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RARECast

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RARECast is a Global Genes podcast hosted by award-winning journalist Daniel Levine. It focuses on the intersection of rare disease with business, science, and policy.

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Episodes

Chiesi Charges Ahead in Rare Disease

Earlier this year Chiesi Farmaceutici established Chiesi Global Rare Diseases, a new business unit to advance research and product development for rare and ultra-rare diseases. The unit, headquartered in Boston, has an initial focus on lysosomal storage, hematologic, and ophthalmologic disorders. We spoke to Giacomo Chiesi, head of Chiesi Global Rare Diseases, about the company’s approach to building its rare disease pipeline, its experimental therapy for Fabry disease, and how it fits in with t...

May 06, 202016 min

Targeting the Metabolism of Rare Cancers

Rafael Pharmaceuticals is focused on developing therapies that act on the metabolism of rare cancers. It designs drugs that attack regulatory processes that are unique to cancer cells and not found in healthy ones. Its lead drug candidate, devimistat, targets enzymes that are involved in cancer cell energy metabolism and found in the mitochondria of cancer cells. We spoke to Sanjeev Luther, president and CEO of Rafael, about the company’s lead indication of pancreatic cancer, its drug discovery ...

Apr 29, 202022 min

Unlocking Bryson's Brain

When Keith McArthur’s son Bryson was born, he was a happy and loving baby. Soon, though, Bryson began missing developmental milestones and doctors determined he had a neurological disorder. After nearly a decade, Bryson was diagnosed with a variant in his GRIN1 gene. Keith McArthur, who today is CEO and head of science for the CureGRIN Foundation, tells Bryson’s story in an eight-part podcast series produced with the CBC called Unlocking Bryson’s Brain (Hyperurl.co/Bryson). We spoke to McArthur ...

Apr 22, 202024 min

Living Therapies for Chronic Conditions

There are a number of rare disease where a genetic mutation results in the deficiency of an enzyme or other critical protein that can lead to a progressive or life-threatening condition. Patients have been treated with the chronic administration of recombinant versions of the proteins they lack. While this provides benefit, it requires regular infusions or self-administered shots, is costly, and disruptive. Sigilon is developing what it calls “Shielded Living Therapeutics,” encased cells that ca...

Apr 15, 202033 min

A One-to-Many Approach to Gene Therapy for Retinal Disease

Gene therapies to treat retinal diseases promise to reverse blinding conditions, but the approach most gene developers take is to replace a mutated gene underlying a genetic disease with a functional version of that gene. The problem is that this approach can only address a narrow set of patients with each gene therapy. Ocugen, which Is developing gene therapies for eye diseases, believes it can treat a range of rare retinal conditions with a single therapy by introducing a functional gene that ...

Apr 08, 202023 min

Targeting an Immune Switch in Rare Diseases

WHIM syndrome is a rare, inherited, primary immunodeficiency disease caused by mutations to the CXCR4 receptor gene. Because of the role CXCR4 plays in the immune system, it is implicated in a number of rare diseases. X4 Pharmaceuticals, a company founded by rare disease pioneer Henri Termeer and other Genzyme alums, is developing a pipeline of CXCR4-targeted therapies. We spoke to Paula Ragan, co-founder, president and CEO of X4, about WHIM syndrome, the role CXCR4 plays in the immune system, a...

Apr 01, 202018 min

Targeting the Regulatory Genome to Treat Rare Blood Diseases

Syros Pharmaceuticals is developing a platform for targeting the regulatory genome with therapies to address diseases at a fundamental level. At the end of last year, the company entered into a collaboration with Global Blood Therapeutics to develop new therapies for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia. Under the collaboration, Syros is using its platform to discover drugs that turn on the production of fetal hemoglobin as a way to treat these rare, hereditary, blood disorders. The producti...

Mar 25, 202024 min

A Reborn Forma Therapeutics Focuses on Rare Blood Diseases and Cancer

Forma Therapeutics had long been a platform-based drug company that used high-throughput screening to discover new drugs that would be developed by partners. After many years, Forma began transitioning to become a fully integrated therapeutics company focused on rare blood disorders and cancer. It brought in Frank Lee, who had been a senior vice president of global product strategy at Genentech, as CEO to help execute the company’s new plan. We spoke to Lee about why he joined Forma, the company...

Mar 18, 202021 min

Targeting Genetic Diseases at Their Root Cause

FSHD is a rare, progressive, muscle wasting disease that affects the face, shoulders, and arms before advancing to the lower body. Like many rare conditions, it is caused by an underlying genetic mutation. Fulcrum Therapeutics is developing an experimental therapy for FSHD, the lead candidate in a pipeline of medicines that target the root causes of genetic diseases. We spoke to Robert Gould, president and CEO of Fulcrum, about FSHD, the company’s experimental therapy to treat the condition, and...

