• Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
SUBSCRIBE
  • Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

USA Grants Patent nod to Dei BioPharma cancer Breakthroughs

75
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

On July 21, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) accepted two patent applications from Dei BioPharma, a Ugandan biotechnology company led by Dr Matthias Magoola—a homegrown scientist whose work could rewrite the future of cancer treatment and immune disease care.

You might also like

UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

But these are not just medical breakthroughs. For many, they signal something more personal: the possibility that life-saving innovation can finally reach those who need it most—not just in Boston or Berlin, but in Busia, Mbale, or Mumbai.

A NEW KIND OF CANCER VACCINE

The first of the two patents is for a universal mRNA cancer vaccine—an approach that could leapfrog some of the most stubborn limitations in cancer immunotherapy today.

Unlike traditional cancer vaccines, which must be custom-built for individual patients based on their tumor type, Magoola’s vaccine uses generalized antigens—molecular signals the body recognizes as foreign—wrapped in lipid nanoparticles that kickstart a type-I interferon response.

In simple terms, it flips a molecular switch that makes invisible tumors visible to the immune system.

“It’s like turning on a spotlight in a dark room,” says a source close to the preclinical trial team. “Once the immune system can see the cancer, it knows how to fight it.” Early preclinical trials have been promising. Mice with solid tumors showed complete tumor regression, with up to 90 per cent protection against recurrence.

The vaccine also appears to work in tandem with checkpoint inhibitors— a class of drugs that includes anti-PD-1 therapies—making the immune attack more durable and comprehensive. The vaccine’s ability to induce “epitope spreading” means it trains the immune system to recognize multiple tumor markers—not just one.

This could prove crucial in treating cancers that mutate quickly or resist first-line therapies. The second patent application focuses on something equally groundbreaking: a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) biologic that targets IL-23p19, a cytokine implicated in chronic inflammatory diseases like psoriasis, Crohn’s disease, and certain types of arthritis.

Big pharmaceutical companies currently dominate this space with expensive monoclonal antibody drugs like Skyrizi® and Tremfya®, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars per year. But Magoola’s scFv is different—not only in design but in philosophy. Smaller than traditional antibodies and engineered to bind more efficiently to its target, the biologic is also fused with proteins like albumin or transferrin, giving it a longer half-life and better tissue penetration.

Most importantly, it can be delivered in non-invasive formats—through inhalers, nasal sprays, skin patches, or even topical creams. That could be a game-changer for patients in under-resourced settings where cold-chain storage or infusion clinics are out of reach.

By using microbial systems instead of mammalian cells, the cost of production drops by as much as 80 percent, making it one of the most affordable biologics in development today.

“THIS IS THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE”

For Dr Magoola, the significance of these patents goes beyond the science. “These patents are not just scientific achievements,” he told reporters.

“They are moral declarations. We are abolishing the myth that cures belong only to the rich.” A former academic turned entrepreneur, Magoola founded Dei BioPharma to build a pipeline of low-cost, high-impact therapeutics and vaccines—created in Africa, for Africa, and the world.

His innovations have already earned him Uganda’s “Faces of Science” national award in June, a rare nod to homegrown excellence in pharmaceutical research. Still, his eyes remain firmly set on global transformation.

“The future of medicine must be globally accessible, scientifically credible, and deeply human,” he said. “That’s what we are building at Dei BioPharma.”

WHY THIS MATTERS 

The World Health Organization estimates that only 15 per cent of patients in low-income countries who need cancer treatment actually receive it. The reasons are manifold: limited infrastructure, costly therapies, and the complexity of delivering biologic drugs in settings with poor logistics. Magoola’s work addresses all three.

By simplifying how advanced therapies are made, stored, and administered, Dei BioPharma is pushing the boundaries of pharmaceutical equity—not as charity, but as a sustainable, scalable model for innovation.

If these therapies prove successful in clinical trials, Uganda could become a global reference point for biotech leadership in the Global South, challenging the status quo where medical innovation flows almost exclusively from the North to the South.

