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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 1st Preview)
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Regulatory uncertainty and trial review for AstraZeneca’s camizestrant
The FDA’s oncology advisory process delivered mixed signals for AstraZeneca’s oral SERD camizestrant as multiple votes questioned different trial strategies for switching patients in HR+/HER2- metastatic breast cancer. In one discussion, the ODAC panel voted 6-3 that available evidence did not support a clinically meaningful benefit for a proposed new switching approach based on ctDNA-detected ESR1 mutations. Separate panel deliberations also surfaced skepticism around paradigm shifts. ODAC discussions reflected concerns that the switching strategy would move earlier in the treatment sequence than current standards, without sufficient evidence to justify that change. Together, the votes underscore how additional regulatory scrutiny can directly affect labeling pathways for oral targeted therapies in breast cancer—especially when the evidentiary threshold hinges on biomarker-driven timing rather than established clinical endpoints.
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Chiesi’s expansion in hereditary angioedema via KalVista acquisition
Chiesi Group moved to deepen its rare disease footprint by agreeing to buy KalVista Pharmaceuticals for about $1.9 billion. The deal adds Ekterly (sebetralstat), a plasma kallikrein inhibitor approved for hereditary angioedema, including an oral, on-demand option for acute swelling attacks. Chiesi will pay $27 per share in cash, a premium of roughly 40% to KalVista’s prior close. The companies positioned the acquisition as a way to strengthen commercial momentum for an already approved therapy and extend clinical development into younger patient groups. The acquisition is expected to close in Q3 2026 and will be Chiesi’s largest deal to date, putting a commercialized oral HAE treatment at the center of its rare immunology strategy.
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AAV-mediated CCR5 blockade for long-term SHIV suppression
Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University reported that AAV gene therapy expressing a CCR5-blocking antibody can drive long-term viral suppression in SHIV-infected macaques. The approach uses AAV delivery of a leronlimab-derived antibody designed to interrupt viral entry by targeting the CCR5 co-receptor. In treated macaques, most produced detectable antibody levels after AAV administration, with about half mounting an immune response that generated antidrug antibodies. Even with immune responses, the study observed stable expression in some animals, while those without immune responses maintained expression over the full observation period. The work supports continued interest in long-acting gene-based antibody delivery for HIV cure research, where sustained suppression can reduce reliance on daily antiretroviral therapy and may address adherence limitations.
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IPO and financing momentum in respiratory and oncology biotech
Two IPO-related items highlighted fresh capital access for drug developers targeting respiratory disease and oncology commercialization. Avalyn Pharma priced a $300 million IPO to fund late-stage work for inhaled therapies in pulmonary fibrosis, including reformulated versions of already approved respiratory drugs. In parallel, another IPO headline signaled broader market appetite for new listings, continuing a stretch of large financings for drugmakers seeking to translate pipeline data into clinical scale and manufacturing readiness. For investors and operators, these deals emphasize that inhaled and immuno-oncology-adjacent franchises remain attractive—especially when they can point to mid-stage proof and near-term development timelines.
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New FDA leadership for biologics regulation
Katherine Szarama was named acting director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), overseeing regulation for vaccines, gene therapies, and the blood supply. The appointment follows the departure of Vinay Prasad from the agency after a tenure described as tumultuous, including high-profile controversies around rare disease drug and vaccine decisions. The move places new leadership at CBER at a time when regulators are facing intense scrutiny over evidentiary thresholds, data integrity, and how complex biologic platforms—gene therapies in particular—are evaluated. For biopharma teams, leadership transitions at CBER can affect the tone of review management, including how additional data requests are handled and how pivotal programs are framed for future pathways.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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