The Readout Loud

STAT
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Dec 22, 2022 • 29min

239: 2022 in review, CEO indictments, & the year ahead

We look back on the biggest biotech stories of 2022 and how, despite some meaningful advances in Alzheimer's disease and gene therapy, the industry seems stuck in a sentiment rut. We also discuss the latest news in the life sciences, including a pair of indicted CEOs and the debate over how much an oft-debated new medicine should cost.
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Dec 15, 2022 • 36min

238: Leaky health data, ASH22, & what it takes to get booed by your peers

Katie Palmer, STAT's health tech correspondent, joins us to explain how the explosive popularity of telehealth is putting sensitive patient information into the hands of Facebook, TikTok, and other big tech firms. We also discuss the latest news in the life sciences, including highlights from a big hematology conference, a disastrous biotech IPO, and the downside of being a good quote.
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Dec 8, 2022 • 36min

237: The 'electric vehicles' of pharma, Illumina's boondoggle, & a Theranos sentencing

STAT's Elaine Chen joins us to explain how the escalating demand for a potent diabetes drug is putting patients with obesity in a difficult situation. We also discuss a curious trend in biotech investing, the future of Illumina, and another sentencing in the Theranos saga.
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Dec 1, 2022 • 33min

236: Wither PhRMA, Alzheimer's treatment data revealed, and the first fecal microbiome drug approval

STAT Washington correspondent Rachel Cohrs joins us to explain how PhRMA, the all-powerful lobbying group, lost its edge in a fight over drug-pricing negotiation. Damian gives us the inside scoop on CTAD, the big Alzheimer's disease research conference, where Eisai and Biogen presented groundbreaking data on their treatment called lecanemab. We also discuss the FDA approval of a microbiome drug for the treatment of a bowel disorder and the potential for a big acquisition of Horizon Therapeutics.
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Nov 17, 2022 • 29min

235: LIVE from the STAT Summit

How do Alzheimer’s drugs even work? Can biotech people bake? And do we even like one another? Recorded live from the 2022 STAT Summit, we discuss the failure of an Alzheimer’s disease treatment from Roche, the unexpected success of a competing one for Eisai, and some unpredictable questions from our audience.
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Nov 10, 2022 • 33min

234: Biogen's new CEO, how the midterms affect science, & a biotech bankruptcy

STAT Washington correspondent Sarah Owermohle joins us to explain how this week's midterm elections will affect health and medicine, and what the politicization of the pandemic means for the future of science in the U.S. We also discuss the incoming CEOs of Biogen and Seagen, plus a pair of biotech collapses.
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Nov 3, 2022 • 30min

233: How the biotech revolution could come apart at the seams

Our colleague Matthew Herper joins us to discuss his thoughtful, personal story on how the biotech revolution that brought us genome editing, Covid-19 vaccines, and lifesaving medicines could run aground if humanity can't get out of its own way.
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Oct 27, 2022 • 23min

232: Anti-science at the polls, a biotech odd couple, & the stakes of the midterms

Our colleague Sarah Owermohle joins us to discuss how pandemic shutdowns, Covid-19 vaccines, and the prospect of arresting Anthony Fauci have become campaign rallying cries in midterm elections. We also discuss the latest news in the life sciences, including the potential effects of federal drug-price negotiation and the virtues of befriending Pharrell Williams.
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Oct 20, 2022 • 35min

231: BU's Covid tinkering, FDA on trial, & why it's hard to take drugs off the market

Lawyer and bioethicist ​​Holly Fernandez Lynch joins us to explain a watershed test of the FDA's authority to revoke drug approvals. And STAT's Helen Branswell calls in to discuss the headline-grabbing research at Boston University involving a lab-developed version of the virus that causes Covid-19.
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Oct 13, 2022 • 34min

230: BIO's messy transition, mRNA's future, & Biogen's next CEO

STAT Washington correspondent Rachel Cohrs joins us to explain the abrupt departure of the CEO of BIO, the lobbying group representing biotech on Capitol Hill, and its wider implications. We also discuss the latest news in the life sciences, including the future of mRNA, a promising startup closing its doors, and Biogen’s search for a new CEO.

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