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Mustang Bio Announces Exclusive Worldwide License Agreement with Leiden University Medical Centre for Clinical-Stage Lentiviral Gene Therapy with Curative Potential for RAG1 Severe Combined Immunodeficiency
Agreement expands Mustang’s pipeline of lentiviral gene therapies for SCID Preclinical development of additional targets to continue at Leiden University

About this update from Mustang Bio, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"Agreement expands Mustang’s pipeline of lentiviral gene therapies for SCID Preclinical development of additional targets to continue at Leiden University WORCESTER, Mass., Nov. 10, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mustang Bio, Inc. (“Mustang”) (NASDAQ: MBIO), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on translating today’s medical breakthroughs in cell and gene therapies into potential cures for hematologic cancers, solid tumors and rare genetic diseases, today announced that the company has executed an exclusive license agreement with Leiden University Medical Centre (“LUMC”) for a first-in-class ex vivo lentiviral gene therapy for the treatment of RAG1 severe combined immunodeficiency (“RAG1-SCID”). The therapy, which includes low-dose conditioning prior to reinfusion of the patients’ own gene-modified blood stem cells, is currently being evaluated in a Phase 1/2 multicenter clinical trial in Europe. The ongoing clinical trial recently enrolled its first patient, and additional clinical sites are expected to be added in the near future. The RAG1-SCID program has been granted Orphan Drug Designation by the European Medicines Agency. Mustang also established an ongoing partnership with Frank J. Staal, Ph.D., professor of Molecular Stem Cell Biology and molecular immunologist, whose laboratory developed the therapy. Dr. Staal will continue the development of additional lentiviral gene therapies in his lab, to which Mustang Bio has rights under the agreement. The RAG1-SCID therapy expands the pipeline of ex vivo lentiviral gene therapies currently in development at Mustang. The Company’s lead programs, MB-107 and MB-207, are being investigated for the treatment of X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (“XSCID”). A pivotal multicenter trial studying MB-107 is expected to enroll its first patient in the first quarter of 2022. XSCID and RAG1-SCID make up almost 60% of all SCID cases1 combined. Manuel Litchman, M.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Mustang said, “We are excited to add RAG1-SCID to the Mustang portfolio as it enables us to leverage our lentiviral gene therapy expertise and experience and our state-of-the-art cell processing facility. Mustang is establishing itself as the leader in developing treatments for patients with severe combined immunodeficiency, an area of high unmet need. We have made great progr...