Explore every episode of the podcast PHASE3
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Silent Killer: The sci-fi episode, with Certa Therapeutics and University of Sydney CTC | 27 Aug 2024 | 00:27:59 | |
Wearable kidneys. Organs on a chip. Xenotransplantation. The future is here. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| The Silent Killer: Prevention is the next cure, with Kidney Health Australia and Proteomics International | 20 Aug 2024 | 00:23:06 | |
We may have led you on a bit in the first two episodes... kidney disease is still a big problem despite the massive shifts forward in treating it. There is a long way to go to bring medical sectors -- and governments -- along as well. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| The Silent Killer: Who has the killer apps? With Dimerix and PYC Therapeutics | 13 Aug 2024 | 00:24:40 | |
We speak to Dimerix CEO Dr Nina Webster about why investors are thrilled with her company, as it nears the midway point for its Phase III clinical trial for the rare disease focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| The Silent Killer: Why biotechs are all in on kidney disease, with University of Sydney CTC and Chris Kallos | 06 Aug 2024 | 00:26:54 | |
Kidney disease is a silent killer, with only 10% of all people knowing they have it before damage has been done. This series explains the mighty leaps that have already come, interviews the key biotech leaders in Australia working to treat and to cure kidney diseases, and joins the dots between what is happening today… and what could happen in the blue skies of the next 20 to 50 years. Episode 1 features Professor Meg Jardine, director of the NHMRC Clinical Trials Centre, a flagship research organisation at the University of Sydney, where she is head of the Kidney Health research program, and investment analyst Chris Kallos. They explain why kidney disease is so hot right now from a science perspective and for investors. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| Phase III Trailer | 29 Jul 2024 | 00:00:39 | |
Life sciences more than anywhere else is the successful mashup of money and tech. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: Why radiopharmaceuticals are exploding, with Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and HB Biotechnology | 03 Sep 2024 | 00:25:34 | |
The radiopharmaceuticals sector is on a knife point. The scope of what nuclear medicine can do is exploding. But the radioisotopes that biotechs need to make those therapies are in very, very short supply. Major clinical trials are hitting pause because of shortages of critical nuclear isotopes, and the world's biggest pharmaceutical companies are buying up biotechs that have locked in both the science and the supply chain. There will be some very successful winners, and many, many losers as companies fight for the nuclear resources they so desperately need to make their therapies work. In this series Nuked, we will walk you through this fascinating marriage between chemistry and physics, why is exciting both investors and clinicians, how biotechs are fighting to lock in supplies of nuclear material, and whether Australia has a shot at becoming a nuclear power. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: Access is everything, with GlyTherix and Telix Pharmaceuticals | 10 Sep 2024 | 00:29:47 | |
In early 2023, one of the first two really big radiopharmaceutical drugs ran into a problem. Novartis' prostate cancer therapy Pluvicto, released only the year before, was suddenly in short supply, snarling up just in time treatment schedules. In 2024 the supply chain problem is with the isotope Actinium 225, which *everyone* wants for clinical trials. RayzeBio has been a very famous victim, delaying a clinical trial because of the shortages. In episode 2 of NUKED we explore where the nukes come from, and how biotechs large and small get their hands on them. With GlyTherix CEO Dr Brad Walsh and Telix Pharmaceuticals CEO Dr Chris Behrenbruch, we look at a potential new front in the US-China tariff war, the Russia question, and how an early stage biotech and one with a product in the market organises its nuclear material supplies. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: The IP game, with Clarity Pharmaceuticals and Radiopharm Theranostics | 17 Sep 2024 | 00:26:25 | |
The question we are dancing around in episode 3 of NUKED is whether locking down isotopes supply chains are really the only way to play the radiopharmaceutical game. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| VAXXED: And the winner is... with OneVentures and Ose Immunotherapeutics | 26 Nov 2024 | 00:27:32 | |
Moderna and BioNTech are getting all of the attention with their phase 3 clinical trials for lung cancer and melanoma. But someone else is already further ahead. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| VAXXED: Game on, with BASE and WEHI | 19 Nov 2024 | 00:26:07 | |
Cancer vaccines are an area that anyone who is anyone is getting into, but it's a field led largely by academics, not-for–profits, and specialist researchers. So this week we go back to basics - science that is. Australia may not have many cancer vaccine biotechs but – as we pointed out in episode one with the godfather of cancer vaccines, professor Dr Ian Frazer – it has heft in its research. Dr Seth Cheetham from the University of Queensland's Base Facility, a specialist mRNA manufacturing lab, explains why they went from COVID19 to cancer. And Dr Shalin Naik from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research explains why he's bringing back a spectre of the past, and why he believes it could be the winner of this biotechnology cage match. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| VAXXED: Boom or bust? With Chris Kallos and Pitt Street Research | 12 Nov 2024 | 00:18:30 | |
In some ways, cancer vaccines are a history of hype and hope, over success. But that hasn't stopped people from trying. In 2024, biotech CEOs are hoping that this time, it's different. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| VAXXED: Deadly infection, with Imugene and ImmVirX | 05 Nov 2024 | 00:23:13 | |
Cancer vaccines are a very niche section of cancer treatments. But two companies in Australia – the only two so far to go public with their work in this arena –are working on an even niche area within this. And one says their work is not a vaccine. The other does. So what gives? Well it depends on what you want to focus on: the deadly infectious nature of an oncolytic virus that bursts tumour cells from the inside, or the resulting immune memory that can fight that cancer as well as others that look similar. We speak with Imugene CEO and managing director Leslie Chong and ImmVirX founder Dr Malcolm McColl about why they think that finally the time has come for this underloved field and what they plan to do with their science if they can prove it up. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| VAXXED: From Gardasil to mRNA, with Dr Ian Frazer and Wilsons Advisory | 29 Oct 2024 | 00:28:39 | |
Cancer vaccines started out as prevention. Think Gardasil for cervical and oral cancers caused by HPV, and the hepatitis B vaccine for liver cancer. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: Our nuclear future, with Novartis, Wilsons Advisory and Cyclotek | 08 Oct 2024 | 00:34:16 | |
Drone-deliveries of radioactive medicines and diagnostics to Australia's far-flung towns. Radiopharmaceuticals matched with genetic information to tailor precisely the right dose and isotope to a person's cancer. Pan-cancer drugs that fix many tumours, not just one. Miniature particle accelerators. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: Patent puzzles, with FB Rice | 01 Oct 2024 | 00:25:20 | |
The rule of thumb in biotech is that it costs around $1 billion to bring a new therapy from lab to market. Protecting that investment is the patent system. But what if part of your product is not made by your contract manufacturer, but by the people who are giving it to patients? Ie, their doctors. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||
| NUKED: Australia the nuclear power, with entX and Cyclowest | 24 Sep 2024 | 00:29:58 | |
Can Australia create a mine to lab to bedside production line for radiopharmaceutical medicine? It has the reactor, biotechs and the hospitals to do that last two, and even has a growing pool of expertise to run these. What it doesn't have, yet, is many advanced manufacturers to do the first bits, the critical parts such as sifting through old mine tailings for precursor materials and making nuclear isotopes for industry use, such as clinical trials. In episode 4 of NUKED we speak with entX managing director Bryn Jones and Cyclowest head of production Dr Jacquie Cawthray about whether Australia has the 'it' factor to go it alone. Produced by Rachel Williamson and Charis Palmer. Music and effect credits to Ziso, Inspector J, Seth Parson and Boom Library. | |||