Caribou Biosciences Appoints Syed Rizvi, M.D., as Chief Medical Officer

On January 18, 2022 Caribou Biosciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: CRBU), a leading clinical-stage CRISPR genome-editing biopharmaceutical company, reported the appointment of Syed Rizvi, M.D., to the newly created position of chief medical officer (Press release, Caribou Biosciences, JAN 18, 2022, View Source [SID1234605526]). Dr. Rizvi has more than two decades of experience in all stages of drug development, from clinical strategy and execution through regulatory submissions to support approval and commercialization of several cancer treatments, including two autologous CAR-T cell therapies ABECMA and BREYANZI.

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"Syed’s extensive industry knowledge, strategic insight, and significant leadership experience in the development of oncology cell therapies will be valuable to Caribou as we advance our pipeline of sophisticated genome-edited allogeneic therapeutics," said Rachel Haurwitz, Ph.D., Caribou’s president and chief executive officer. "In 2022, we plan to disclose initial data from our ANTLER Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating CB-010, file an IND application for our second CAR-T cell product candidate, CB-011, and announce target selection for our first CAR-NK cell therapy, CB-020. We have a transformative year ahead of us and I am delighted to welcome Syed to the Caribou team."

"I am thrilled to join Caribou, a pioneering company at the cutting edge of CRISPR genome editing and allogeneic cell therapy discovery and development," said Dr. Rizvi. "Caribou’s promising pipeline and highly specific Cas12a chRDNA technology have the potential to revolutionize the treatment of patients with cancer and may have broader applications. I am excited to lead Caribou’s clinical development initiatives and look forward to working with our experienced leadership team, dedicated colleagues, investigators, and regulatory authorities to achieve Caribou’s mission to provide innovative, transformative therapies for patients with devastating diseases."

Dr. Rizvi most recently served as chief medical officer of Chimeric Therapeutics, where he led the strategy and execution of clinical development programs for the company’s T cell and NK cell therapy platforms and helped build the pipeline. Previously, he worked for Legend Biotech, a cell therapy company, serving as head and vice president of clinical development, clinical operations, safety, data sciences, project management, and medical affairs, and he served as co-chair of the joint development committee for the Legend-Janssen collaboration. At Legend, he led the development of Cilta-cel, an autologous BCMA CAR-T cell therapy, as well as other cell therapies. Earlier, he worked for Celgene Corporation (now a Bristol Myers Squibb Company), serving as the head of global medical affairs for CAR-T cell programs and head of hematology and immuno-oncology for U.S. medical affairs. At Celgene, he was responsible for the strategic direction and management of Celgene’s CAR-T cell and immuno-oncology therapy portfolios. He built a comprehensive clinical research alliance and developed an immuno-oncology network with researchers to harness scientific learnings and advance clinical development for targeted patient outcomes. At Celgene, he was responsible for the global medical strategy supporting the clinical development of ABECMA in multiple myeloma and BREYANZI in lymphoma, both autologous CAR-T cell therapies. He previously held global clinical leadership positions of increasing responsibility for oncology programs at Novartis, Merck, and Genta, Inc.

Dr. Rizvi received his medical degree from Dow Medical College and spent several years in direct patient care before joining Saint Vincent’s Comprehensive Cancer Center in New York. Dr. Rizvi has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications and is a member of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) (Free ASCO Whitepaper), the American Society of Hematology (ASH) (Free ASH Whitepaper), the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, and other professional organizations.

About Caribou’s Novel Next-Generation CRISPR Platform

CRISPR genome editing uses easily designed, modular biological tools to make DNA changes in living cells. There are two basic components of Type II CRISPR systems: the nuclease protein that cuts DNA and the RNA molecule(s) that guide the nuclease to generate a site-specific, double-stranded break, leading to an edit at the targeted genomic site. CRISPR systems occasionally edit unintended genomic sites, known as off-target editing, which may lead to harmful effects on cellular function and phenotype. In response to this challenge, Caribou has developed chRDNAs (pronounced "chardonnays"), RNA-DNA hybrid guides that direct substantially more precise genome editing compared to all-RNA guides. Caribou is deploying the power of its Cas12a chRDNA technology to carry out high efficiency multiple edits, including multiplex gene insertions, to develop CRISPR-edited therapies.