Pre-Meeting Workshops

Jefferson East CAR T and Related Immune Effector Cell Therapies Workshop—SOLD OUT! WAITLIST FULL
 

Clinical Long Term Follow-Up

Chair: Cameron Turtle, MBBS, PhD

  10:10 a.m.-12 p.m.

Now that CAR T cells have been in clinical use for over 5 years, this session will focus on the clinical results and longer-term follow up of CAR T cell studies in hematologic malignancies, on the consensus grading systems that have emerged as CAR T cells enter general practice and there are more and more clinical studies, and on how clinical centers manage the administration and collection of long-term follow-up data required by regulatory bodies.

Cameron Turtle, MBBS, PhD—Adult NHL

Shannon Maude, MD, PhD—Pediatric ALL

Jim Kochenderfer, MD—MM/BCMA

Sattva Neelapu, MD—ASBMT CRS grading and ASBMT neurotox grading

Sarah Nikiforow, MD, PhD—Long term follow-up program development

Matt Frigault, MD—Requirements to establish a phase 1 program

 

Lunch

  12-1 p.m. Lunch will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Novel Engineering and Gene Editing

Chair: Marcela Maus, MD, PhD

  1-3:10 p.m.

This session will focus on the scientific innovation as well as the safety and regulatory aspects of next-generation genetic engineering strategies that are in development that will enable complex strategies to target novel antigens not amenable to standard autologous CAR T cell therapies or to enable allogeneic cellular products.

Wendell Lim, PhD—Syn–notc

Justin Eyquem, PhD—TRAC locus targeting

Saar Gill, MD, PhD—CD33 edit and CD33 CAR-T cells

J. Keith Joung, MD, PhD—Measuring off-target effects of editing – Regulatory aspects of QC/release in gene edited products

 

Coffee Break

  3:10-3:30 p.m. Coffee will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Beyond Autologous CAR-T Cells for Cancer

Chair: Marcela Maus, MD, PhD

  3:30-6 p.m.

CAR T cells are in wide clinical use in B cell cancers as autologous cellular products that have been transduced to express a single transgene. This session will focus on innovations with alternative cellular products and indications, such as allogeneic NK cells, stem cells, and potential uses of engineered cell therapies on non-cancer indications.

Katy Rezvani, MD, PhD—NK-CARs

Michel Sadelain, MD, PhD—iPSC-derived IEC

Marcela Maus, MD, PhD—Treg CARs

Mike Milone, MD, PhD—Non-cancer – pemphigus

Cyril Konto MD (Allogene Therapeutics)—Allogeneic CAR T cells

Lincoln Gene Editing Workshop
 

The Gene Editing workshop provides an overview of current gene editing technologies and approaches, emerging uses and applications, with sessions highlighting junior investigators and clinical gene editing programs.

Chair: Betty Poon, PhD

  10-10:20 a.m.

Introduction to Gene Editing led by Morgan Maeder, PhD.

 

NIH Genome Editing Consortium Grant Recipients

  10:20 a.m.-12 p.m.

The National Institutes of Health recently awarded its first grants through the Somatic Cell Genome Editing program. In this session we will hear from some of these initial awardees.

Betty Poon, PhD—Introduction to NIH Genome Editing Consortium Grants

Shengdar Tsai, PhD—A Novel Human T-cell Platform to Define Biological Adverse Effects of Genome Editing

Guangping Gao, PhD—CRISPR-based in vivo gene editing in multiple target organs

Aravind Asokan, PhD—Evolving AAV for Efficient Neuromuscular Genome Editing

 

Lunch

  12-1 p.m. Lunch will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Corporate Review I

  1-2 p.m.

A series of presentations from some of the leading companies in gene editing, describing their pre-clinical and clinical programs.

Shawdee Eshghi, PhD, Caribou Biosciences—Identification of high efficiency and high specificity guides for CRISPR-Cas9 engineering of allogeneic CAR-T cells

Leonela Amoasii, PhD, Exonics Therapeutics—CRISPR/Cas9-Based Gene Editing for the Correction of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

Derek Jantz, PhD, Precision BioSciences—Engineered Meganucleases for Gene and Cell Therapy

Charlie Albright, PhD, Editas Medicine—Gene editing therapies for inherited retinal diseases

Giuseppe Ciaramella, PhD, Beam Therapeutics

Tony Ho, MD, CRISPR Therapeutics—Bringing CRISPR to the Clinic

 

NIH Genome Editing Consortium Grant Recipients Continued

  2-3 p.m.

The National Institutes of Health recently awarded its first grants through the Somatic Cell Genome Editing program. In this session we will hear from some of these initial awardees.

Erik Sontheimer, PhD—Enhancing Genome Editing with Chemically Engineered Guides and New Cas9 Orthologs

Shaoqin Sarah Gong, PhD—Multifunctional CRISPR/Cas9 Delivery Nanoplatforms for Targeted Genome Editing

Zheng-Yi Chen, DPhil—Development of bioreducible lipid nanoparticles for the delivery of editing agents in the mammalian inner ear

 

Coffee Break

  3:10-3:30 p.m. Coffee will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Junior Investigator Session

  3:30-5 p.m.

