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What’s in Today’s Brief? (July 16th Preview)
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Regulatory milestone: oral PCSK9 expands cholesterol options
The FDA cleared Merck’s first oral PCSK9 cholesterol drug, Lipfendra (enlicitide), marking a major shift for patients who need deeper LDL lowering than statins alone. The once-daily pill reduces LDL levels to targets far below typical statin ranges, with trial data showing reductions of up to about 60% and a side-effect profile described as comparable to placebo. The approval follows new cholesterol guideline updates from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology in March, which pushed more aggressive LDL targets for higher-risk patients. Merck is also running studies designed to test whether the therapy can reduce heart attacks and strokes. For biotech stakeholders, the clearance also underscores continuing regulatory willingness to broaden cardiovascular prevention toolkits beyond injectable biologics—potentially reshaping competitive dynamics across lipid-lowering and adjacent cardiometabolic drug classes.
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Big pharma moves into psychedelics for treatment-resistant depression
Eli Lilly agreed to acquire AtaiBeckley in a deal worth $2.8 billion upfront and up to $3.8 billion with development and regulatory milestones, pushing Lilly into psychedelic-based psychiatry. Lilly will pay $6.75 per share in cash for AtaiBeckley, according to the announced terms. AtaiBeckley’s lead program, BPL-003 (mebufotenin benzoate), is a synthetic psychedelic aimed at rapid-acting neuroplasticity effects via the serotonin system. In a Phase IIb trial (NCT05660642), a single in-clinic dose produced statistically significant reductions in depressive symptoms starting on day two, with effects reportedly maintained through day 57. The transaction signals renewed industry confidence in a complex regulatory pathway for psychedelics, and it adds to Lilly’s broader neuroscience expansion beyond its cardiometabolic foundation.
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Lung cancer partnership licensing deal lifts AstraZeneca’s EGFR franchise
AstraZeneca secured global rights to Dizal Pharmaceutical’s oral EGFR exon 20 insertion therapy Zegfrovy (sunvozertinib) in a licensing agreement valued at up to $1.5 billion. The structure includes a $600 million upfront payment and additional development and sales milestones. Zegfrovy is positioned for adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC harboring EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations after prior platinum chemotherapy, where it has approval in both the US and China. Dizal’s WU-Kong28 Phase III results, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, reported superior progression-free survival versus platinum-doublet chemotherapy in the first-line setting. For biotech and pharma planning, the deal consolidates AstraZeneca’s targeted oncology roadmap and provides a template for monetizing China-originated development through global commercialization rights.
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Radiopharmaceutical funding accelerates next phase of prostate cancer program
AdvanCell closed a $315 million Series D financing to advance its lead radiopharmaceutical candidate into late-stage development and expand US manufacturing capacity. The company said the funding supports clinical progression for a prostate cancer agent and increases throughput for radioisotope-based production. The round is framed as particularly important for radiopharma makers where the bottleneck is often manufacturing availability rather than only clinical execution. It also positions AdvanCell as a direct contender in the expanding radioligand market. Industry observers will watch follow-on milestones for the prostate program and whether the expanded manufacturing platform can translate financial scale into reliable supply for trial and commercial timelines.
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Diagnostic scale-up: Qiagen bloodstream panel gains CE-IVD certification
Qiagen announced CE-IVD certification for its QiaStat-Dx BCID GN Plus AMR Panel, extending the company’s rapid molecular coverage for bloodstream infections. The panel is designed to detect 13 gram-negative bacterial targets and 18 AMR markers from positive blood cultures in roughly one hour. Qiagen said the panel complements its earlier CE-IVD certified QiaStat-Dx BCID GPF Plus AMR Panel, which targets 20 gram-positive bacterial and fungal pathogens and 10 AMR markers. Both run on Qiagen’s PCR-based QiaStat-Dx system. For lab operators and developers, the certification reinforces the move toward faster pathogen-and-resistance reporting to support antimicrobial stewardship and infection control decisions at the point of care.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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