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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 17th Preview)
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Seizure cell therapy deal
UCB will buy Neurona in a deal valued at up to $1.2 billion, positioning the Belgian pharma to broaden beyond its small-molecule epilepsy portfolio with a potentially one-off cell therapy. The acquisition is aimed at seizure treatment in a hard-to-treat form of epilepsy, according to the announcement. For UCB, the move signals continued investment in advanced therapies as it looks to diversify sources of growth. For Neurona, the transaction provides capital and development reach that can accelerate clinical testing and potential registration plans. The market impact is likely to hinge on how Neurona’s early clinical data translate into durability and safety in larger studies, especially in patient populations where current options remain limited.
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Pancreatic cancer Phase 3 readout
Revolution Medicines reported a landmark survival benefit for its investigational RAS-targeting drug daraxonrasib (RMC-6236) in a global Phase 3 trial in metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. In RASolute 302, the company said median overall survival was 13.2 months with daraxonrasib versus 6.7 months with standard chemotherapy. The trial, which included a broad mix of RAS genotypes, also showed improvements in progression-free survival and a manageable safety profile with no new safety signals reported in the release. Revolution said it plans to use the data to pursue FDA approval, though timing was not specified. The significance for biotech is high: pancreatic cancer has historically resisted targeted approaches, and a positive readout for a RAS-state inhibitor could quickly reframe the competitive landscape for developers targeting MAPK and related pathways.
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DMD gene therapy Phase 3 expansion for Europe
Roche said it will launch a new global Phase 3 trial for the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy Elevidys after Europe’s main regulator delivered a negative opinion. The company aims to generate placebo-controlled data over 72 weeks that could support a revised path to European approval. The study will enroll about 100 “early ambulatory” boys with Duchenne, randomizing them to Elevidys or placebo. Roche’s strategy reflects an attempt to address prior concerns about long-term benefit and to strengthen the clinical evidence package versus the Embark Phase 3 outcome. The development matters because Elevidys’ regulatory history has been volatile, with restrictions in the U.S. in certain patients following safety concerns. Another Phase 3 readout could determine whether the therapy can regain market access in Europe and beyond.
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Biotech IPO pipeline
Kailera Therapeutics priced an upsized U.S. IPO to raise about $625 million, setting a new benchmark for biotech listings. The obesity-focused company’s offering supports global development across injectable and oral candidates, anchored by ribupatide (KAI-9531), a once-weekly GLP-1/GIP dual agonist peptide in Phase 3 testing. The IPO also reflects how investors continue to underwrite late-stage obesity narratives after a multiyear surge in GLP-1 demand. Kailera said its proceeds will fund clinical trials across its obesity pipeline. Separately, the wider market reaction underscores continued appetite for obesity platforms with clear clinical differentiation and sizable addressable patient pools.
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Molecular glue clinical expansion financing
Neomorph secured a $100 million Series B financing to advance NEO-811, an oral molecular glue degrader designed to induce targeted degradation of ARNT (HIF-1β). The company plans to use the proceeds to fund its ongoing Phase I/II trial in locally advanced or metastatic non-resectable clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), plus to expand its broader pipeline. The financing was led by Deerfield Management, with participation including Regeneron Ventures, Longwood Fund, Alexandria Venture Investments, and investors tied to Dana-Farber’s Binney Street Capital. Neomorph also disclosed partnerships with Novo Nordisk, Biogen, and AbbVie, including milestone potential across the collaborations. For the biotech sector, the deal highlights continued capital flow toward molecular glue degraders as developers seek differentiated approaches to HIF-pathway biology in oncology.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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