CTOs on the Move

Autem Therapeutics

www.autemtherapeutics.com

 
Autem Therapeutics is a privately held oncology therapeutic and bioelectric company headquartered in Hanover NH, USA that is developing a novel, non-invasive and non-toxic oncology treatment platform targeting HCC (liver cancer) and other solid tumor cancers.
  • Number of Employees: 25-100
  • Annual Revenue: $0-1 Million

Executives

Name Title Contact Details

Funding

Autem Therapeutics raised $10M on 06/06/2022

Similar Companies

Immunocore

Immunocore is a privately owned British clinical-stage biotechnology company, based in Oxfordshire, which researches and develops biological drugs to treat cancer, infectious diseases and autoimmune diseases using soluble T-cell receptor technology.

ITOCHU Chemicals America

ITOCHU Chemicals America is a White Plains, NY-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.

BridgeBio

We are a collection of individuals focused on discovering and developing drugs for patients with grievous genetic diseases.

QuintilesIMS

Quintiles and IMSHealth have merged together to form the new QuintilesIMS. Each wanting to bring something new to customers, we deliver integrated information and technology solutions to drive healthcare forward. QuintilesIMS has approximately 50,000 employees conducting operations in more than 100 countries, dedicated to helping our clients improve their clinical, scientific and commercial results. As a global leader in protecting individual patient privacy, QuintilesIMS uses healthcare data to deliver critical, real-world disease and treatment insights.

Appia Bio

Appia Bio is an early stage biotechnology company based in Los Angeles, California. Founded in 2020, Appia Bio is focused on discovering and developing engineered allogeneic cell therapies across a broad array of indications with a scalable technology platform that increases access for patients. With its ACUA (Appia Cells Utilized for Allogeneic) technology platform, Appia Bio leverages the biology of lymphocyte development with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) and T-cell receptor (TCR) gene engineering to generate CAR-engineered invariant natural killer T (CAR-iNKT) cell subtypes from hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs).