Prana’s COO Diane Angus, Head Of Research Robert Cherny On Prana’s Unique Mechanism Of Action In Neurodegenerative Drug Development: An Interview With PharmAsia News (Part 2 of 2)
• By PharmAsia News
Established in 1997, Melbourne, Australia-based biotech company Prana has developed a library of chemical compounds that addresses the role of biological metals in human disease. The company's lead compound PB2 in Alzheimer's disease completed Phase IIa clinical trials, and the company recently announced a preclinical candidate for Parkinson's disease. "Prana" is Sanskrit for "moving force," or "life force," which sustains life and diminishes as humans age. The company has formed its business strategy on neurological disorders that result from interactions between selected metals and target proteins as the brain ages. COO Diane Angus and Head of Research Robert Cherny sat down with PharmAsia News in Australia to talk about Prana's unique approach to developing compounds in the neurodegenerative space.
Read the full article – start your free trial today!
Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Scrip for daily insights
Editor’s note: This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.
Editor’s note: We are conducting a survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. If there are any changes you’d like to see in the coverage topics, content format or the method in which you receive and access Scrip, or if you love it how it is, now is the time to have your voice heard.
CEO Paul Stoffels said gaining US clearance for an IND for its novel CAR-T product was demanding, but now opens up a pathway towards a pivotal study starting in 2025.
A final rejection of Leqembi could also spell the same fate for Lilly’s rival drug but public outcry and demand for Alzheimer’s therapies might force the regulator’s hand
The list of small-cap companies with the fastest-rising share prices so far this year is dominated by Chinese companies, underscoring their growing contribution to the global biopharma ecosystem.
Soleno Therapeutics will raise about $200m gross proceeds from an offering of 2.35m of its common stock to fund the commercialization of Vykat XR, which became the first drug for Prader-Willi syndrome to gain US approval on March 26.
Glenmark’s managing director talks about IGI’s billion dollar-plus deal with AbbVie, ISB-2001’s striking data, the BEAT platform, other "exciting" pipeline assets and the "blood, sweat and tears" to get to this stage.