Venture capital for US seed and Series A cell and gene therapy companies has collapsed from a historical high of 17-21% of deals to only 7% this year. The sharp decline is driven by a confluence of factors including patient deaths, persistent manufacturing challenges, and growing regulatory uncertainty.
The FDA is shifting policy to no longer allow reliance on immunogenicity data (immunobridging) for approving new or updated vaccines. This move toward requiring full clinical efficacy trials will make it harder to combat evolving pathogens and would have prevented past approvals of key vaccines like those for HPV and Ebola.
In stark contrast to the US, Chinese investors are accelerating funding for early-stage cell and gene therapies, which now account for 29% of seed/Series A rounds. These firms are specifically backing technologies like NK cell therapies, which have fallen out of favor in the West, creating a divergent global innovation strategy.
After several tau-targeting antibodies failed, including J&J's pazdenimab, confidence in blocking extracellular tau is waning. The field's new hope is Biogen’s Biv80, an antisense drug that prevents tau protein production at the mRNA level, a mechanism that has shown potential to reverse pathology in early data.
Novo Nordisk ran a nearly 4,000-patient Phase 3 Alzheimer's trial despite publicly stating it had a low probability of success. This strategy consumes valuable patient resources, raising ethical questions about whether a smaller, definitive Phase 2 study would have been a more responsible approach for the broader research ecosystem.
