FDA Rare Pediatric Disease and Orphan Drug Designations for ST-01156

“SEED is rapidly transitioning into a clinical-stage company, with the planned IND filing in the next few months for ST-01156, our novel and potentially best-in-class RBM39 degrader. This marks a significant milestone in our four-year journey to bring innovative therapies to patients,” said Dr. Lan Huang, Co-Founder, Chairman, and CEO of SEED and BeyondSpring. “RBM39 is a validated target to address cancers with high unmet medical needs, as highlighted in a recent Nature Reviews Drug Discovery article. At SEED, we are committed to improving patient outcomes through pioneering science and rational drug development.”

Share:

More News

“Initiation of the TEADCO Phase 1b/2 basket trial is another important milestone for the ODM-212 clinical development program and reflects our commitment to patients with difficult-to-treat cancers,” said Professor Outi Vaarala, Executive Vice President, Research & Development at Orion. “Together with the ongoing TEADES study, TEADCO highlights the versatility of

“In this study, tovecimig showed an impressive overall response rate which translated into a clinically meaningful and highly statistically significant improvement in PFS for patients with previously treated BTC. The remarkable 56% reduction in the risk of disease progression is unprecedented in this patient population without an actionable mutation in

“We are encouraged to see taletrectinib (IBTROZI) added to the NCCN Guidelines® for CNS Cancers given its demonstrated high rates of intracranial response that are durable in ROS1+ NSCLC patients with brain metastases,” said David Hung, M.D., Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer of Nuvation Bio. “Given the prevalence of

Daniel Getts, Ph.D., CEO of CREATE, added “MT-304 is proof of what our platform can do, and what our team can execute. Our mRNA-LNP leadership enables us to move from concept to clinic with remarkable speed. Just last weekend at AACR, we presented compelling preclinical data across our in vivo