use in theDemocratic Republic of Congo), hepatitis B virus, influenza A, malaria, and others.

AboutVir Biotechnology

Vir Biotechnologyis a clinical-stage immunology company focused on treating and preventing serious infectious diseases. Vir has assembled four technology platforms that are designed to stimulate and enhance the immune system by exploiting critical observations of natural immune processes. Its current development pipeline consists of five product candidates targeting hepatitis B virus, influenza A, human immunodeficiency virus and tuberculosis. For more information, please visit http://www.vir.bio.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as may, will, expect, plan, anticipate, estimate, intend, potential and similar expressions (as well as other words or expressions referencing future events, conditions or circumstances) are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on Virs expectations and assumptions as of the date of this press release. Each of these forward-looking statements involves risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements contained in this press release include statements regarding the companys efforts to neutralize the SARS-CoV-2 virus and identify additional potential therapies for SARS-CoV-2, and its ability to address the emerging public health epidemic. Many factors may cause differences between current expectations and actual results including unexpected safety or efficacy data observed during preclinical or clinical studies, challenges in neutralizing SARS-CoV-2, difficulty in collaborating with other companies or government agencies, and challenges in accessing manufacturing capacity. Other factors that may cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements in this press release are discussed in Virs filings with theU.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including the section titled Risk Factors contained therein. Except as required by law, Vir assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in expectations, even as new information becomes available.

Story continues

Contact:Vir Biotechnology, Inc.

Investors Neera Ravindran, MDHead of Investor Relations & Strategic Communications nravindran@vir.bio+1-415-506-5256

Media Lindy Devereux Scient PR lindy@scientpr.com +1-646-515-5730

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Vir Biotechnology Announces Research Collaboration with the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center on Antibodies Against Coronaviruses...

Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Growth by Top Companies, Trends by Types and Application, Forecast to 2026 – Bandera County…

Verified Market Research recently published a research report titled, Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Study Report 2020. The research report is created based on historical and forecast data derived from researchers using primary and secondary methods. The Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals market is one of the fastest-growing markets and is expected to witness substantial growth in the forecast years. Reader are provided easy access to thorough analysis on the various aspects such as opportunities and restraints affecting the market. The report clearly explains the trajectory this market will take in the forecast years.

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Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Leading Players:

Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market: Competitive Landscape

This section of the report provides complete information about the various manufacturers in the market. The major manufacturers to which the report refers hold a large proportion that require a microscopic appearance. It provides important information about the different strategies of these manufacturers to combat competition and to expand their presence in the market. In addition, the current trends of the manufacturers are checked in order to innovate their product for the future. This report is intended to help the reader understand the market and make business decisions accordingly.

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Tags: Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Size, Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Trends, Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Forecast, Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Growth, Nanoparticles in Biotechnology and Pharmaceuticals Market Analysis

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Cuba’s revolutionary cancer vaccine builds bridges between the island and the United States – AL DIA News

Despite the fact that Donald Trump's government is determined to continue sanctioning Cuba - the charter flights from the U.S. to nine Cuban airports were suspended last week because of the country's support for Maduro's regime, according to statements by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo - the collaboration between the United States and the island continues, at least on scientific matters. And this should not surprise us, taking into account the great medical advances made by Cuban professionals in the treatment of various types of cancer.

This is what we'll be able to witness in "Cuba's Cancer Hope," a documentary by Llew Smith that will be released next April by PBS and that sheds light on CimaVax, a revolutionary treatment against lung cancer that prolongs the life of patients in very advanced stages and that the Center of Molecular Immunology (CIM) in Habana has taken more than twenty years to develop.

In fact, the results are so encouraging that the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in New York soon joined the project and will be the first U.S. institution to conduct a clinical trial of the drug produced on the island.

"The future of our country must necessarily be a future of men of science and thought, because that is precisely what we are sowing most," Fidel Castro, 1960.

Llew Smith himself was one of the volunteers to test this pioneering treatment, according to Prensa Latina, and his results, which were made known two years ago, will be part of the documentary.

"The wonderful thing about working with our Cuban colleagues is that they really believe, in their heart of hearts, that medical care is a human right," said Dr. Kevin Lee, director of the Roswell Park immunology department, in a dialogue with the press, praising the medical advances being made in Cuba and its "great potential to treat and prevent cancer of various kinds."

Cuba a pioneer in science

Biotechnology is one of the most developed branches of Cuban science, which began to be promoted in 1980, when Fidel Castro's government created a group dedicated to the production of interphenon, a possible cancer drug, in addition to promoting scientific parks.

This is a commitment to progress that the current president of Cuba, Miguel Daz-Canel Bermdez, acknowledged to Castro on the occasion of the documentary, and which the late revolutionary leader already advocated in a speech made in 1960when he said:

"The future of our country must necessarily be a future of men of science and thoughtbecause that is precisely what we are sowing most."

But the CimaVax is not the only discovery of Cuban scientists, whose achievements can be traced in the history of the island:

In 1881, the scientist Carlos Juan Finlay was the discoverer of the agent that transmits yellow fever, the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which made it possible to clean up the areas invaded by this infectious agent and which, in the end, has prevented millions of deaths.

"The wonderful thing about working with our Cuban colleagues is that they truly believe, deep in their hearts, that medical care is a human right," Dr. Kevin Lee from Roswell Park.

Also at Cuba's Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB), Heberprot-P was developed, a unique drug that prevents the amputation of diabetic feet by healing ulcers.

In addition, Cuba was recognized by WHO as the first country in the world to eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

The documentary "Cuba's Cancer Hope" also includes other therapies being experimented with on the island, specifically for the treatment of different types of cancer, which once again confirms thatscientific advances are breaking down the walls that apparently separate us.

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Cuba's revolutionary cancer vaccine builds bridges between the island and the United States - AL DIA News