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What’s in Today’s Brief? (July 19th Preview)
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FDA approvals and PI3K-targeted breast cancer regimen
The FDA approved gedatolisib (Revtorpyk) with fulvestrant, with or without palbociclib, for adults with hormone receptor–positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer after progression on endocrine therapy in the metastatic setting when the tumor lacks PIK3CA mutations. The decision was supported by the VIKTORIA-1 phase 3 trial (NCT05501886), where the PIK3CA wild-type cohort saw median progression-free survival of 9.3 months with the triplet (n=131) versus 2.0 months with fulvestrant alone (n=131), and 7.4 months with the doublet. The FDA submission was filed under the Real-Time Oncology Review program. The triplet’s reported any-grade adverse events included stomatitis (69.2%), neutropenia (65.4%), and nausea (43.8%), while overall survival data remained immature and did not reach statistical significance at the May 30, 2025 cutoff.
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Oncology treatment sequencing in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
A new randomized Phase II trial, OPTIM, is testing an escalation strategy in recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, starting with nivolumab and moving to nivolumab–ipilimumab or docetaxel based on response or selection criteria. The study, reported in the British Journal of Cancer, is designed to evaluate whether an adaptive approach can improve outcomes compared with fixed sequencing, shifting the focus from whether immunotherapy works to when and how to apply it. For clinicians and trial teams, OPTIM targets a common practical challenge in HNSCC—treatment selection after initial checkpoint therapy—while using a design intended to generate decision-relevant efficacy and safety signals early in development.
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Immunotherapy timing appears to affect survival in advanced cancers
A new analysis in the British Journal of Cancer links the timing of immune checkpoint inhibitor dosing to overall survival in advanced cancer, according to results from a large, single-center cohort. Rather than asking only whether immunotherapy works, the study examines how when therapy is administered can shape outcomes—an approach that could influence real-world scheduling, sequencing with other treatments, and protocol design. The findings add to growing evidence that immunotherapy performance may depend on more than drug selection, making timing a variable under active investigation as oncology centers standardize care pathways.
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GM-CSF-free alternative: RENAL RRI-guided blood pressure titration in sepsis
Researchers reported results from a randomized trial in Nature Communications evaluating whether renal resistive index (RRI)–guided mean arterial pressure (MAP) targets improve outcomes for critically ill sepsis patients. The study uses Doppler-derived kidney hemodynamics to individualize MAP titration versus standard approaches, aiming to shift sepsis management toward more physiology-aligned target setting. If validated in broader settings, the work could support bedside decision-making tools that translate organ-specific perfusion signals into hemodynamic targets during sepsis treatment.
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New FDA-affecting CMS pricing pressure from midsize biotechs
Midsize biotech companies met with White House and HHS officials to urge changes to pending Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) pricing models, arguing the rules could hinder business. The push reflects continued regulatory and reimbursement friction that investors and drug developers closely monitor, particularly for therapies facing uncertain launch economics. The development highlights how biopharma’s near-term funding and commercialization plans are increasingly tied to pricing-policy execution as CMS models move toward finalization.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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