How Gilead Sciences Is Betting Big on Gene Editing

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It's no secret that Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: GILD) wants to be a big player in cancer treatment, or that it's prepared to use its deep pockets to do it. Last year, the company spent $11.9 billion to get its hands on Kite Pharma's Yescarta, a gene therapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma. As far back as 2014, its cancer interest was evidenced by the launch of Zydelig, its treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Furthermore, Gilead Sciences revealed on its fourth-quarter conference call last month that it wasn't done bulking up its cancer pipeline and that it was especially interested in gene editing.

This week, the company put its money where its mouth is by inking a collaboration with Sangamo Therapeutics (NASDAQ: SGMO) that's potentially worth billions of dollars. Here's what you should know.

Game-changing treatments

Gene therapy that supercharges the immune system to fight cancer is the latest thing in cancer treatment. However, gene editing may prove to be an even better solution to winning the war against cancer.

Scientists in lab coats collaborating in front of a monitor displaying a double helix.
Scientists in lab coats collaborating in front of a monitor displaying a double helix.

Image source: Getty Images.

In 2014, the FDA approved the immuno-oncology drug Opdivo for use in solid tumor cancer, and in 2017, it approved two chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies -- Yescarta and Novartis' Kymriah -- for use in blood cancer patients.

These immuno-oncology drugs deliver game-changing efficacy and manageable safety, but they're imperfect treatments. Opdivo and other drugs with the same mechanism of action, including Keytruda, don't work for everyone, and some patients develop resistance to them. Yescarta and Opdivo yield six-month response rates of about 40% in non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients, but they carry the risk of life-threatening cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity.

The drawbacks associated with these immuno-oncology approaches show there's still plenty of reason to continue innovating so that we can produce even better cancer treatments. Perhaps those better treatments will come courtesy of gene editing.

Technology that's providing us with a greater understanding of the relationship between genetic abnormalities and cancer is revealing DNA targets that, if manipulated, might control cancer.

The concept of rewriting genes sounds like science fiction, but it may be closer to reality than you think. For example, early stage research is under way at CRISPR Therapeutics, Editas Medicine, and Intellia Therapeutics that is based on an approach used by bacteria to cut the DNA of an invading virus to keep it from replicating. This approach -- CRISPR/Cas9 -- could eventually be used to regulate proteins in humans to tackle various diseases, including cancer.