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In Brief This Week: Yourgene Health, Epigenomics, Bionano Genomics, Diatech Pharmacogenetics, More

NEW YORK – Yourgene Health said this week that it expects fiscal year 2023 revenues of £19.0 million ($23.7 million). Sales in Europe "remain suppressed" during FY2023, which ended March 31, due to the loss of a single NIPT account in FY2022, the UK molecular diagnostics firm said, while international revenues were up 70 percent year over year, with strong performance in the Americas and in Asia-Pacific. The company is currently negotiating to divest its Taiwanese laboratory and has been focusing on reshaping its business internally. In January of this year, Yourgene raised approximately £6.8 million in net proceeds from a capital funding round and is in the midst of reducing its operating costs. As of March 31, the firm had £2.8 million in cash. 


Epigenomics said this week that its revenues for 2022 dropped to €500,000 ($549,000) from €6.2 million in 2021. Prior-year revenues included €5.7 million from the sale of samples from the firm's blood sample database, the German developer of molecular diagnostics for cancer said. It added that it recorded other income of €1.9 million in 2022, compared to €3.2 million in 2021, due to exchange rate volatility. Total exchange rate gains last year were €1.8 million, Epigenomics said. The firm had a net loss of €12.0 million, or €2.96 per share, last year compared to a net loss of €2.4 million, or €.87 per share, in the prior year. Its R&D costs increased to €6.7 million from €3.1 million in 2021 as pandemic-related short time work was discontinued. Its SG&A costs dropped to €6.6 million from €7.5 million a year ago. Epigenomics ended 2022 with €10.1 million in cash and cash equivalents. 


Bionano Genomics said this week that it is withdrawing its applications for Category I Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for its OGM technology ahead of the May 2023 CPT Editorial Panel meeting, during which the company’s applications would have been reviewed. Bionano said it is doing so to mitigate the possibility of OGM being assigned Category III CPT codes instead of Category I CPT codes. According to the company, Category III CPT codes can be assigned if a technology is considered to be emerging. Because these codes are not assigned pricing under Medicare's clinical laboratory fee schedule, reimbursement of the technology would be primarily at the payor’s discretion. 


Private equity firm TA Associates plans to make a strategic growth investment in Diatech Pharmacogenetics, the Italian pharmacogenetics and cancer precision medicine diagnostics company said this week. The investment, expected to close in Q2, will support Diatech's efforts to expand into markets internationally. Financial terms were not disclosed, but as part of the deal, Diatech leaders will retain majority ownership of the company while minority investor Alto Partners will exit its stake. 


Ginkgo Bioworks said this week that it has partnered with Visolis to improve the production of isoprene. Under the terms of the agreement, Visolis and Ginkgo will improve an existing microbial strain that produces a key feedstock ingredient used to make bio-based isoprene, a chemical used to make synthetic rubber and sustainable aviation fuels. Financial and other details were not disclosed. 


MGI Tech opened its customer experience center in South Korea this week in partnership with life science technology company Bio-Medical Science (BMS). As part of a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the two firms, the new facility serves as a hub for potential and existing customers to learn about MGI's products, including the DNBSeq-T7, DNBSeq-G400, and DNBSeq-G99 sequencers as well as the MGISP-960 automation system. 


OpGen subsidiary Curetis said this week that it has completed all key milestones outlined in an R&D collaboration with FIND by developing and performing initial wet-lab testing of a Unyvero A30 instrument for use in low- and middle-income countries. The firm said it designed, built, and tested prototypes of the firm's sample-to-result Unyvero A30 with modifications that would allow use of the instrument in locations with high dust, extended temperature ranges, and power outages. The cartridge-based platform can test for up to 33 targets in one specimen. Achieving the key milestones under that agreement triggers a $300,000 payment to the firm. 


Becton Dickinson’s board of directors declared a quarterly dividend this week of $.91 per common share, payable on June 30 to shareholders of record on June 9. The indicated annual dividend rate is $3.64 per share. 


PerkinElmer said this week that its board of directors has approved a regular quarterly dividend of $.07 per share of common stock, payable on Aug. 11 to shareholders of record at the close of business July 21. 


Parse Biosciences said this week that it has partnered with the Human Cell Atlas to offer its members pricing discounts on its single-cell sequencing assays. Parse will also provide support for experimental design, assay execution, and bioinformatics. 


Promis Diagnostics announced this week that its EarlyTect BCD test for the detection of bladder cancer has received breakthrough device designation from the US Food and Drug Administration. The assay qualitatively detects PENK methylation, an epigenetic biomarker associated with bladder cancer in the urine DNA of patients with hematuria. PENK methylation presents highly frequently in the urine DNA of patients with bladder cancer and rarely in hematuria patients without bladder cancer, the Irvine, California-based company said in a statement.


In Brief This Week is a selection of news items that may be of interest to our readers but had not previously appeared on GenomeWeb.

The Scan

Cystatin C Plays Role in Immunosuppression, Cancer Immunotherapy Failure, Study Finds

A study in Cell Genomics provides insight into how glucocorticoids can lead to cancer immunotherapy failure via cystatin C production.

Aging, Species Lifespan Gene Expression Signatures Overlap

An Osaka Metropolitan University team reports in Nucleic Acids Research that transcriptional signatures of aging and maximum lifespan have similarities.

Splicing Subgroup Provides Protocols for Evaluating Splicing Variant Data

The group presents their approach on how to apply evidence codes to splicing predictions and other data in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

Single-Cell Transcriptomic Atlas of Mouse Cochlea to Aid Treatment Development

Researchers in PNAS conducted single-cell and single-nuclear sequencing of about 120,000 cells at three key timepoints in cochlear development to generate a transcriptomic atlas.