logo
Treating Autoimmune Diseases: Four New Technologies To Watch

Treating Autoimmune Diseases: Four New Technologies To Watch

Forbes23-04-2025
Scientists from Belgian biotech company etherna, who are working on inverse RNA vaccines for ... More multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune diseases.
For decades, the only option available to patients suffering from debilitating autoimmune diseases, which attack the body's own tissues, has been to suppress the immune system with corticosteroids or anti-cytokine antibodies.
But while these treatments can ease symptoms, they come with a hidden long-term cost. Dampening the immune system's normal function over many years makes patients more vulnerable to opportunistic infections and cancer, creating a significant need for more sophisticated alternatives.
As a venture investor following emerging trends in public health, I've been particularly concerned by data indicating that these diseases are on the rise. According to the U.S. National Health Council, rates of autoimmunity are approaching epidemic levels, with most autoimmune diseases being diagnosed in growing numbers in recent decades.
The causes are not fully understood, but they're thought to range from changing lifestyle factors such as dietary patterns and sleep deprivation, to increasing exposure to harmful environmental toxins or viruses.
We need better therapies, and fortunately, there are a few emerging technologies which could change the treatment landscape.
CAR T-cell therapy is best known as a form of cancer immunotherapy, but it could also be a way of eliminating autoreactive B cells, a category of immune cells which underpin many autoimmune diseases by producing autoantibodies which target the body's own cells and tissues, causing damage.
Back in 2022, researchers at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany showed that administering CAR T-cell therapy to five people with severe lupus could completely remove the aberrant B cells, sending all of the patients into remission.
But CAR T-cell therapy is not easy to scale for thousands of patients. However, a company called Coding Bio is working on an approach which CEO and co-founder Simon Bornschein describes as a more 'off-the-shelf' solution, developing so-called immune engager molecules which can help trigger precision killing of the autoreactive B cells.
'A lot of companies are moving towards such immune engagers, as they can be manufactured at scale to address a large patient population,' says Bornschein.
One of the main causes of autoimmune diseases are immunoglobulin G (IgG) autoantibodies. Many patients are thus treated with intensive and laborious infusions of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) therapy.
While IVIG can be effective, it is often difficult for patients to tolerate because it is administered in large doses, with infusion sessions of up to eight hours at a time. One of Leaps by Bayer's portfolio companies, Nuvig Therapeutics, is working on a more effective and convenient alternative.
One of the reasons that IVIG works is because there is a crucial fraction of the IgGs present in IVIG that are sialylated. Sialylation, or the addition of a sugar group to the antibody, alters where these antibodies eventually bind, helping switch the immune environment back to a more anti-inflammatory state.
Pamela Conley, co-founder and CSO at Nuvig, says that the company has identified a way to capture the anti-inflammatory activity of sialylated IgGs in a novel drug. The resulting molecule, named NVG-2089, has been found to be 10-20 times more potent than IVIG in preclinical studies and so can be administered in much lower doses. 'It means it can be a much shorter therapy, smaller volumes, and an easier infusion to tolerate because of the increased potency of our drug,' she says.
Nuvig has since completed a Phase 1 study in healthy volunteers which showed NVG-2089 to be safe and well-tolerated and are now moving into a Phase 2 trial in patients with a neuro-autoimmune disease called chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.
While normal RNA vaccines train the immune system to recognize and attack antigens associated with a virus or cancer cells, a growing number of companies have been considering a so-called 'inverse vaccine.'
Because autoimmune diseases are caused by autoantibodies binding to autoantigens on the body's own cells, their concept is to use RNA to train the immune system to forget these autoantigens. This can be done through boosting the numbers of regulatory T cells, which suppress a particular immune response, linked to a particular autoantigen.
Belgian-based biotech etherna is now collaborating with Hasselt University with the aim of using this concept to develop a mRNA-based treatment for multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune diseases. 'The benefit of amplifying disease-suppressing Tregs is the potential to restore self-tolerance to autoantigens, resulting in long-term therapeutic effects,' says Bernard Sagaert, CEO of etherna.
Instead of changing the function of IgG antibodies, we could also just use enzymes to break them down into fragments, an approach known as antibody cleaving.
This strategy is being pioneered by a Swedish biotech called Hansa Biopharma, which is running a series of clinical trials in various autoimmune conditions where disease progression is linked to IgG antibodies mistakenly launching inflammatory attacks on the body's organ systems.
The company has developed two enzymes, imlifidase and HNSA-5487, which are capable of rapidly degrading IgG antibodies and inhibiting their activity. 'We believe that they have the potential to address unmet need in IgG-driven autoimmune diseases where faster acting treatment options are needed,' says Hitto Kaufmann, Hansa Biopharma's Chief R&D Officer.
The company recently completed patient enrollment for a global Phase 3 trial in anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) disease, a rare condition where the immune system mistakenly attacks the kidneys and the lungs. An intriguing Phase 2 trial of imlifidase in addition to IVIG treatment, showed positive results in patients with Guillain Barré Syndrome, helping them recover muscle strength and independent walking ability.
As these emerging therapies develop, I'm cautiously optimistic that we're nearing some major breakthroughs in our decades-long quest to stop the body attacking its own tissues and organs, which will hopefully allow people diagnosed with these debilitating illnesses to live longer and better lives.
Thank you to David Cox for additional research and reporting on this article.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NASA intern stole $21M of Lunar to use during sex to have ‘sex on the moon'
NASA intern stole $21M of Lunar to use during sex to have ‘sex on the moon'

