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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 1st Preview)
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TYK2 inhibition innovation
Ropsacitinib (PF-06826647) has moved into Phase 2 testing for plaque psoriasis and hidradenitis suppurativa, extending the competitive field of TYK2 kinase inhibition. The program positions the drug as mechanistically distinct from allosteric TYK2 inhibitors such as deucravacitinib (Sotyktu), with PF-06826647 binding the catalytically active TYK2 (JH1) domain. The crossover matters for development strategy because JH1-directed inhibitors could bring different safety, efficacy, and biomarker behavior than JH2 allosteric agents as programs mature in inflammatory dermatology. PF-06826647’s entry also keeps pressure on established IL-17 and JAK/TYK franchises while broadening the clinical data set around TYK2 engagement modes. With both psoriasis and hidradenitis suppurativa in the initial Phase 2 plan, the sponsor is effectively testing the durability of the inhibition approach across two inflammatory diseases that have distinct immunopathology and clinical endpoints.
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FDA-approved companion diagnostics for precision prostate oncology
FDA approval cleared Foundation Medicine CDx assays as companion diagnostics for Pfizer’s Talzenna plus Xtandi regimen in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. The decision authorizes FoundationOne CDx to identify patients with homologous recombination repair (HRR) gene mutations for treatment selection. The paired approval reinforces the growing role of genomic companion testing in prostate cancer therapeutics, especially as PARP inhibitor-based combinations expand. For manufacturers and clinical labs, it also emphasizes the need for consistent assay performance across patient populations and real-world workflow constraints. Clinically, the approval supports a more streamlined biomarker-and-therapy pathway for HRR-mutant patients moving into treatment, with potential downstream effects on utilization patterns for next-generation sequencing panels used in CDx settings.
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Big pharma licensing for GI rare disease GLP-2
Eli Lilly expanded its GLP-2 strategy through a licensing deal with Hanmi Pharm for sonefpeglutide, a long-acting GLP-2 analog being developed in short bowel syndrome (SBS). Lilly will pay $75 million upfront and can earn up to $1.185 billion in development, regulatory, and commercialization milestones, while Hanmi keeps rights in Korea. Sonefpeglutide is currently in a global Phase 2 trial (NCT04775706) for SBS, where Lilly will assume global development and commercialization responsibilities outside Korea, while Hanmi continues to lead the Phase 2 study through completion. The asset is delivered via Lilly’s antibody-linked formulation approach designed to improve in-body stability. For the GI rare-disease market, the agreement adds a challenger to Takeda’s Gattex and aligns Lilly’s GLP portfolio expansion with an unmet need for less burdensome, long-acting dosing options in a population with limited therapeutic alternatives.
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New approach methodologies and safer genome editing in HSCs
A research team led by Luigi Naldini at the San Raffaele Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy (SR-Tiget) unveiled an improved CRISPR-Cas9 strategy aimed at increasing precision and safety in human hematopoietic stem cells. The work targets a core translation barrier for genome editing therapies: minimizing unwanted editing outcomes while keeping editing efficient enough for clinical use. By focusing on HSCs—cells that can seed durable immune and blood system recovery—the platform is designed to reduce risk associated with genome editing variability and off-target activity. The study’s framing positions the advance as a step toward enabling broader clinical application of gene editing in blood disorders. If the improved precision translates in vivo, it could inform dosing, manufacturing, and regulatory expectations for next-generation edited cell therapies entering clinical development.
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Carve-out deal for muscular dystrophy pipeline
Servier agreed to acquire Edgewise Therapeutics’ muscular dystrophy assets in a transaction worth up to $2.65 billion, centered on sevasemten. The deal includes a $1.55 billion upfront payment plus potential milestones of up to $1.1 billion, with Servier expecting pivotal trial data to arrive this year. Sevasemten is being studied in a pivotal trial for Becker muscular dystrophy and a Phase 2 program in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. The oral drug is intended to protect muscles from ongoing damage in both rare neuromuscular conditions. The acquisition meaningfully consolidates risk and timelines for a late-stage neurology asset, offering Servier a path to move from development into potential regulatory review schedules dependent on trial readouts.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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