Research published in Communications Biology
demonstrates potential of Company’s active chromatin platform to
inform personalized treatment approaches across multiple disease
states
Aqtual, Inc., a precision medicine company with a novel active
chromatin cell-free DNA (cfDNAac) platform to develop products for
chronic diseases and oncology, announced research in Communications
Biology, a Nature portfolio journal. The research demonstrates the
potential of Aqtual’s proprietary platform that evaluates gene
regulation, epigenetics, and transcriptomics by analyzing
previously unexplored cfDNA fragments found in blood, opening the
door to new clinical applications in almost every major disease
area.
cfDNA has become pivotal in precision medicine by changing the
diagnostic and therapeutic landscape. However, cfDNA platforms have
largely been limited to applications in non-invasive prenatal
testing, cancer diagnostics and monitoring organ transplantation
because they are unable to capture the full range of molecular
complexity involved in other disease states.
In contrast, this research showed Aqtual’s platform has the
potential to expand the clinical utility of cfDNA beyond these
areas. By capturing active chromatin fragments (sections of DNA
that are associated with regions of the genome where genes are
actively being expressed) that reflect gene regulation and
molecular changes in real-time, the platform can uncover new
biomarkers relevant to a broader range of disease states.
“The simple modification of DNA isolation techniques from plasma
samples, allowing for enrichment of longer DNA fragments derived
from actively transcribed regions, is a major advancement in the
cell-free DNA field,” said Clifford Lowell, MD, PhD, Distinguished
Professor and Chair at the University of California, San Francisco,
Dept. of Laboratory Medicine. “This cell-free DNA sequencing assay
can follow the normal circadian rhythm of immune cell gene
expression, offering a novel and straightforward method to monitor
gene expression profiles in immune and potentially non-immune
mediated disease states. It will be exciting to see how this new
tool is applied.”
Aqtual’s platform provides insights into how genes are
controlled and expressed by analyzing DNA fragments from a single
blood sample. This approach may enable physicians to diagnose
diseases earlier and tailor treatments to individual patients. The
ability to monitor gene activity without the need for an invasive
procedure opens up a wide range of possibilities for better
managing various conditions, including chronic diseases, autoimmune
disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, and infectious diseases.
"The potential of Aqtual’s platform is vast. For example,
globally, 2.6 billion people suffer from some form of chronic
disease, with 1 in 3 living with more than one chronic condition,”
said Diana Abdueva, PhD, Chief Executive Officer of Aqtual and
co-author of the study. “The challenge with managing chronic
diseases is that treatment is often trial and error, leading to
inefficiencies and poor patient outcomes. In the U.S. alone, 90% of
all healthcare spending—over $3.6 trillion—is dedicated to chronic
diseases. We believe Aqtual’s platform has the potential to shift
this paradigm."
Aqtual’s initial focus is developing a blood test to guide
therapy management for Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA). RA is a highly
debilitating chronic inflammatory disease affecting 1.3 million
Americans.1 With more than 20 FDA-approved drugs across six drug
classes, many patients try at least two or three different
therapies before finding one that works for them.2 It is estimated
that annual healthcare costs of RA patients in the United States
total more than $19B, not including intangible costs like quality
of life, premature mortality, and societal costs.3 Patients living
with RA are often on expensive therapeutics for years and often
fail to respond to a prescribed treatment; in which case the
guidelines recommend switching therapy.
"For conditions like RA, there’s a clear opportunity to optimize
therapy selection and avoid the wasteful spending associated with
ineffective immunotherapy assignments,” continued Dr. Abdueva.“By
providing clinicians with a more precise, data-driven approach to
treatment, Aqtual’s platform could help ensure patients receive the
right therapy sooner, improving both outcomes and
cost-efficiency."
About Aqtual, Inc.
Aqtual, Inc. is a precision medicine company developing products
for chronic disease management and oncology utilizing a novel
cell-free DNA-based platform. Aqtual’s proprietary platform
evaluates protein regulation, epigenetics, and transcriptomics
solely using cell-free DNA fragments found in the blood. The
platform yields efficient and robust real-time analysis of disease
and treatment while overcoming the limitations of previous
cell-free DNA methodologies.
_____________________________
1 Xu Y, Wu Q. Prevalence Trend and Disparities in Rheumatoid
Arthritis among US Adults, 2005-2018. J Clin Med. 2021 Jul
26;10(15):3289. doi: 10.3390/jcm10153289. PMID: 34362073; PMCID:
PMC8348893.
2 Lauper K, Iudici M, Mongin D, Bergstra SA, Choquette D,
Codreanu C, Cordtz R, De Cock D, Dreyer L, Elkayam O, Hauge EM,
Huschek D, Hyrich KL, Iannone F, Inanc N, Kearsley-Fleet L,
Kristianslund EK, Kvien TK, Leeb BF, Lukina G, Nordstr�m DC,
Pavelka K, Pombo-Suarez M, Rotar Z, Santos MJ, Strangfeld A,
Verschueren P, Courvoisier DS, Finckh A. Effectiveness of
TNF-inhibitors, abatacept, IL6-inhibitors and JAK-inhibitors in 31
846 patients with rheumatoid arthritis in 19 registers from the
'JAK-pot' collaboration. Ann Rheum Dis. 2022 Oct;81(10):1358-1366.
doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2022-222586. Epub 2022 Jun 15. PMID:
35705376; PMCID: PMC9484385.
3 Birnbaum H, Pike C, Kaufman R, Marynchenko M, Kidolezi Y,
Cifaldi M. Societal cost of rheumatoid arthritis patients in the
US. Curr Med Res Opin. 2010 Jan;26(1):77-90. doi:
10.1185/03007990903422307. PMID: 19908947.
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