Gene editing is a dynamic area of research, attracting many new investigators. This session highlights the work of some of the outstanding junior investigators in the field.

Pietro Genovese, PhD—Advanced Genetic Engineering of Hematopoiesis for the Treatment of Inherited Diseases

Ben Kleinstiver, PhD—Enhancing Genome Editing with Engineered CRISPR Proteins

Thomas Gaj, PhD—Application of Genome Editing Technologies for the Treatment of Neurodegenerative Diseases

Prashant Mali, PhD—Therapeutic strategies via genome and transcriptome engineering

Pinar Akcakaya, PhD—Evaluating in vivo off-targets of CRISPR-Cas gene editing

Jennifer Adair, PhD—Precision gene editing without electroporation in blood repopulating cells using a novel CRISPR nanoformulation

 

Corporate Review II

  5-6 p.m.

A series of presentations from some of the leading companies in gene editing, describing their pre-clinical and clinical programs.

Edward Rebar, PhD, Sangamo Therapeutics—Therapeutic Genome Editing and Gene Regulation Using Designed Zinc Finger Proteins

Julianne Smith, PhD, Cellectis—TALEN Gene Editing for “Off-the-Shelf” Allogeneic CAR T-Cell Products

Philip Gregory, DPhil, bluebird bio—MegaTAL driven genome editing for enhanced CAR-T cell anti-tumor activity

Andy Scharenberg, MD, Casebia Theapeutics—Casebia therapeutics: driving gene editing innovation

Fred Chereau, MBA, LogicBio—Innovative promoterless nuclease-free genome editing

Sean Burns, Intellia Therapeutics—Delivering on the therapeutic promise of CRISPR/Cas9

Jefferson West Pre-Approval Commercialization Workshop: Clinical Path Toward Commercialization—SOLD OUT! WAITLIST FULL
  The Pre-Approval Commercialization Workshop covers industry perspectives on CMC Challenges for cell and gene modified cell therapy products, updates from global regulatory bodies, manufacturing challenges in late phase development of gene therapy products, and discussions on the difficulties in commercializing AAV product candidates.
  10-10:30 a.m.

Patient Perspective Keynote

Mark Skinner, JD

 

Industry Perspective on CMC Challenges for Cell and Gene Modified Cell Therapy Products

  10:30 a.m.-12 p.m.

Yoko Momonoi, MS, Director RegCMC, Celgene—Process Development Challenges

Jason Hamilton, PhD—Analytical Development Challenges

Katy Spink, PhD

Michael Boychyn, PhD

Panel Discussion Moderated by John Tomtishen

 

Lunch

  12-1 p.m. Lunch will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Global Regulatory Update: Outlook in 2019 – Policy Approaches and Considerations in Gene Therapy

  1-2:30 p.m.

Peter Marks, MD, PhD, Director, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research

Martina Schüssler-Lenz, MD, Chair, EMA Committee for Advanced Therapies

Manuela Corti, PhD

Debra Segal, PhD

Panel Discussion Moderated by Adora Ndu, PharmD, JD

 

Coffee Break

  3:10-3:30 p.m. Coffee will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Manufacturing Challenges During Late Phase Development of Gene Therapy Products

  3-4:30 p.m.

Chair: Eduard Ayuso, DVM, PhD

Victor (Xiaobin) Lu, PhD

Richard Snyder, PhD

Kim Warren, PhD

Pratik Jaluria, PhD

 

Hindrance to Commercializing AAV Product Candidates

  4:30-6 p.m.

Chair: H. Trent Spencer, PhD

Harrison Brown, PhD

Fraser Wright, PhD

Hank Fuchs, MD

Cabinet Post-Approval Commercialization Workshop
  New for 2019, the Post-Approval Commercialization Workshop will include sessions on patient focused drug development; post-approval change management and overall impact on commercialization; and pricing, reimbursement, and payment models for gene therapies.
  10-10:30 a.m.

Jessica Tucker, PhD—Modernizing Gene Therapy Oversight and the Role of the RAC

 

The Role of the Patient Panel

Moderator: Susanne Warner, MD

  10:30 a.m.-12 p.m.

Celia Witten, MD PhD—Patient Focused Drug Development

Ronald Bartek

Sue Kahn, MBA

Maria Kefalas, PhD

 

Lunch

  12-1 p.m. Lunch will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Post-Approval Change Management and Overall Impact on Commercialization

  1-2:30 p.m.

Kristen Harrington-Smith, MBA

Ramjay Vatsan, PhD

Anne-Virginie Eggimann, MSc

Joann Parker, MS

 

Coffee Break

  3:10-3:30 p.m. Coffee will be provided for workshop speakers and attendees.
 

Achieving Sustainable Patient and Market Access

  3-6 p.m.

Tim Hunt, JD—Overview of Pricing, Reimbursement, and Payment Models: ASGCT View

William Smith, PhD—Limitations of QALYs in Cost-Effectiveness Reviews

Jeremy Allen, MPA—Enabling Legislation for Novel Payment Models

Jugna Shah, MPH—Medicare Coverage & Reimbursement Issues

Rachel Pryor, MSW—Issues in Medicaid Reimbursement of Gene Therapies

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