The Bio Report

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 221:08:19
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Sinopse

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

Episódios

  • Stratus Wants to Demonstrate Its Telehealth Fluency

    26/01/2017 Duração: 24min

    Telehealth, which encompasses an array of technologies to deliver healthcare, is a rapidly growing area. Stratus Video, a language services company, is making a push into telehealth where it sees a big opportunity to leverage its expertise and apply it to healthcare. We spoke to Lee Horner, president of the Stratus Telemedicine division, about telehealth trends, how its altering the practice of medicine, and whether it can deliver on the promise of improving care while reducing costs.

  • Regeneron Embraces Genetics as Fundamental to Drug Development

    19/01/2017 Duração: 32min

    Drug discovery and development is a slow and costly process, but the Regeneron Genetics Center represents a drugmakers’ bet that harnessing large amounts of genetic data can point the way to better targets, greater success rates, and ultimately better drugs. We spoke to Aris Baras, vice president and head of the Regeneron Genetics Center ahead of the Precision Medicine World Conference 2017 in Silicon Valley about how large genetic studies are brining fundamental change to the drug development process, the approach Regeneron is taking, and why its becoming a necessary element of drug development today.

  • Despite FDA Setback, KemPharm Advancing Prodrug Pipeline

    12/01/2017 Duração: 19min

    Last year, KemPharm was on its way to winning an FDA approval for its opioid Apadaz designed to deter users from snorting, injecting, or otherwise abusing it. But the regulatory agency stymied the company’s efforts when it declined to label it as an abuse-deterrent opioid. Apadaz is a prodrug that is converted to its active form through an enzyme present in the intestinal tract that releases the hydrocodone in it. The decision sent shares in KemPharm tumbling. Now, as the company works to resolve regulatory issues around Apadaz, it’s moving forward with the rest of its prodrug pipeline. We spoke to KemPharm CEO Travis Mickle about abuse-deterrence, the ongoing discussion with the FDA, the company’s prodrug pipeline.

  • Using digital technologies to improve diagnosis and treatment of mental health patients

    05/01/2017 Duração: 22min

    In the realm of mental health, a lack of biologic measures for diagnosing and treating patients has at times made this an area where doctor’s subjective decisions can play a disproportionate role. Ehave is seeking to improve diagnosis and treatment of patients with its data-rich management, assessment, and remediation tools that sit on its cloud-based software platform. The company’s initial product focuses on ADHD, although it plans to roll-out other applications in the future. We spoke to Prateek Dwivedi, CEO of Ehave, about its platform, the problems the company is trying to address, and how digital technologies are changing the way doctors diagnose, treat, and interact with patients.

  • Biotech in 2016 and the Year Ahead with TheStreet’s Adam Feuerstein

    29/12/2016 Duração: 20min

    With 2016 drawing to a close and the biotech industry gearing up for the annual JPMorgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco, we continued our holiday tradition of checking in with Adam Feuerstein, senior columnist for TheStreet. We spoke to Feuerstein about the year in biotech that was, the winners and losers of 2016, and what to look for at the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference and beyond.

  • Harnessing Gut Bacteria to Treat Disease

    22/12/2016 Duração: 18min

    While there has been much buzz in the industry over the potential for harnessing the microbiome and using it as a way to treat disease, it remains early days for the therapeutic pipeline. Rebiotix, which is delivering human-derived microbes to treat recurrent Clostridium difficile infections, is ready to move its lead experimental therapeutic into late-stage clinical testing. The company says it is the most advanced human clinical program evaluating a microbiota-based drug conducted in coordination with a regulatory authority. We spoke to Lee Jones, founder and CEO of Rebiotix, about the microbiome, the opportunity for drugs targeting the colonies of bacteria in the gut, and the indications beyond c. diff Rebiotix is pursuing.