New York Post

time5 days ago

  • New York Post

NASA intern stole $21M of Lunar to use during sex to have ‘sex on the moon'

He promised her the Moon — and meant it. More than 23 years ago, NASA intern Thad Roberts hatched a daring plan to steal 17 pounds of moon rocks and a meteorite from Houston's Johnson Space Center — priceless samples from every Apollo mission, locked in a 600-pound safe and valued at $21 million, according to the FBI. Only 24 years old with a triple major in physics, geology, and geophysics at the University of Utah, with a wife he was supporting back in Utah, and financially struggling, Roberts thought his plan was foolproof. Advertisement 4 Thad Roberts orchestrated a daring theft from NASA's Johnson Space Center, stealing a safe containing lunar samples. The first step was finding a buyer. With help from friend Gordon McWhorter, Roberts connected online with a potential Belgian purchaser willing to pay $1,000 to $5,000 per gram. The buyer, however, grew suspicious and alerted the FBI, who instructed him to keep talking while they investigated. Advertisement Around this time, he met Tiffany Fowler, a 22-year-old NASA intern conducting stem cell research. Their friendship quickly became romantic, and after three weeks, they moved in together. When Roberts revealed his plan, Fowler agreed to help. They recruited another NASA intern, Shae Saur, and one night the trio used their NASA IDs to slip into the Johnson Space Center, making off with the entire safe. 4 Lunar gloveboxes are seen in the Lunar Lab where moon rocks are examined, during a media day hosted by NASA to preview the OSIRIS-REx Sample Lab at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, on July 24, 2023. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement Back at the hotel, they cracked it open with a power saw. On July 20, 2002—the 33rd anniversary of the first moon landing—Roberts and Fowler drove to Orlando to meet family members of the Belgian buyer. While waiting, Roberts placed moon rocks beneath the bed covers, later claiming the couple had 'sex on the moon' as a symbolic gesture. 'I take some of the moon rocks and I put them underneath the blanket on the bed… I never said anything but I'm sure she could feel it,' he told CBS News in 2012. Advertisement 4 The lunar samples were valued at up to $21 million. AFP via Getty Images 'It was more about the symbol of what we were doing, basically having sex on the moon. It's more uncomfortable than not, but it wasn't about the comfort at that point. It was about the expression. And no one had ever had sex on the moon before. I think we can safely say that.' When they met with the supposed buyers, they were instead greeted by undercover FBI agents. The moon rocks were recovered from their hotel room, though the FBI reported they were now 'virtually useless to the scientific community' and that the heist destroyed three decades of handwritten research notes by a NASA scientist. After his arrest, Roberts admitted to also stealing dinosaur bones and fossils from the Natural History Museum in Salt Lake City. 4 Roberts was sentenced to eight years in federal prison, serving only six. MediaNews Group via Getty Images When asked why he stole the moon rocks, Robert told CBS News he 'wasn't' looking at it like stealing at the time. 'We weren't going to take this money we were getting from it to go buy a yacht or lots of cars or a big house. We were gonna live just the small kind of lifestyle we were, but fund science that might change the world, you know?' he said. In the end, Roberts, Fowler, and Saur all pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit theft and interstate transportation of stolen property. Advertisement Roberts was sentenced to eight years in federal prison, serving six. Fowler and Saur each received 180 days of house arrest and 150 hours of community service. McWhorter, convicted at trial, was given six years in prison. Roberts and Fowler never saw each other again.

US plans to incinerate $9.7M in USAID contraceptives
US plans to incinerate $9.7M in USAID contraceptives

