This Company Is Focused on Treg-Enhancing Therapies - Could This Be Medicine's Next Frontier?

Texas-based biotech company, Coya Therapeutics COYA, is positioning itself as a leader in a promising area of the medical field. When the father of company CEO and founder Howard Berman was diagnosed with dementia, Berman became inspired to turn his expertise in neuroscience towards developing a treatment that could help his father and others like him. Now the company has conducted trials that show the promise of a new therapy to slow or stop neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinsons, Alzehimers, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), as well as other autoimmune and metabolic diseases.

Cell and gene therapy (CGT) is a growing biomed market. It is currently worth over $18 billion and was forecasted to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22.41% by Precedence Research, bringing its value to over $93 billion by 2030. 

Regulatory T cell (Treg) therapy is a developing field in the cell therapy market. It has been inspired by the successes of Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapies for treating cancer. CAR-T treatments, which engineer the immune system to respond to the cancerous cells, have seen high complete remission rates in cancer patients suffering from cancers like B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). 

Treg-based therapies look to apply the innovations of CAR-T therapy to other diseases. It's an exciting field, with around $3 billion raised by investors over the past decade. More than 180 trials for Treg therapy have been registered in the past twenty years, however the majority of these trials are still pre-clinical.

While many companies involved in Treg-based therapy remain in the pre-clinical stage, one is already bringing data to the table. Coya Therapeutics is advancing multiple Treg-based therapy modalities and is one of the most clinically advanced companies in the Treg field.

Coya Is Tackling Inflammation At Its Source

Many neurodegenerative diseases, including ALS and Parkinson's Disease, are often driven by widespread inflammation, resulting from a malfunction of Treg cells. Coya Therapeutics is investigating Treg’s potential for reducing inflammation by modifying the Treg cell to make it functional again and down-regulate the cytokine inflammation. 

The company believes that restoring Treg cells’ functionality could either slow or stop the spread of these diseases. Unlike some others in the market, Coya has been able to bring its therapies to the clinic. With its Coya-101 therapy, it has validated this approach for cell therapy, with two trials that either slowed or stopped the disease’s progression.

With its Coya 302 therapy, it is also looking to add biologics to its portfolio. In two proof of concept studies, the company has identified two biologics which treat Alzheimers and ALS, and biomarkers indicate patients seeing some recovery for the disease. Also biologic treatments, which are derived from living organisms as opposed to synthetic chemicals, have the advantage of being both cheaper and more scalable than traditional treatments. Biologics can be developed as “off the shelf” therapies, as opposed to the more time-consuming autologous treatments that are specific to each patient.

Other companies working in the TREG space include Sonoma Biotherapeutics, which has received investment from the venture arm of Eli Lilly and Company LLY, GentiBio, which has seen investment from the venture arm of Novartis NVS, and Abata Therapeutics.

Treg-based therapies are a unique way to target inflammation and potentially reverse the spread of the disease at the cellular level. Currently there are only two FDA-approved drugs on the market to treat ALS and Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and they don’t seem to halt the disease. While studies have sought to reduce inflammation in ALS patients using drugs like cyclooxygenase–2, or through experimental therapies that use intracerebral and intrathecal delivery, these approaches are either too invasive or don’t appear to reduce inflammation. Coya believes its novel cell therapy could see positive results, just as CAR-T treatment saw cancer remission rates without the negative side effects of treatments like chemotherapy.

Want to learn more about Coya Therapeutics and its Treg therapies? Visit its website.

This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investing advice.

Featured photo by Julia Koblitz on Unsplash

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