  • A Look at What’s Ahead for Biopharma in 2017

    15/12/2016 Duração: 25min

    Investors bid up biopharmaceutical stocks following the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States. It reflected a belief that a Trump administration will remove the threat of price controls on drugs and bring about a friendlier regulatory environment at the FDA. We spoke to Amy Brown, senior reporter and author of the EP Vantage 2017 Preview, about what’s in store for the biopharmaceutical sector in the year ahead, what to look for, and why it may turn out to be a big year for M&A activity.

  • AMA Wants Docs to Have Seat at mHealth Table

    08/12/2016 Duração: 17min

    The advent of digital health devices and mobile health apps has the potential to improve care, change patient behavior, and permit doctors to intervene early when the health of a patient changes. But the American Medical Association wants to ensure that as these devices proliferate, doctors have a role in guiding their design and determining their worth. We spoke to James Madara, CEO of the AMA, about new principles its adopted to promote safe and effective mHealth applications, the concerns physicians have about the use of these apps, and how he sees them reshaping healthcare.

  • Testing of New HIV Vaccine Carries Hopes of a Breakthrough

    01/12/2016 Duração: 22min

    A clinical trial of an experimental vaccine against HIV that just began in South Africa is raising new hopes of making new strides against the disease. The trial follows recent news of tests in animals that suggest the vaccine, in combination with an innate immune stimulant may be able to put infected patients into remission. We spoke to Colonel Nelson Michael, director of the U.S. Military HIV Research Program at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, about the new trial, how this vaccine builds on what was learned from a clinical trial in Thailand from an earlier version of the vaccine, and why there’s hope of related work moving researchers towards a functional cure for the disease that could free patients from the need for antiretroviral therapy for extended periods.

  • Centrexion Takes Aim at Pain with Growing Portfolio of Non-Opioid Therapeutics

    24/11/2016 Duração: 22min

    Pain takes both a personal toll on individuals who suffer from it and an economic toll on society more broadly. Though there is a wide range of drugs available to treat pain, it’s a problem that is still not well addressed. The need for new pain therapies has become even more acute as the problem of opioid addiction has grown. We spoke to Kerrie Brady, founder and chief business officer of Centrexion Therapeutics, which is developing a pipeline of non-opioid pain drugs. Brady discussed the problem of today’s existing pain therapies, how the company is using Big Data in its pursuit of new drugs, and its strategy of building out its pipeline.

  • Bringing Women into Biotech Boardrooms

    18/11/2016 Duração: 19min

    A number of studies have recently called attention to the lack of gender diversity in leadership positions in the life sciences industry. Women in BIO and LifeSci Advisors have taken steps to increase the presence of women in the boardroom of biotech companies through a new training program to get women boardroom ready, as well as the creation of an initiative to help place qualified women onto the boards of companies. We spoke to Dawn Hocevar, president elect of Women in Bio and Michael Rice, founding partner of LifeSci Advisors about their efforts, why there aren’t more women on the boards of biotech companies today, and what has to be done to remedy the problem.

  • Novartis Deal Validates Perlara’s Approach to Rare Disease Drug Discovery

    10/11/2016 Duração: 19min

    Perlara is a drug discovery company focused on using model organisms to find treatments for diseases previously believed to be too rare to cure. Recently Perlara entered into a drug discovery and development collaboration with Novartis, a deal that included an equity investment and is seen as validating Perlara’s platform. We spoke to Ethan Perlstein, CEO of Perlara, about the company’s unique approach to drug discovery, why it focuses on the diseases it does, and the significance of its agreement with Novartis.

  • Harvesting the Aquatic Microbiome for New Drugs

    03/11/2016 Duração: 18min

    There’s been much buzz about the microbiome, but what that constitutes can mean different things to different people. Biosortia Pharmaceuticals is focusing on the aquatic microbiome as a rich source of potential first-in-class small molecules to address unmet medical needs. We spoke to Ross Youngs, founder and CEO of Biosortia, about what makes the aquatic microbiome compelling as a source of new drugs, how the company goes about mining it for potential compounds, and what the company’s growing pipeline looks like.