Mar 11, 202020 min

Targeting Hormone Dysregulation in Prader-Willi Syndrome

Prader-Willi syndrome is the most common genetic cause of life-threatening childhood obesity. It is a rare and complex condition that is characterized by unrelenting hunger, or hyperphagia, as well as intellectual disability, short stature, and incomplete sexual development. Millendo Therapeutics is developing livoletide, an experimental, first-in-class therapy that treats hyperphagia by targeting the underlying hormone dysregulation of Prader-Willi syndrome. We spoke to Julia Owens, CEO of Mill...

Mar 04, 202021 min

Rare Disease Advocates Take to the Hill

As rare disease patients and advocates seek to raise awareness around the globe for World Rare Disease Day at the end of February, one notable place they will gather is on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. It’s become an annual tradition for rare disease advocates to talk face-to-face with lawmakers to bring the abstractions of rare disease down to a human level and speak about the needs patients and their caregivers face. We spoke to Steve Silvestri, director of public policy for the Everylife F...

Feb 25, 202022 min

Targeting a Common Link in Otherwise Different Rare Diseases

Fibroblast growth factors are a group cell signaling proteins that play a critical role in growth and development. They have been implicated in achondroplasia, the most common genetic form of dwarfism, but these growth factors are also involved in a number of rare cancers. QED Therapeutics, a BridgeBio company, is developing infigratinib, an experimental tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets multiple fibroblast growth factors, for both achondroplasia and certain forms of bile duct and bladder c...

Feb 19, 202024 min

Bringing Clinical Trials to Patients

Conducting rare disease clinical trials can be challenging because of small and geographically dispersed groups of patients who may face difficulties in travelling to trial sites. Regulatory requirements for cell and gene therapies, even if only administered once, require long-term follow ups that extend for many years and provide an ongoing burden for patients. Jeeva Informatics Solutions is seeking to address those challenges through it harnessing of digital health technologies to bring the tr...

Feb 12, 202035 min

Crowdsourcing Therapeutic Approaches for an Ultra-Rare Disease

Terry Pirovolakis became immersed in the world of rare disease after his son Michael was diagnosed with spastic paraplegia 50, an ultra-rare and progressive neurodegenerative disease. Later this month, interdisciplinary teams from around the world will gather as part of a 30-day hackathon to develop therapeutic strategies for Michael’s condition. We spoke to Pirovolakis about Michael’s disease, how the hackathon will work, and why he’s trying to turn this into a sustainable model for other peopl...

Feb 05, 202018 min

Delivering Oligonucleotide Therapies to Any Cell Type

David Giljohann likens his company’s spherical nucleic acid (SNA) constructs to Koosh balls. But instead of having elastic strings extending from their core, this new class of immunomodulatory and gene regulating drugs are covered with nucleic acids that stick out in all directions. The arrangement allows these oligonucleotides to be taken up by all cell types and can be delivered throughout the body allowing them to overcome some of the limitations of existing nucleic acid therapies. We spoke t...

Jan 29, 202022 min

Protalix Looks Beyond Biobetters

Protalix Biotherapeutics plant cell-based platform has been a point of differentiation for the company, a faster and more scalable way of producing protein therapeutics. The company first product, an enzyme replacement therapy for Gaucher disease, offered a proof of its approach. The company is pursuing therapies for Fabry disease and cystic fibrosis, as well as inflammatory diseases, but it is also in the process of rethinking its strategy of biobetters. We spoke to Dror Bashan, CEO of Protalix...

Jan 22, 202024 min

Driving N-of-1 Therapies for Ultra-Rare Disease Patients

Antisense pioneer and Ionis Pharmaceuticals Executive Chairman Stanley Crooke has launched a nonprofit to design and deliver custom RNA-targeted therapies free of charge for individual patients with ultra-rare diseases. The organization, n-Lorem Foundation, will leverage Ionis’ technology platform to speed the discovery and development of custom antisense oligonucleotide. We spoke to Crooke about the genesis of n-Lorem, how it will determine whether to work with an individual patient or research...

Jan 15, 202028 min

Cutting the Time and Cost of Drug Discovery with MicroOrgans

One of the reasons for the clinical failure of drugs is that animal models often fall short as predictors of how a drug will work in humans. StemoniX believes it can cut the time and cost of drug discovery with its microOrgans that are engineered from human induced pluripotent stem cells. These microOrgans can be used for high throughput human drug screening without the need for drugs to enter a human subject. We spoke to Ping Yeh, CEO of StemoniX, about the company’s technology platform, how it...

Jan 08, 202028 min

Acquisition Combines Two Pipelines for Rare Skin Diseases

In December, Castle Creek Pharmaceutical Holdings completed its acquisition of Fibrocell. The deal brought together two companies developing therapies for rare skin disorders. We spoke to John Maslowski, CEO of the combined company, about its late-stage gene therapy in development for recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, how it differs from what is conventionally thought of as gene therapy, and what the acquisition does to advance the pipeline of the two companies.

Jan 02, 202029 min

Programming Cells to Produce Neuroprotective Factors to Treat ALS

ALS is a progressive neurodegenerative disease. As motor neurons die, people with the condition grow weaker and lose motor function. For most, death occurs within three to five years of diagnosis. Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics is conducting a phase 3 clinical trial of its autologous stem cell therapy that programs cells taken from patients to produce neuro-protective factors that promote the survival of neurons. We spoke to Ralph Kern, chief operating officer and chief medical officer of Brainsto...

