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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 3rd Preview)
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Regulatory approval: prostate/protein degradation breast cancer
The FDA approved Pfizer and Arvinas’ Veppanu (vepdegestrant) for a defined subgroup of adults with metastatic estrogen receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer whose disease progressed after at least one endocrine therapy, and who have ESR1 mutations. The agency’s decision aligns with efficacy data from the VERITAC-2 trial, where Veppanu improved progression-free survival by nearly three months versus fulvestrant. Arvinas and Pfizer co-developed the PROTAC (proteolysis-targeting chimera) therapy. The approval gives the regimen a clearer regulatory footprint in ESR1-mutated disease after endocrine resistance, a segment where treatment options are limited and clinical endpoints have emphasized durability. Commercially, the label is narrow and tied to ESR1 status, setting up a targeted use profile rather than broad first-line positioning. The approval also adds a new mechanism class to the breast cancer market, reinforcing investor focus on protein-degradation strategies. For diagnostics, the decision increases the practical value of companion-style biomarker testing for ESR1 mutations to identify eligible patients.
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Clinical readout: long-term efficacy for RET+ NSCLC
Rigel Pharmaceuticals published the final long-term results from the Phase 1/2 ARROW study of pralsetinib (Gavreto) in metastatic RET fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. The dataset includes an additional 42 months of follow-up beyond earlier disclosures. Across patients with measurable disease (n=259), the overall response rate reached 70%, including 7% complete responses. The company also reported a manageable safety profile consistent with prior ARROW NSCLC data, including three treatment-related deaths in treatment-naive patients in Asia attributed to pneumonia and interstitial lung disease, with no new safety signals flagged. The publication also highlighted activity in a baseline measurable CNS metastases subset, expanding the clinical narrative around intracranial benefit for a therapy designed as a once-daily, selective RET inhibitor. Rigel framed the longer-term data as further support for positioning pralsetinib as a first-line option for RET fusion-positive NSCLC, with oncologists emphasizing the need for early biomarker testing to identify eligible patients.
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Regulatory dispute: FDA rejects breakthrough-designated melanoma therapy
Replimune’s oncolytic immunotherapy RP1, engineered from a modified herpesvirus, has faced additional FDA hurdles after the agency declined approval twice despite the program holding breakthrough therapy designation. The controversy centers on why the FDA rejected the proposed pathway for RP1 as a second-line option for melanoma patients who have not responded to initial treatments. The reporting notes that RP1’s early trials generated strong responses in clinical settings, which is precisely why developers expected a fast regulatory outcome under the breakthrough designation and fast-track-like posture. Instead, developers say the agency has behaved “like this” in a way they have not previously seen, underscoring the gap between early signals and regulatory expectations. UPMC Hillman Cancer Center director Yana Najjar said the decision leaves a patient population without clear second-line options. She characterized the affected group as “left behind” due to the lack of alternatives. For Replimune, the episode heightens uncertainty around oncolytic virotherapy acceptance and may sharpen scrutiny of endpoints, response durability, and benefit-risk in treatment-resistant metastatic disease.
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Funding and IPOs: continued capital formation in biotech
Three biotechs priced upsized IPOs in a single window, totaling more than $850 million combined, and moved into public trading with gains in the aftermarket. Seaport Therapeutics, Hemab Therapeutics, and Avalyn Pharma collectively marked a strong reopening of the IPO channel for biotech investors. Seaport’s launch followed its listing strategy shift, with Puretech choosing to exit the market for a London Stock Exchange-only posture while Seaport raised gross proceeds of $254.9 million. Hemab priced a larger-than-expected deal, targeting coagulation disorders including Glanzmann thrombasthenia and von Willebrand disease, and set gross proceeds at $301.5 million. Hypergrowth in the sector was also reflected in related deals outside the IPO bucket: Hypervision Surgical raised £17 million for an AI-enabled hyperspectral imaging platform intended to provide surgeons real-time tissue physiology insights. The net effect is fresh risk capital flowing into both clinical-stage and technology-enabled life sciences, suggesting sustained appetite for differentiated platforms and commercially addressable therapeutic areas even amid volatile equity conditions.
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Business platform: SCADA integration for biopharma manufacturing
Cytiva and Rockwell Automation launched Figurate SCADA, a supervisory control and data acquisition layer meant to reduce digital bottlenecks across biopharmaceutical manufacturing. The open-architecture system is designed to enable real-time oversight of unit operations through a single interface while supporting third-party instrument connectivity. The collaboration targets interoperability gaps that can force manual workarounds and create data integrity risks when biomanufacturers run equipment from fragmented vendor ecosystems. Figurate SCADA is positioned for a “process development to commercial manufacturing” workflow without redesign. The platform also emphasizes compliance readiness through streamlined cGMP alignment, centralized alarms, and modular, template-driven implementation intended to reduce deployment and validation timelines. By bundling connectivity and monitoring across instrument vendors, Cytiva and Rockwell are pushing for faster digitization of process intensification and continuous manufacturing use cases.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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