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What’s in Today’s Brief? (July 6th Preview)
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Company dealmaking and pipeline build
Roche moved to deepen its breast cancer pipeline by striking an early-stage deal with Otsuka’s subsidiary Astex, according to reporting on the transaction. The arrangement centers on Astex programs for Genentech and underscores Roche’s continued effort to expand next-generation oncology modalities ahead of later-stage readouts. While the upfront cash component was described as modest at $25 million, the strategic signal is tied to what Roche gets beyond initial funding, including access to Astex’s early-stage assets and platform capabilities. For Genentech, the deal also fits a broader pattern of partnering to refresh solid-tumor exposure without waiting for internal discovery cycles. For biotech observers, the Astex-Roche structure highlights how oncology incumbents are using smaller, capability-oriented transactions to manage portfolio risk while building optionality around new mechanisms and targets.
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Regulatory setbacks in oncology confirmatory trials
Bristol Myers Squibb disclosed that a confirmatory study for Krazati failed in colorectal cancer, providing an update on the drug’s evidence package. The company said patients taking Krazati in combination with an EGFR inhibitor did not meet the confirmatory trial’s intended outcome in the colorectal setting. The filing is significant because confirmatory trials can determine whether regulators expand label scope or whether post-approval expectations tighten. For the broader oncology market, Krazati’s trajectory also affects competitive positioning among KRAS-pathway and EGFR-combination strategies in solid tumors. BMS’s update adds near-term uncertainty for planned development steps and reinforces how quickly sponsor plans can shift after confirmatory failures.
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FDA cleared diagnostics at home
FDA clearance has been granted to Visby Medical for an at-home, multi-virus PCR test covering flu and COVID-19, positioning the product as the first such assay cleared via 510(k). Visby’s test differentiates influenza A, influenza B and SARS-CoV-2 and is designed to deliver lab-quality sensitivity with a 30-minute result, paired with telehealth connectivity. The company framed the clearance as an expansion of access to molecular diagnostics for early antiviral decision-making. Visby also cited prior over-the-counter PCR clearances, including an STI assay authorized via de novo clearance in March 2025. The development was supported in part by BARDA funding under the US Department of Health and Human Services’ ASPR program, and Visby’s distribution partnerships include major testing and retail channels.
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Clinical-stage funding for pulmonary fibrosis
Celea Therapeutics secured $180 million to fund a pivotal Phase 3 head-to-head study of deupirfenidone in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, focusing on an oral small-molecule comparison against standard of care. The financing is earmarked for the company’s de-risking push toward a late-stage efficacy and safety readout. The trial design described in the coverage targets real-world clinical decision points by positioning deupirfenidone against an established comparator rather than placebo. That approach can sharpen the signal for payers and clinicians evaluating an additional option for IPF management. For the respiratory biotech landscape, the round reflects continued investor appetite for fibrosis programs when trial strategy and comparator selection are clear.
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Big pharma acquisition and deal value expansion
AbbVie moved to acquire Apogee Therapeutics after years of discussions, setting up a $10.9 billion deal structure described in coverage of the transaction. The report also notes additional regulatory and market context, including a UK drug pricing pilot. For Apogee, the takeover ends a long search for scale and late-stage development resources. For AbbVie, adding Apogee’s pipeline and platform capabilities supports continued portfolio building across immunology and other high-value disease areas. The size and structure of the proposed consideration highlight how large-cap drugmakers keep funding capacity for targeted biotech bets as competition for late-stage assets intensifies.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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