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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 19th Preview)
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Retatrutide hits endpoints — Lilly posts large weight and glucose declines
Eli Lilly reported late‑stage clinical data showing its triple‑agonist retatrutide produced substantial weight loss and clinically meaningful HbA1c reductions in patients with type 2 diabetes. The company disclosed topline Phase 3 results showing double‑digit percentage weight loss and up to a 1.9 percentage‑point drop in HbA1c, positioning the drug as a potential competitor to current GLP‑1/GIP therapies. The data provide both metabolic and weight‑loss signals of interest to regulators and payers; Lilly fielded analyst attention and has begun framing retatrutide for dual diabetes‑and‑obesity use. Retatrutide’s results were reported by Lilly and summarized in major trade coverage (STAT, company releases) with detailed efficacy and safety readouts expected in peer materials and regulatory filings. Clarification: retatrutide is a multi‑receptor agonist designed to target GLP‑1, GIP and glucagon pathways to amplify weight‑loss and glycemic control beyond single‑agonist therapies.
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Pfizer seeks earlier Talzenna use after Phase 3 win
Pfizer announced Phase 3 results showing its PARP inhibitor Talzenna (talazoparib) combined with standard therapy met primary endpoints in prostate cancer, and the company said it will seek regulatory label expansion to earlier lines of care. The data came as Pfizer continues commercial integration after acquiring Talzenna in a prior deal. Analysts flagged that earlier‑line use could materially expand the drug’s addressable market after initially slow uptake in later lines. Pfizer framed the results around response and survival signals that may shift prescribing patterns and justify moving Talzenna into frontline settings.
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FDA clears Icotyde: J&J lands oral IL‑23 pill for psoriasis
Johnson & Johnson and partner Protagonist won FDA approval for icotrokinra (branded Icotyde), the first oral IL‑23 receptor antagonist cleared for moderate‑to‑severe plaque psoriasis in adults and adolescents. The approval is based on a large ICONIC Phase 3 program in roughly 2,500 patients that met primary endpoints and demonstrated a tolerable safety profile. J&J projects blockbuster sales and is positioning Icotyde as an oral alternative to parenteral IL‑23 biologics such as Skyrizi and Tremfya, aiming to convert patients who avoid injectables. Regulators cleared the drug with label language for systemic therapy candidates; commercial uptake will hinge on payer coverage, real‑world tolerability and how payers value an oral IL‑23 option versus established injectables.
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In vivo CAR‑T: Dual‑vector system inserts large payloads and clears tumors
Researchers at UC San Francisco and collaborators reported a dual‑vector approach that enables precise, site‑specific integration of large DNA payloads into T cells directly in vivo, producing functional CAR‑T cells without ex vivo manufacturing. Published results showed durable engraftment and antitumor activity in humanized mouse models, including efficacy against solid tumors. The study represents a technical advance over prior in vivo strategies by combining cell specificity with locus targeting to reduce off‑target integration risks. Investigators framed the method as a potential shortcut to eliminate complex manufacturing and reduce costs; they cautioned translation will require careful safety testing and regulatory scrutiny because permanent genomic insertion in vivo raises risk‑management questions.
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AstraZeneca bets on China — builds cell‑therapy R&D and manufacturing hub
AstraZeneca unveiled plans to invest in end‑to‑end cell‑therapy capabilities in Shanghai, including a manufacturing and supply base plus an innovation center for early research, clinical manufacturing and regulatory support. The move follows AstraZeneca’s multi‑billion‑dollar commitment to China and reflects the company’s pivot to scale cell‑therapy production for Asian markets. Company statements and industry reporting said the Shanghai plant will support CAR‑T and next‑generation cell therapies acquired through deals and internal programs. The investment signals multinational pharma strategy to localize advanced biologics manufacturing and compress timelines for Asia‑focused trials and regulatory filings.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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