Antibody therapeutics research and development by the biopharmaceutical industry has undergone remarkable expansion in the past ~ 5 years. Over 100 novel antibodies entered first clinical studies in 2015, and the overall clinical pipeline now includes ~480 antibodies. Importantly for patients, these molecules are progressing through the phases of clinical testing, and being approved for marketing. Over 50 antibody therapeutics for a variety of diseases are in Phase 3 studies. A record number (9 new products) were granted first marketing approvals in the United States or European Union in 2015, and the evidence suggests that a larger number may be approved in 2016. A new presentation now available to Society members shows the number of novel antibodies that entered clinical studies recently, how many are in the three clinical phases, and which antibodies might be approved in 2016. Log in to get the presentation. Not a member? Please join!
Comprehensive meeting report now available to members!
The 26th Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics meeting, the annual meeting of The Antibody Society, united over 800 participants from all over the world in San Diego from 6-10 December 2015. The latest innovations and advances in antibody research and development were discussed, covering a myriad of antibody-related topics by more than 100 speakers, who were carefully selected by The Antibody Society. As a prelude, attendees could join the pre-conference training course focusing, amongst others, on the engineering and enhancement of antibodies and antibody-like scaffolds, bispecific antibody engineering and adaptation to generate chimeric antigen receptor constructs. The main event covered four days of scientific sessions that included antibody effector functions, reproducibility of research and diagnostic antibodies, new developments in antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), preclinical and clinical ADC data, new technologies and applications for bispecific antibodies, antibody therapeutics for non-cancer and orphan indications, antibodies to harness the cellular immune system, building comprehensive IgVH-gene repertoires through discovering, confirming and cataloging new germline IgVH genes, and overcoming resistance to clinical immunotherapy. The Antibody Society’s special session focused on “Antibodies to watch” in 2016. Another special session put the spotlight on the limitations of the new definitions for the assignment of antibody international nonproprietary names introduced by the World Health Organization. The convention concluded with workshops on computational antibody design and on the promise and challenges of using next-generation sequencing for antibody discovery and engineering from synthetic and in vivo libraries.
Find the full meeting report in the Members Only section.
‘Antibodies to watch in 2016’ now free
The current late-stage clinical pipeline includes over 50 antibody therapeutics that are listed in the latest installment of the ‘Antibodies to watch’ article series. ‘Antibodies to watch in 2016’ is now freely available on the mAbs website.
mAbs is a journal of the Society, and a special subscription rate of US $63 is available for Society members. To receive the special rate, contact the publisher Taylor & Francis at 1 (800) 354-1420 (Fax: (215) 207-0046) or customerservice@taylorandfrancis.com