A LONG ROAD AHEAD

Of course, patents are only the beginning. Clinical trials, regulatory approvals, and market access still lie ahead. But the foundation is solid—and the vision bold.

If successful, Dei BioPharma’s platforms could offer a universal cancer vaccine that doesn’t require personalised sequencing, and a mass-market immune therapy that doesn’t require cold storage or specialist infusion.

That is not just science. That is a shift in power. And perhaps, in the quiet labs of Kampala, a preview of what the future of global health might finally look like: decentralized, affordable, and fair.

Email:homelandnewspaper@gmail.com

Share30Tweet19Send
The Homeland Newspaper

The Homeland Newspaper

The Homeland Newspaper is Ugandan’s Leading independent weekly Newspaper that delivers real time news & information on Politics, Analysis,Investigations,Business,Finance

Related Posts

UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
UCC Blocks 500 Porn Sites, Admits VPN Challenge!

The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) has directed telecommunications operators to block at least 500 websites found to be distributing pornographic content, in a move aimed at enforcing national...

Read moreDetails

New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
New Best Hotel Busega Faces Closure over Promotion of Nudity!

The Pornography Control Committee has warned that New Best Hotel in Busega could be shut down if allegations of facilitating explicit content persist, as authorities intensify enforcement against...

Read moreDetails

NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
NRM Retreat Deepens Ideological Grounding of Newly Elected MPs, Says Party Finance Director

The National Resistance Movement says its nine-day leadership retreat at NALI has strengthened newly elected MPs’ understanding of party ideology and the manifesto, preparing them for more aligned...

Read moreDetails

Prisons Van Crushes Media Person Covering Ggaba Murder Suspect!

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 15, 2026
0
Prisons Van Crushes Media Person Covering Ggaba Murder Suspect!

A TikTok content creator was critically injured when a Uganda Prisons Service van carrying a murder suspect lost control and rammed into journalists ahead of a mobile court...

Read moreDetails

Police Recover Illegal Firearm in Entebbe Operation, Arrest 16 Suspects

by The Homeland Newspaper
April 12, 2026
0
Police Recover Illegal Firearm in Entebbe Operation, Arrest 16 Suspects

Police in Entebbe Municipality have recovered an illegal pistol following an intelligence-led security operation conducted on April 11, 2026, across multiple locations in Wakiso District, resulting in the...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Dismiss Hudu Hussein’s petition, Nangoli urges NRM tribunal

Dismiss Hudu Hussein’s petition, Nangoli urges NRM tribunal

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Gaddafi Beat Proline to Grass in FUFA Big League Playoffs, Promoted On First Attempt

Gaddafi Beat Proline to Grass in FUFA Big League Playoffs, Promoted On First Attempt

August 17, 2021
Speaker Kadaga writes to ICT ministry over Parliament Radio frequency

Speaker Kadaga writes to ICT ministry over Parliament Radio frequency

March 3, 2021
Cheptegei Back from Injury, Wins 10km Race in Spain!

Cheptegei Back from Injury, Wins 10km Race in Spain!

January 3, 2023

Browse by Category

  • 2021 Elections
  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business
  • CLIMATE CHANGE
  • Columnists
  • Corporate Profile
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Diplomacy
  • Economy
  • Editorial
  • EDUCATION
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • Entertainment
  • Feature News
  • Health
  • International
  • Investing
  • Local/Government
  • News
  • Parliament
  • Politics
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • Religion
  • SECURITY
  • Special Reports
  • Sports

The Homeland Newspaper, is a product of THE HOMELAND MEDIA GROUP LTD. Uganda's Weekly Newspaper of choice. Registered by the Media Council of Uganda and Regulated by Uganda Communication s Commission [UCC] as Digital and Online Data Communication Services.
Email:homelandnewspaper@gmail.com

E-Peper

Copyright © 2006-26 homelandmedia.co.ug

No Result
View All Result
  • Africa
    • East Africa
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Health
  • MULTIMEDIA
    • Radio
    • Television
  • E-Paper
  • Tourism

Copyright © 2006-26 homelandmedia.co.ug