Some Prognostications on Biotechnology in 2011

After consulting with the Oracle at the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, here are a few of the trends I was told to watch for in 2011…

Two revolutionizing pharmaceutical frontiers are on the horizon—RNA therapeutics and stem cell therapies:

—RNA therapeutics will become a big reality in 2011. Mipomersen, a LDL lowering drug from Isis, completed four Phase III trials and is expected to be approved as the first major RNA therapeutic. There will be more than two dozen clinical trials currently involving RNA therapeutics, including siRNA drugs. In 2011, the microRNA therapeutic platform will mature further and will advance in the clinic.

—Stem cell biology is rapidly advancing toward human patient trials. For example, Geron has just initiated a Phase 1 clinical trial in spinal cord injury using the injection of functional replacement cells manufactured from human embryonic stem cells.

Also, more effective and efficient clinical trials will remain a high priority for the drug industry, and new predictive biomarkers will be key:

—Predictive and companion molecular biomarkers will continue to be extremely important for drug development and clinical trials. Drug companies now understand the model of “one drug fits all” is not effective or economical. The new model is a more personalized approach that tries to identify the right patient cohort for a specific drug. Molecular biomarkers are an approach to identify which patient will respond, or are responding, to a particular drug treatment regimen. There is a possibility that drug developers will not even consider initiating a clinical development program without a biomarker associated with it.

—Biomarkers predictive of disease state and outcomes will be highly sought after.

New genomic technologies will emerge from centralized core facilities and spread into everyday laboratories. For example:

—Deep genomic sequencing using a platform that sits on a lab bench will replace large capillary electrophoresis equipment and potentially even chip-based array technology.

And my final prediction for 2011:

—All biotech companies will be very, very successful :-)…if they make the right choices…and pay homage to the oracle.

[Editor’s Note: This is part of a series of posts from Xconomists and other technology and life sciences leaders from around the U.S. who are weighing in with the top surprises they’ve seen in their respective fields in the past year, or the major things to watch for in 2011.]

Author: Kleanthis Xanthopoulos

Kleanthis G. Xanthopoulos, Ph.D., is a serial entrepreneur whose passion is building healthcare companies focused on innovation. He has over two decades of experience in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical research industries as an executive, company founder, chief executive officer, investor, and board member. Xanthopoulos has founded three companies, introduced two life science companies to NASDAQ, and financed and brokered numerous creative strategic alliances and significant partnership deals with large pharmaceutical partners. Xanthopoulos is currently the executive chairman of IRRAS AB, a medical device and drug delivery company, and a principal at the Vandel-Group, focusing on investing and building innovative biotechnology companies. Xanthopoulos served as president and CEO of Regulus Therapeutics from the time of its formation in 2007 until June of 2015. Prior to that, he was a managing director of Enterprise Partners Venture Capital. Xanthopoulos co-founded and served as president and CEO of Anadys Pharmaceuticals, from 2000 to 2006, and remained a director until Roche acquired the company in 2011. He was vice president at Aurora Biosciences (acquired by Vertex Pharmaceuticals) from 1997 to 2000. Xanthopoulos participated in The Human Genome Project as a Section Head of the National Human Genome Research Institute from 1995 to 1997. Prior to this, he was an Associate Professor at the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden after completing a postdoctoral research fellowship at The Rockefeller University, New York. An Onassis Foundation scholar, he was named the E&Y Entrepreneur of the year in 2006 in San Diego. Dr. Xanthopoulos received his B.Sc. in Biology with honors from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, and received both his M.Sc. in Microbiology and Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from the University of Stockholm, Sweden.