Dec 26, 201919 min

Origin's Rapid Path to Seek Approval for Treatment of Ultra-Rare Metabolic Condition

Earlier this month, Origin Biosciences initiated a rolling submission with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for approval to market an experimental therapy to treat the ultra-rare metabolic condition molybdenum cofactor deficiency (MoCD) Type A. The condition manifests itself shortly after birth and leads to difficulty feeding and intractable seizures. Children with the condition have a median survival of three years and those who live longer suffer irreversible damage to their central nervo...

Dec 18, 201921 min

Developing a Common Language for Rare Diseases

There is no clear agreement as to what constitutes a rare disease, the actual number of rare diseases, and how individual rare diseases are defined. The lack of clarity on the matter is not just an academic issue. The consequences of this, say researchers, is that it slows the diagnostic process and impedes the development of needed therapies for these conditions. In a recent commentary in the journal Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, Melissa Haendel and her co-authors discuss their efforts to char...

Dec 11, 201925 min

Why Payers Lag Drug Developers and Regulators in Embracing Real-World Evidence

Drug developers and regulators are rapidly expanding the use of real-world evidence to develop rare disease therapies, but a new report finds payers are far less enthusiastic about incorporating such data in evaluating the value of therapies. The report from Syneos Health found payers have concerns about a lack of standards and have gaps in their understanding. We spoke to Meg Alexander, head of the reputation and risk management practice for Syneos Health, about the report, the important role r...

Dec 04, 201925 min

How a Brother's Love Is Forging a Path for Customized Therapies for Rare Disease Patients

Rich Horgan was attending Harvard Business School when he started reaching out to leading researchers to learn about his brother Terry’s condition Duchenne muscular dystrophy and what could be done to accelerate efforts to find a cure. Horgan was taken with the work of Timothy Yu to develop a customized therapy for a young girl with a form of the rare neurological condition Batten disease and founded the nonprofit organization Cure Rare Disease to develop customized therapies to treat patients w...

Nov 27, 201937 min

Addressing the Barriers to Accessing Experimental Therapies

Expanded access—a means of allowing people with serious and life-threatening conditions who fail to meet the enrollment criteria of a clinical trial to gain access to experimental therapies —has become an area of growing interest among the rare disease community. Though so-called right-to-try legislation has allowed patients to bypass regulators, it has done little to address the true obstacles patients face in getting access to these therapies. The Expanded Access Summit, which will be help Jan...

Nov 20, 201944 min

A Journey to Advocacy

When Kyle Bryant was diagnosed with the rare neuromuscular disease Friedreich's ataxia, it upended his sense of himself and his future as he began to wrestle with feelings of anger and depression. His life changed, though, when he read about a man with multiple sclerosis and his use of a recumbent trike, an adult-sized tricycle with a reclined seat. Bryant was inspired and shortly planned a cross-country bike trip with his father to raise money for Friedreich's ataxia research, a journey he chro...

Nov 13, 201925 min

Turning Chronic Illness into a Fashion Statement

Keisha Greaves was studying for a career in fashion and business when she was diagnosed with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, a rare and progressive neuromuscular condition. Rather than let her disease sidetrack her entrepreneurial vision, she has used it as a source of inspiration. She launched Girls Chronically Rock to produce T-shirts and adaptive clothing that celebrates and empowers people with chronic diseases. We spoke to Greaves about her experience with chronic illness, her vision for Gi...

Nov 06, 201921 min

Connecting Young Adults with Rare and Chronic Conditions

Seth Rotberg and Kristina Wolfe have each felt the isolation of entering adulthood in the shadow of rare and chronic disease. Rotberg, whose mother was diagnosed with Huntington’s disease, had genetic testing as a college student that showed he too will develop the neurodegenerative condition. Wolfe has grown up with type 1 diabetes. The two founded Our Odyssey to help young adults connect, find social and emotional support, and help them improve their quality of life. We spoke to Rotberg and Wo...

Oct 30, 201922 min

Helping Caregivers Care for Themselves

Cristol O'Loughlin grew up with three older brothers with the rare lysosomal storage disorder MPS II, or Hunter syndrome. The experience of seeing the demands on her mother led her to create Angel Aid Cares, an organization that seeks to support and connect caregivers, and help them learn to care for themselves while caring for others. We spoke to O’Loughlin about the challenges caregivers face, why they often neglect their own needs, and how her organization seeks to help them.

Oct 23, 201928 min

A Festival of Moving Pictures

Disorder: The Rare Disease Film Festival features films from around the world that capture the challenges of life with a rare disease. Launched in Boston in 2017, the festival will be held in San Francisco November 9 and 10 at the UCSF Mission Bay Campus. We spoke to Bo Bigelow, co-founder of Disorder, about what’s showing at this year’s festival, the power of film to raise awareness about rare disease, and how the event is intended to foster connections between patients and researchers.

Oct 16, 201924 min
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