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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 10th Preview)
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Teva Taps Blackstone for $400m Push on Late‑Stage IBD Antibody
Teva Pharmaceuticals signed a growth‑capital agreement with Blackstone Life Sciences that could deliver up to $400 million over four years to accelerate development of duvakitug, a monoclonal antibody targeting the TL1A inflammatory pathway. The financing includes regulatory and commercial milestone payments plus potential royalties, and follows Teva’s 2023 co‑development pact with Sanofi. Duvakitug is in Phase III studies for ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease (NCT07184931, NCT07184996). Blackstone said the investment aligns with its life‑sciences growth strategy; Teva framed the deal as part of a broader “Pivot to Growth” plan to bolster its pipeline while preserving financial discipline. The structure shifts late‑stage capital risk away from Teva’s balance sheet and links funding to development and commercial outcomes.
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Vertex’s Kidney Drug Halves Key IgA Nephropathy Marker in Phase 3
Vertex reported Phase 3 data showing its acquired therapy cut a key biomarker for IgA nephropathy by roughly 50%, mirroring or exceeding results from peers and positioning the program as a potential blockbuster. The company said the result matches data from Otsuka’s Voyxact and compared favorably with Vera Therapeutics’ numbers. Vertex acquired the asset as part of a multi‑billion dollar deal and now sees best‑in‑class potential in a disease population it estimates at ~330,000 patients in the U.S. and Europe. The company’s shares rose in after‑hours trading on the news. Analysts note that positive Phase 3 biomarker outcomes could accelerate regulatory discussions and commercial planning in a crowded but lucrative renal disease market.
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Ferritin bridge strengthens CAR‑T engagement – a non‑genetic fix for relapse
Researchers at the Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, introduced a ferritin‑based aggregation cell engager (FACE) that augments CAR‑T cell avidity without re‑engineering receptors. FACE binds CD71 on both CAR‑T cells and leukemia cells to physically bridge the two and improve killing even when target antigen expression is low; results were reported in Cell. In patient‑derived xenograft models, FACE enabled comparable efficacy using one‑fifth of the cell dose and appeared to reduce cytokine release syndrome risk. The platform is composed of endogenous ferritin and FDA‑approved polymer derivatives and can be integrated into existing manufacturing workflows as a culture supplement before infusion. Authors say the approach tackles antigen escape mechanistically rather than by altering CAR constructs.
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Xenon’s epilepsy pill slashes seizures — phase 3 blowout
Xenon Pharmaceuticals announced Phase 3 X‑Tole2 results showing azetukalner reduced focal‑onset seizure frequency by 53.2% at the 25 mg dose versus placebo—an effect the company characterized as exceeding expectations. Xenon said it will file for FDA approval in the third quarter and highlighted a favorable tolerability profile. Investors reacted strongly: the stock jumped more than 40% after the readout. Company executives and analysts cited the magnitude of placebo‑adjusted efficacy and an attractive safety profile—particularly at the lower 15 mg dose—as positioning azetukalner for rapid uptake if regulators approve. Xenon plans an NDA submission targeting U.S. approval later this year.
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Roche’s oral SERD fails first‑line test — ripples across the oral SERD field
Roche’s Phase 3 PersevERA study of the oral SERD giredestrant missed its primary progression‑free survival endpoint in the first‑line ER‑positive, HER2‑negative breast cancer setting, the company disclosed. The miss refines the competitive and regulatory profile for oral SERDs and complicates positioning across treatment lines. The negative readout triggered investor and competitor responses: Olema Pharmaceuticals, which has a competing oral SERD candidate, saw its stock slide on the news. Analysts and developers of next‑generation oral SERDs now face pressure to define optimal patient subsets and combination strategies; parties pointed to differences in trial settings and prior lines of therapy as critical context for interpretation.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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