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U.S. FDA grants orphan drug designation to adaptimmune’s T-cell therapy targeting NY-ESO

 

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Adaptimmune Therapeutics plc announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s Office of Orphan Products Development has granted orphan drug designation for the company’s affinity enhanced T-cell therapy targeting NY-ESO for the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma, a solid tumor cancer.

There are approximately 50 different types of soft tissue sarcomas. The American Cancer Society estimates that, in 2016, about 12,310 new soft tissue sarcomas will be diagnosed (6,980 cases in males and 5,330 cases in females) in the United States, and approximately 4,990 Americans (2,680 males and 2,310 females) are expected to die of soft tissue sarcomas.

Adaptimmune’s affinity enhanced T-cell therapeutic candidates are novel cancer immunotherapies that have been engineered to target and destroy cancer cells by strengthening a patient’s natural T-cell response. T-cells are a type of white blood cell that play a central role in a person’s immune response. Adaptimmune’s goal is to harness the power of the T-cell and, through its multiple therapeutic candidates, significantly impact cancer treatment and clinical outcomes of patients with solid and hematologic cancers.

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