  • How TwoXAR Is Using Big Data to Accelerate Drug Discovery

    27/10/2016 Duração: 25min

    It can take up to six years to accumulate enough evidence to support advancing an experimental drug into clinical development. twoXAR is working to rapidly accelerate that process through the use of Big Data and its proprietary algorithms to find screen large public and proprietary data sets to indentify new drug candidates and determine their efficacy. We spoke to Andrew Radin, co-founder and CEO of twoXAR, about the company’s technology, how it’s being applied today, and the evolution of the company’s strategy.

  • Developer of innovative catheter for cancer drugs turns to crowdfunding

    20/10/2016 Duração: 15min

    Robert Goldman had been a successful Internet age inventor having developed some of the critical technology underlying the way digital music is stored, searched, and purchased online. But when his sister developed cancer, he found himself turning his skills as an inventor into an unchartered area for him. Eventually he developed a new type of catherter to deliver cancer medicines directly to where they are needed in the body. But despite his company’s success at winning marketing clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, his company Vascular Designs has had difficulty raising money. On October 17 Vascular Designs launched a campaign to raise $500,000 through the crowdfunding site Indigogo. We spoke to Goldman about his IsoFlow catheter, the funding environment for innovative medical device companies, and his decision to turn to crowdfunding.

  • Harnessing Real World Samples and Data to Speed Biomedical Research

    13/10/2016 Duração: 27min

    One of the issues researchers face is getting access to needed biospecimens with detailed clinical data that can expand the understanding of a specific disease or treatment. The difficulty in obtaining biospecimens can hamper R&D productivity, extend the time of project, and increase costs. Novaseek has developed a platform that provides access to real world data and supports the ability to define patient cohorts based on detailed clinical criteria, such as demographics, diagnoses, medications, and lab test results, and supports the collection of biospecimens at various time points. The platform also offers healthcare organizations an opportunity to develop a new source of revenue. We spoke to Kate Torchilin, CEO of Novaseek, about the challenges researchers face in getting biospecimens, how Novaseek seeks to address that, and how the company’s platform can help to accelerate biomedical research.

  • A Rich Pipeline Expected to Drive Industry’s Growth

    06/10/2016 Duração: 18min

    Evaluate Pharma, in its latest World Preview report, is projecting solid growth for prescription drug sales through 2022. Driving that growth is both the new products expected to come to market during that time and the industry’s embrace of orphan drugs, the source of half of that growth. We spoke to Antonio Iervolino, head of forecasting for Evaluate, about the new report, the growing number of drug approvals, and the challenges drugmakers face that could alter the outlook for the industry.

  • Harnessing Biology to Transform the Economy

    29/09/2016 Duração: 25min

    The growing promise to harness biology to address environmental, agricultural, health, and energy needs is fueling a new bioeconomy. The state of engineering biology will be on display at the SynBioBeta SF 2016 conference in South San Francisco October 4 through October 6. We spoke to John Cumbers, founder of SynBioBeta, about the state of the industry, the challenges it faces, and the long-term potential it holds for transforming our manufacturing sector.

  • How a Predictive Diagnostic Can Reduce Preterm Births

    21/09/2016 Duração: 26min

    About 380,000 infants in the United States—about one in 10— are born prematurely each year. Preterm births, defined as any birth before 37 weeks of pregnancy, is the leading cause of death for infants and puts these babies at greater risk for cerebral palsy, respiratory and cardiovascular complications, and delays in development. Sera Prognostics has developed a predictive diagnostic that can identify pregnant woman at risk of delivering prematurely, allowing for interventions. We spoke to Greg Critchfield, CEO of Sera Prognostics, about the test, how it works, and what it take to get doctors to adopt the test and payers to reimburse for it.

  • Building Better Drugs for Psychiatric Disorders by Targeting the Causes

    15/09/2016 Duração: 17min

    The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies are leading a $15.4 million effort to develop new systems for quickly screening libraries of drugs for potential effectiveness against schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The National Institute of Mental Health is funding the work. We spoke to Hongjun Song, professor of neurology and neurosciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, about the effort, the challenges of understanding the underlying biological mechanism of these disorders, and how the consortium expects to change the development of drugs to treat mental illnesses.

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