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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 27th Preview)
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Regulatory action: Tavneos revocation trajectory expands across agencies
Europe’s drug regulator moved closer to pulling Tavneos (avacopan) after the CHMP joined the FDA in challenging the approval basis for Amgen and Vifor’s rare-disease treatment. The recommendation to revoke EU authorization cites data integrity concerns tied to the Advocate study used to support the marketing application. In parallel, the EMA’s committee recommended withdrawing Tavneos in light of “incorrect and misleading” data, and the FDA has outlined a U.S. withdrawal proposal that is expected to proceed to a hearing. The coordinated escalation underscores how clinical dataset validity—beyond trial outcomes—can determine the fate of late-stage biologics and small molecules. For stakeholders, the next steps are decisive: EU deliberations on revocation and U.S. procedural milestones (including the hearing) will shape whether Tavneos exits both markets or survives via additional agency-specific justification.
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FDA approvals: Viridian’s veligrotug launches competition against Tepezza
The FDA approved Viridian Therapeutics’ thyroid eye disease drug veligrotug, to be marketed as Lumvoa, setting up direct competition with Amgen’s Tepezza. The approval expands treatment options for a high-visibility indication and immediately increases pressure on the incumbent’s commercial differentiation. Viridian’s move also signals the agency’s willingness to clear new therapies in established marketplaces, where pricing, access, and safety/efficacy head-to-head positioning will likely become central marketing battlegrounds. With veligrotug entering a category already defined by Tepezza’s clinical footprint, the next period will focus on uptake dynamics—particularly reimbursement and real-world prescribing patterns.
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Oncology pipelines: Replimune seeks third FDA try with RP1 advisory decision in August
Replimune’s resubmission for oncolytic immunotherapy RP1 in advanced melanoma has cleared an FDA administrative step, with a potential advisory committee timeline in late July and a decision date on or before Aug. 2. The candidate is being pursued for accelerated approval after two prior FDA rejections. RP1’s first rejection in July 2025 cited that the pivotal study did not qualify as an “adequate and well-controlled clinical investigation.” The second rejection in April found the data package “insufficient” to support “substantial evidence of effectiveness.” The resubmission arrives after leadership changes at FDA that contributed to a controversial review backdrop. The FDA will now weigh whether the revised package resolves the agency’s earlier concerns—an outcome that could determine whether accelerated approval is achievable for RP1 or remains blocked.
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New therapies entering broader markets: Ionis’ Tryngolza gains prevalent-market label
Ionis’ Tryngolza has received an approval expansion that moves the therapy from rare FCS into severe hypertriglyceridemia—a step that gives Ionis its first widespread cardiometabolic-market foothold. The change reframes Tryngolza as a broader lipid-regimen option for patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia, which carries risk for acute pancreatitis. The expansion also highlights Ionis’ strategy shift: rather than partnering out its assets, the company is leaning into commercialization and building internal revenue pathways around pipeline-to-market progression. For biotech and pharma distribution players, the key near-term question becomes formulary access and prescribing uptake, as payers often decide quickly when a therapy scales beyond a narrow orphan-defined segment.
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Cell therapy innovation: intravesical MUC16 CAR T controls bladder tumors in mice
Weill Cornell Medicine and Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center reported preclinical results for intravesical CAR T therapy targeting MUC16 in bladder cancer. In a Journal of Experimental Medicine paper, investigators led by Taha Merghoub, PhD engineered catheter-delivered CAR T cells designed to kill bladder cancer cells directly inside the bladder. In mouse models, the intravesical delivery approach controlled bladder tumors and established MUC16 as a clinically relevant target for anti-bladder-cancer CAR T strategies. The team positioned the catheter-based route as a potential way to reduce hurdles typical of solid-tumor CAR T programs, where limited infiltration and off-target toxicity often limit efficacy. The immediate translational implication is route-of-administration focus: if the approach can be replicated safely in humans, it could widen the set of “solid tumor-ready” CAR T strategies beyond purely systemic delivery models.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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