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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 23rd Preview)
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Pancreatic cancer RAS targeting expands with new first-line and combination data
Revolution Medicines delivered updated evidence for daraxonrasib, its oral multi-selective inhibitor targeting RAS, at AACR, adding first-line and combination readouts in metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The new dataset follows previously reported Phase 3 results in previously treated patients that showed a survival benefit versus chemotherapy. In the first-line studies presented, daraxonrasib was evaluated as monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy across cohorts with different RAS mutation statuses. Monotherapy data reported tumor shrinkage or disappearance in 47% of patients and disease progression–free survival markers including 71% alive without progression at six months. In the combination arm, those figures were 58% and 84%, respectively. The presentation keeps pressure on the Phase 3 RASolute 303 program, which is already enrolling previously untreated patients irrespective of tumor RAS genotype. Wall Street interest also intensified after the earlier Phase 3 win and the company’s associated financing activity, though competing narratives on takeover speculation remain mixed. Overall, the AACR update positions daraxonrasib as a potential shift in the standard of care for a heavily RAS-driven, chemotherapy-resistant cancer population where durable outcomes remain scarce.
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Pancreatic cancer chemo-resistance faces new leverage via netrin-1 inhibition
Netris Pharma reported positive Phase Ib data for NP-137, a first-in-class inhibitor of netrin-1, targeting chemotherapy resistance in pancreatic cancer. The company’s update centers on the hypothesis that netrin-1 signaling contributes to the resistance biology that limits benefit from standard regimens. The trial results indicate NP-137 can alleviate resistance to chemotherapy in this setting, supporting further development in a disease where resistance mechanisms are a persistent clinical barrier. Netris framed the data as a potential step toward improving treatment efficacy in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. The announcement places netrin-1 inhibition into the broader pancreatic cancer strategy landscape increasingly focused on overcoming microenvironment- and pathway-driven resistance, complementing RAS- and immune-adjacent approaches. With pancreatic outcomes still dominated by late-stage resistance, the emerging NP-137 signal increases the number of actionable mechanisms now being tested in clinically relevant trial populations.
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FDA approval opens competition in second-line HIV with Merck’s once-daily regimen
The FDA cleared Merck’s Idvynso (doravirine/islatravir), giving providers a new once-daily option for adults with HIV-1 who are already virologically suppressed and have no history of treatment failure, along with specified resistance constraints. The approval arrives ahead of the drug’s April 28 PDUFA date, according to reporting. Idvynso is a two-drug regimen designed to pair mechanisms that suppress HIV replication, with dosing positioned to expand choice for patients needing alternatives due to safety or tolerability. The authorization also brings renewed competitive pressure on established regimens such as Gilead’s Biktarvy. For biotech and pharma, the decision underscores continuing movement toward simpler regimens and incremental innovation within the suppressed-patient population. It also provides a concrete regulatory milestone for Merck’s effort to reassert presence in HIV after years of competitive repositioning. Clinically, the label reflects a narrower switch use case than de novo initiation strategies, but it still matters for sequencing of therapy when patients require changes rather than first-line starts.
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Autoimmune CAR-T pushes toward FDA filing after full SPS dataset from Kyverna
Kyverna Therapeutics advanced its stiff-person syndrome (SPS) CAR T effort with full registrational trial results for mivocabtagene autoleucel (miv-cel, KYV-101). The company published a comprehensive dataset from KYSA-8, supporting rapid clinical endpoints at 16 weeks and extending to a full-view assessment of function and treatment discontinuation outcomes. Kyverna reported that a single dose drove statistically significant, clinically meaningful improvements across primary and secondary endpoints at 16 weeks. The update also described an outcome profile in which most patients regained function and all discontinued chronic immunotherapies, alongside tolerability signals appropriate for a potential first-in-class autoimmune CAR T. The company is preparing regulatory steps, including a planned BLA submission for the FDA in the first half of the year. That timeline is material because CAR T approvals for autoimmune indications would represent a distinct expansion from existing blood-cancer-only labels. The dataset tightens the case for a registrational-grade evidentiary package and increases scrutiny on comparators, manufacturing reliability, and safety monitoring expectations for a one-time therapy platform.
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Medicare obesity drug coverage stalls as CMS delays BALANCE model
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services indefinitely delayed the BALANCE pilot model after insurance plans did not commit to participate in covering obesity drugs under Medicare Part D. CMS extended the temporary Medicare GLP-1 Bridge demonstration through the end of 2027, while Medicaid BALANCE coverage remains active in participating states. The move effectively slows implementation of a policy designed to expand access to GLP-1-based obesity therapies for seniors, amid uncertainty around plan participation and financial implications. CMS’s decision keeps the market waiting on the operational details of how, and whether, Medicare will expand coverage. For drug developers and payers, the delay is a tangible reimbursement headwind because it limits near-term payer adoption at scale and prolongs cash-pay and alternative access models for patients. The policy trajectory also matters to biotech planning given how quickly pricing and formulary decisions can shift when Medicare coverage patterns change.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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