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Western genetic medicine makers turn to Chinese investigator-initiated trials

Earlier this year, the Belgian cell therapy startup EsoBiotec had only 12 employees and had raised €22 million to develop a cutting-edge infusion that turns a patient’s immune cells into destroyers of disease.

This report was first published by Endpoints News. To see the original version, click here

Earlier this year, the Belgian cell therapy startup EsoBiotec had only 12 employees and had raised €22 million to develop a cutting-edge infusion that turns a patient’s immune cells into destroyers of disease.

But despite its meager resources, EsoBiotec managed to do something that its better-capitalized peers hadn’t: It became the first to report clinical data on a highly-anticipated cancer treatment called an in vivo CAR-T therapy.

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