The Hill

time08-08-2025

  • The Hill

US plans to incinerate $9.7M in USAID contraceptives

The Trump administration plans to incinerate more than $9.7 million worth of U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded contraceptives that have been lying in a warehouse in Belgium since President Trump's order freezing foreign aid and shutting down USAID. The U.S. government is spending more than $160,000 to burn the mix of birth control pills, shots, implants, and IUDs at a facility in France that destroys medical waste, according to The New York Times. A spokesperson for the Department of State did not immediately respond to questions from The Hill on when the incineration will take place. State in a statement confirmed to the Times that there was a plan to incinerate the products. State also said the products to be incinerated were 'aborifacient,' meaning they induce abortions. But the Times reported that none of the supplies registered for storage in the Belgian warehouse fit that description, and USAID under the law isn't allowed to purchase products that induce abortions. European governments and activist groups have decried the decision. The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), a nonprofit, estimates incinerating contraceptives will leave 1.4 million women and girls across Africa with access to life-saving care. For the past nine years, USAID has spent $607.5 million on global family planning and reproductive programs, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Those funds have helped operate family planning and reproductive health programs in more than 30 countries. France is currently under pressure to stop the impending destruction of the stockpile from French reproductive rights groups and family planning organizations, although officials said earlier this month they cannot legally seize the contraceptives. IPPF estimates that 77 percent of the supplies are earmarked for five African countries: Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Mali, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DNC). More than 40 percent of the soon-to-be destroyed supplies were meant for Tanzania alone, according to the nonprofit. IPPF wrote in a statement the supplies are being 'needlessly and egregiously' destroyed and that many of the contraceptives will not expire until 2027 at the earliest and 2029 at the latest. 'This decision to destroy ready-to-use commodities is appalling and extremely wasteful,' said Marie-Evelyne Petrus-Barry, Africa regional director of IPPF. 'These life-saving medical supplies were destined to countries where access to reproductive care is already limited, and in some cases, part of a broader humanitarian response, such as in the DRC.' Destroying the contraceptive supplies will result in 362,000 unintended pregnancies which can force some to seek out unsafe abortions, and will cause 161,000 unplanned births, according to the Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition (RHSC). IPPF estimates that once the contraceptives are destroyed, Tanzania will have more than 1 million fewer injectable contraceptives and 365,100 fewer implants to distribute—or about 28 percent of the country's total annual need. Mali will experience a shortage of more than 1,100,000 oral contraceptives and 95,800 implants or roughly 24 percent of the country's annual need. Zambia will have 48,400 fewer implants and 295,000 injectable contraceptives to distribute to women. In Kenya, nearly 14 percent of the country's annual contraceptive need will not be met, and more than 100,000 women will not be able to access contraceptive implants this year.

Trump administration plans to burn contraceptives
Trump administration plans to burn contraceptives

Boston Globe

time07-08-2025

  • Boston Globe

Trump administration plans to burn contraceptives

Advertisement However, last month it emerged that the US government had instead decided to burn the supplies, incurring a cost of more than $160,000 in transportation and incineration fees. 'USAID was allegedly dismantled to prevent future wastage and to deliver value for money for the American people,' said Sarah Shaw, the associate director of advocacy at MSI Reproductive Choices. 'It's just egregious that they're willing to waste $9 million worth of contraceptives that are so desperately needed.' She added, 'Women are going to die because they've not had access to those contraceptives.' The decision to destroy the contraceptives has created alarm in Brussels and France as politicians scramble to figure out if the supplies have physically left the warehouse and how they can prevent their destruction. The State Department confirmed in a statement that 'a preliminary decision was made to destroy certain' birth control products. It declined to say exactly why the decision was made or to specify the current location or status of the products. Advertisement The department said the contraceptives that had been flagged for destruction were 'abortifacient,' meaning that they work by inducing abortion. None of the supplies registered for storage in the Belgian warehouse met that description, and USAID was prohibited by law from purchasing such products. The department did not reply to repeated requests for clarification. While earlier reports suggested that the supplies would be destroyed by the end of July in France, European governments, advocacy groups, and an American congressional office all said they did not know whether the burning had begun. It is not clear why the government would not sell or donate the contraceptives. The department, in its statement, referred to policies preventing the US government from providing aid to overseas nongovernmental organizations that provide or help with access to abortions, based on a rule that the Trump administration reinstated. The United States has recently refused to work with the UN Population Fund, citing other government policies. The dissolution of USAID has created a huge gap in the supply chain of contraceptives for the world's poorest countries, because the United States was a major donor. Siobhan Perkins, who was the procurement adviser for the USAID contraception supply chain, said the products slated for destruction were enough to prevent approximately 362,000 unintended pregnancies, 110,000 unsafe abortions, and 718 maternal deaths. The contraceptive supplies in the Belgian warehouse would have been enough to supply Senegal for three years, Shaw, of the reproductive health group, said. Most of the products have a remaining shelf life of several years. Advertisement European governments are still hoping to stop the incineration. The Belgian government's foreign office has been in talks with its American counterparts about an alternative plan. 'Foreign Affairs is exploring all possible avenues to prevent the destruction of these stocks, including their temporary relocation,' Florinda Baleci, a spokesperson for the department, said in an email on Tuesday. She said that she could not confirm or deny whether the stock was still in Geel and that Belgium had 'not officially received any information to the contrary.' Attempts at negotiating a solution have, so far, been unsuccessful. The UN population agency spent weeks in April trying to buy the contraceptives from the United States' contractor, said Udara Bandara, the UN official handling those negotiations. He said the American side missed an April 25 deadline to discuss the terms of the deal and then missed another deadline on April 30. On May 8, the contractor wrote to ask if the UN group was still interested in the purchase. It was. Bandara said he never heard back. If the Belgian talks fall through, it is not clear what else European officials can do. Politicians on the left in France have urged the government to seize the stockpile. 'We cannot allow an anti-choice ideology to be imposed on us within our own borders,' Marine Tondelier, the head of France's Green party, wrote last month in an open letter to President Emmanuel Macron. But France's government has suggested that it cannot legally seize the drugs. And while Mélissa Camara, a French member of the European Parliament for the Greens, wrote that the European Commission was asking it to intervene diplomatically, the commission has merely said it is monitoring the situation and exploring solutions. Advertisement This article originally appeared in

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store