Moderna’s vaccine helped fight COVID. Here’s what’s coming in its next wave of mRNA drugs

You might think a biotech company that created a new vaccine, using novel tech like mRNA-based therapeutics, in record time to help the world fight a historic pandemic like COVID-19 would still be flying high. That hasn’t been the case so far for Moderna, whose only FDA-approved product to date remains its COVID vaccine Spikevax and its various forms for teens and children. But a new analyst report from Oppenheimer released this week asserts the company’s pipeline of mRNA-based vaccine candidates, for infectious diseases ranging from RSV to influenza, all the way to a type of cancer vaccine, is underrated, and could yield five new marketed products by 2026. The stock ended the first week of January up nearly 12% on the news.

The Oppenheimer report points to a number of the company’s experimental products that are in later-stage development, including:

  • An influenza vaccine that might prove more effective than standard quadrivalent seasonal flu vaccines
  • A combination flu and COVID vaccine that would, if proven effective, make it easier to address two bugs that tend to spike right around the same time every year
  • An RSV vaccine candidate
  • An experimental cancer vaccine for melanoma

Moderna’s Spikevax, like Pfizer’s similar COVID vaccine, is based on mRNA drug technology. Unlike traditional vaccines, ones based on mRNA tech use messenger RNA, which provide the body instructions to code for and create certain types of proteins, essentially turn your own cells into mini drug-making factories that produce an immune response against the specific biological adversary you’re fighting.

Conventional vaccines typically use weakened or modified bits of actual viruses to induce that same immune response so that your body can prepare an antibody army once you come face to face with the real pathogenic deal.

The ostensible advantage of mRNA tech is that it’s adaptable; if you have the genomic breakdown of the biological target you’re trying to fight or immunize yourself against, you can rapidly make new versions of a vaccine. That’s how Moderna and Pfizer have been able to adjust to evolving COVID variants with new booster shots suited to versions of coronavirus.

But the technology’s novelty and adaptability have also made it a prime target for political fearmongering rebuked thoroughly by the scientific community. For instance, Florida surgeon general Joseph A. Lapado this week called for a total halt on the use of mRNA vaccines, citing baseless and debunked claims about their risk for contaminating people’s DNA, during a season when a trifecta of respiratory illness-causing viruses (COVID-19 subvariant JN.1, influenza type A, and RSV) have left millions of Americans sick or hospitalized. New CDC data published on January 5 projects that COVID-related hospitalizations alone spiked by more than 20% in the week ending December 30 compared to the previous week, with just under 35,000 new COVID-related hospital admissions in the final week of 2023.

From a business perspective, the demand for COVID shots has plummeted, leaving both Moderna and Pfizer in a COVID vaccine sales rut which has forced both companies to shift strategies and focus on other diseases. Moderna faces singular challenges as a biotech whose entire strategy is based on mRNA technology that, to date, has only produced one winning product. This is the precise tension between science and the stock market when it comes to a technology like mRNA-based therapeutics, for science “doesn’t move in a straight line,” as Moderna CEO Stéphan Bancel told Fast Company’s Adam Bluestein last year. Many in the biotech investment crowd dismissed the notion that mRNA would ever produce any successful product–right up until it helped save the world from a pandemic.

The Oppenheimer report takes a bullish view on the opportunities of Modern’s underlying technology and the company’s leadership position in the space. Moderna’s in-development personalized cancer vaccine, in particular, could be a key therapy for the company’s future.

That vaccine for a form of the blood cancer melanoma is being tested in combination with pharma giant Merck’s best-selling cancer immunotherapy Keytruda. The companies announced in summer 2023 that they had begun enrolling patients in a wide-scale, global phase 3 trial testing the combination of Keytruda with Moderna’s experimental cancer vaccine mRNA-4157.

And according to the Oppenheimer analyst report, that combination, which is also being tested in other types of cancer, might be submitted for FDA approval by 2024 or 2025.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91006001/moderna-drug-pipeline-analyst-report-oppenheimer?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 2y | 06.01.2024, 15:20:06


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

Windows 95’s look and feel are more impressive than ever

Every so often, Microsoft design director Diego Baca boots up an old computer so he can play around with Windows 95 again.

Baca has made a hobby of assembling old PCs with new-in-box vin

16.07.2025, 06:30:02 | Fast company - tech
Jack Dorsey’s new Sun Day app tells you exactly how long to tan before you burn

Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey is back with a new app that tracks sun exposure and vitamin D levels.

Sun Day uses location-based data to show the current UV index, the day’s high, and add

15.07.2025, 21:10:06 | Fast company - tech
The CEO of Ciena on how AI is fueling a global subsea cable boom

Under the ocean’s surface lies the true backbone of the internet: an estimated

15.07.2025, 18:50:04 | Fast company - tech
AI therapy chatbots are unsafe and stigmatizing, a new Stanford study finds

AI chatbot therapists have made plenty of headlines in recent months—s

15.07.2025, 18:50:03 | Fast company - tech
How this Florida county is using new 911 technology to save lives

When an emergency happens in Collier County, Florida, the

15.07.2025, 16:30:05 | Fast company - tech
How a ‘Shark Tank’-winning neuroscientist invented the bionic hand that stole the show at Comic-Con

A gleaming Belle from Beauty and the Beast glided along the exhibition floor at last year’s San Diego Comic-Con adorned in a yellow corseted gown with cascading satin folds. She could bare

15.07.2025, 14:20:03 | Fast company - tech