BBG Advanced Therapies launches first-of-its-kind mobile leukapheresis center

Closing the Access Gap in Sarcoma Treatment Through Cell Therapy

Blueprint for Breakthroughs is a LinkedIn newsletter published by Adrienne B. Mendoza, MHA, SVP BioBridge Global and Chief Operating Officer (COO), BBG Advanced Therapies

Originally published on LinkedIn on July 15, 2025, Adrienne discusses the progress of cell therapies in sarcoma treatment

July is Sarcoma Awareness Month – a time to amplify the voices of those affected by this rare, often aggressive cancer, and to spotlight innovation in sarcoma treatment, including cell and gene therapies that could reshape the future of care.

Sarcomas make up less than 1% of all adult cancers, yet they present a disproportionate number of treatment challenges. With more than 70 distinct subtypes, sarcomas can arise anywhere in the body, from bone to soft tissue, and often affect younger patients. Many go undiagnosed until late stages, and for those with advanced or metastatic disease, options are limited.

But the tide is turning, and new access models could bring these therapies to the forefront.


Progress in the Pipeline

The landscape of sarcoma treatment is changing rapidly, with several notable breakthroughs in cell therapy over the past year. Right now, there is both scientific momentum and real progress for patients who previously had few options. It’s exciting.

Groundbreaking FDA Approval for Solid Tumors

In August 2024, Adaptimmune’s Tecelra (afamitresgene autoleucel, or afami-cel) became the first engineered T-cell receptor (TCR) therapy approved for any solid tumor. This historic approval, based on the SPEARHEAD-1 trial, offers a new option for adults with metastatic synovial sarcoma expressing the MAGE-A4 antigen and specific HLA types. Patients who had exhausted chemotherapy options saw a 43% overall response rate, marking a major milestone for both the company and the field.

CAR T-Cell Therapy Trials for HER2, GD2, and B7-H3 Targets

HER2 is a protein involved in cell growth, and while HER2 is best known in breast cancer, it can also be found in other cancers, including certain types of sarcoma and gastric (stomach) cancer. In sarcoma, some tumors express HER2, and this has become a target.

In April 2024, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital Cancer, and Houston Methodist reported promising results from the HEROS 2.0 phase I trial. This study evaluated HER2-targeted CAR T cells in high-risk sarcomas, demonstrating both safety and clinical benefit. These findings highlight the progress being made for patients with difficult-to-treat sarcomas.

There are multiple CAR T-cell therapies targeting HER2, GD2, and B7-H3 are in early-phase clinical trials for sarcoma subtypes, including osteosarcoma, Ewing’s sarcoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma. These trials are showing encouraging results, though most remain investigational as of the writing of this article in July 2025.

TCR Therapy Options for Soft Tissue Sarcoma

At the #ASCO2024 meeting, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and collaborators shared encouraging results from the IGNYTE-ESO phase 2 trial of letetresgene autoleucel (lete-cel), a TCR therapy targeting NY-ESO-1. Tested in synovial sarcoma and myxoid/round cell liposarcoma, the therapy achieved a 40% overall response rate, further illustrating the rapid expansion of engineered T-cell therapies for sarcoma.

Ongoing Collaboration and Pipeline Growth

MD Anderson Cancer Center, and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center are actively leading trials of CAR T and TCR therapies for sarcoma, often in partnership with biotech firms, such as Adaptimmune. These collaborations are accelerating both discovery and patient access, with multiple early-phase and pivotal trials underway.


Access: The Missing Piece

Breakthroughs are only as powerful as our ability to deliver them. Cell therapies require a highly coordinated, patient-specific process, starting with the harvest of the patient’s or donor’s cells (the crucial ingredient in cell therapy) through a special immune cell collection procedure known as leukapheresis. This step is still largely limited to patients who can travel to major academic centers with built-out infrastructure. For rare cancer patients, especially those in rural or underserved regions, that can mean the difference between getting treatment and going without.

BBG Advanced Therapies, has introduced the Mobile Leukapheresis Center as an emerging solution, bringing cell collection capabilities closer to patients and supporting participation in early-phase trials through to late phase and commercial therapies. It’s a vital option for broadening access to advanced therapies.

Designing for Rare, Not Just Common

Most cell and gene therapy infrastructure in the United States has been built around high-prevalence diseases like leukemia or lymphoma, with specialized centers concentrated in a limited number of major hospitals. As a result, access remains highly uneven: there are currently about 20 states in the US with no cell and gene therapy infrastructure at all. For patients in these regions, participating in clinical trials or receiving advanced therapies often means traveling hundreds or even thousands of miles.

To truly democratize access, including for rare cancers like sarcoma – the available infrastructure and ecosystem must evolve. That means:

  • Establishing more regionalized and community-based access points for cell collection, clinical coordination, and patient support, beyond just the largest academic centers.
  • Developing flexible testing and manufacturing processes that can accommodate early-phase programs and adapt quickly to new therapies as they move from research to clinical use.
  • Designing process development specifically for low-volume, high-urgency populations—like those with rare sarcoma subtypes—so that these patients are not left behind as the field advances.

