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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 14th Preview)
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Hematology - off-the-shelf CAR T with outpatient intent
Legend Biotech’s LB-2501 is showing early efficacy with a safety profile that is enabling investigators to frame a future outpatient CAR T approach. At EHA2026, Lei Fan of First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University presented first-in-human data in relapsed/refractory B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma for LB-2501, a CD19/CD20 dual-targeting, off-the-shelf CAR T. Twelve participants across two dose levels received single infusions. At the higher dose, all six patients responded with five complete responses (CR) and one partial response (PR), including instances where responses deepened over time. Fan reported no neurotoxicity to date and the highest adverse-event grade observed so far was grade two. Legend CEO Ying Huang characterized the low observed toxicity as “a pleasant surprise,” comparing expectations to historical rates in autologous CAR T where grade 3 or higher adverse events have been reported in roughly 10% of patients.
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Regulatory approval - FDA clears adjuvant pembrolizumab plus belzutifan in kidney cancer
The FDA has approved an adjuvant regimen combining pembrolizumab and belzutifan for high-risk clear cell renal cell carcinoma following surgery. Dana-Farber researchers cited in the report supported the regulatory pathway for the pembrolizumab–belzutifan combination, a strategy designed to add checkpoint inhibition plus hypoxia pathway targeting after nephrectomy or partial resection. The approval covers adult patients with clear cell RCC meeting high-risk criteria in the post-surgical setting, establishing a new option intended to reduce recurrence risk. For developers, the approval also signals continued confidence in pairing immunotherapy with HIF-2α inhibition in oncology populations where tumor biology includes hypoxia signaling.
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Regulatory approval - Merck’s Welireg plus Keytruda gains kidney cancer indication
Merck’s pembrolizumab (Keytruda) and belzutifan (Welireg) combination received approval as an adjuvant treatment for kidney cancer after surgery. The approval expands the use of the dual regimen in the post-operative setting, aligning with a growing set of tumor-directed and hypoxia-targeting strategies being tested to prevent recurrence. For biotech and pharma portfolios, the decision reinforces the durability of Merck’s oncology development strategy around combining immune checkpoint blockade with pathway modulation, which has increasingly become a focal point in adjuvant trials. Market impact is likely to extend beyond Merck’s brand positioning, as the adjuvant label can affect how clinicians evaluate competing post-surgical regimens in eligible patients.
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Cell & gene therapy - first patient treated in partial reprogramming glaucoma trial
Life Biosciences has treated the first participant in a gene therapy trial designed to partially reprogram aged cells as a glaucoma treatment. The approach turns on three genes intended to drive partial reprogramming—maintaining cellular identity while restoring aspects of “youthful” function. The company expects the protein products to support regeneration of optic nerve neurons, which generally do not regenerate in adults. Because partial reprogramming carries theoretical safety concerns, including a potential risk of tumorigenesis, the trial is positioned around safety evaluation while assessing feasibility of the reprogramming mechanism in humans. The first-in-human step follows preclinical animal findings suggesting partial reprogramming can be performed with safety, while acknowledging that risks remain a central question for the field.
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Oncology - oncolytic VSV targets metastatic ovarian cancer through engineered signaling
Researchers unveiled ErbB-OSV, an engineered vesicular stomatitis virus designed to selectively ablate metastatic ovarian cancer cells by exploiting rewired signaling. The report describes an oncolytic platform built as a targeted VSV variant, with the goal of improving the safety and potency profile compared with a widely used attenuated strain background. In preclinical comparisons, ErbB-OSV showed enhanced anti-tumor activity while maintaining a safety profile characterized as improved relative to VSV-ON-∆M51. The work underscores how virotherapy developers are shifting from broad oncolysis toward circuit-level targeting—engineering the virus to recognize tumor-dependent signaling contexts rather than relying solely on viral tropism.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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