Adoptive T-cell therapies: how game-changing cancer treatments pose IP challenges

16 November 2018
2019_biotech_test_vial_discovery_big

In an Expert View column, Stephen Bennett (pictured) and Mary Foord-Weston, from UK-based law firm Hogan Lovells, consider the questions that new oncology treatments raise around the current intellectual property (IP) system.

Adoptive T-cell therapies are heralded as having the potential to revolutionize cancer treatment.

While only a few treatments have so far reached the market, these immunotherapies offer hope for patients whose disease has proved resistant to conventional treatment.

This article is accessible to registered users, to continue reading please register for free.  A free trial will give you access to exclusive features, interviews, round-ups and commentary from the sharpest minds in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology space for a week. If you are already a registered user please login. If your trial has come to an end, you can subscribe here.

Login to your account

Become a subscriber

 

£820

Or £77 per month

Subscribe Now
  • Unfettered access to industry-leading news, commentary and analysis in pharma and biotech.
  • Updates from clinical trials, conferences, M&A, licensing, financing, regulation, patents & legal, executive appointments, commercial strategy and financial results.
  • Daily roundup of key events in pharma and biotech.
  • Monthly in-depth briefings on Boardroom appointments and M&A news.
  • Choose from a cost-effective annual package or a flexible monthly subscription
The Pharma Letter is an extremely useful and valuable Life Sciences service that brings together a daily update on performance people and products. It’s part of the key information for keeping me informed

Chairman, Sanofi Aventis UK

Today's issue

Company Spotlight





More Features in Biotechnology