With more clinical trials opening and new CAR and TCR constructs under active development, cell therapy for sarcoma is no longer just a future possibility – it is an emerging reality.

Now is the time to build the access model that will support these advances and ensure that innovation reaches every patient who needs it.


Let’s Work Together to Build Systems with Reach

Sarcoma may be rare, but the courage and resilience of those affected—and the innovation now unfolding—are anything but. We are standing at a pivotal moment: the science is moving forward, and the tools to transform lives are within reach. Yet, progress will only matter if it reaches every patient, everywhere.

Let’s not allow geography or infrastructure gaps to dictate who benefits from tomorrow’s breakthroughs. Let’s work together to ensure that hope, access, and advanced therapies are not privileges for the few but rights for all, no matter where they live or what disease they face.

If you are a patient, caregiver, clinician, or advocate who wants to help shape this future, or if you have questions about access, mobile cell collection solutions, or clinical trial opportunities, please reach out to me. Your voice and experience matter, because we can make the promise of next-generation sarcoma care a reality for every patient who needs it.

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BBG Advanced Theapies’ Mobile Leukapheresis Center

Designing for Reality: A Lesson From Architecture – and Advanced Therapies

Blueprint for Breakthroughs is a LinkedIn newsletter published by Adrienne B. Mendoza, MHA, SVP BioBridge Global and Chief Operating Officer (COO), BBG Advanced Therapies

Originally published on LinkedIn on July 1, 2025 Adrienne Mendoza makes valuable connections between architecture and advanced therapies

My dad enjoyed an incredible career in architecture, shaping the spaces where people live, work, and heal. He often shares lessons with me from his time in the field, and his design philosophies – and I find myself drawing more and more inspiration from them, especially now that I lead teams working to reshape how cell and gene therapies (CGT) reach people.

Recently, he talked about how architecture sometimes drifts into artistic indulgence: impressive projects that look great on paper but lose sight of the people and functions they’re supposed to serve. Sometimes, the field gets caught up in trends…designing for the moment rather than for the enduring realities of the people who will actually live and work within those spaces.

He shared a story he found about a leaking Library in Norman, Oklahoma. It was designed to be iconic—a showpiece for a growing city. But within weeks of opening, it was making headlines for all the wrong reasons: costly water damage, design flaws, and frustration from the people it was supposed to serve. It looked stunning in renderings, but didn’t hold up to reality.

The same pattern plays out in advanced therapies. We’re pushing biology to new frontiers—engineering cells, and imagining new ways to treat disease. It’s bold. It’s complex. It’s necessary. But if we don’t design these innovations to work – to scale, to integrate into real healthcare environments, to reach the people who need them, they risk becoming scientific indulgences. Brilliant on paper. Fragile in practice.

First Principles Apply to More Than Buildings

Great architects lean on first principles: proportion, balance, rhythm, unity, and above all, function. The same should hold true in CGT. We have to design therapies with human realities at the center. That means considering every person along the access journey: the patient, the care team, the apheresis nurse, the manufacturing tech, the family navigating treatment options.

It’s not enough to ask if a therapy works in the lab. We have to ask:

  • How does it fit into clinical workflows?
  • Can it reach patients beyond major academic centers?
  • Does it balance scientific complexity with accessibility?
  • Does it unify discovery, manufacturing, delivery, and patient access?

If the answers don’t hold up in the real world, the foundation cracks, or the roof leaks.

Building for the Real World

At BBG Advanced Therapies, that’s the work we’re focused on every day. Innovating practical infrastructure that makes breakthrough science real:

  • Mobile leukapheresis teams to bring critical skills, equipment, and logistics support to more communities.
  • Characterization, potency, purity, safety testing, and manufacturing systems designed to flex with demand.
  • Development programs that help therapies scale without crumbling at the handoff points.

Because too often, CGT delivery models assume healthcare access that simply doesn’t exist for everyone. And if we ignore that, the therapies, no matter how revolutionary, remain distant promises.

A Timely Shift Toward Access

The FDA’s recent decision to remove REMS requirements and related site certifications for approved CAR-T therapies is a turning point. The message is clear: safety and efficacy matter, but so does access. Therapies can’t just be scientifically sound—they have to work within the realities of people’s lives.

That’s why flexible, patient-centered models, regional manufacturing, mobile platforms, community-based delivery, aren’t just nice to have. They’re now essential and in my view, it’s the only way this field scales beyond ideas and hope into real, reliable care.

The Blueprint That Lasts

My dad taught me: innovation and beauty matter most when design is grounded in the lives of those it’s meant to serve. The same is true in CGT and that’s the blueprint my team and I are working to bring to life, so that advanced therapies don’t just exist, but actually reach the people who need them.