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What’s in Today’s Brief? (July 9th Preview)
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Neurodegeneration collaboration collapse
GSK has notified Alector that it is ending their immuno-neurology alliance, following major clinical setbacks for both investigational programs. The companies’ pact, struck in 2021 and scaled with amendments that shifted more development funding responsibility to Alector, covered two late-stage neurodegeneration candidates: latozinemab (AL001) and nivisnebart (AL101). Latozinemab failed to show meaningful benefit in a large late-stage study, while an interim futility analysis prompted Alector to discontinue its Phase 2 nivisnebart trial in early Alzheimer’s disease. GSK’s termination notice was issued July 6 and is expected to be fully settled by Jan. 2. The split marks a return attempt to brain diseases that GSK had deprioritized for more than a decade, including a parallel effort with the University of Oxford to create a drug-development center focused on Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and ALS.
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Gene editing funding push
ARPA-H launched THRIVE, a planned up-to-$160 million effort to develop custom gene editing treatments across rare diseases. The program will fund seven different teams, each with a stated milestone to begin clinical trials by year three. The agency’s focus is on tailoring gene editing “constructs” and approaches to specific disease biology, using partner teams to translate candidate designs into early clinical proof. THRIVE’s structure emphasizes parallel programs across organ systems, aiming to compress development timelines for indications with limited treatment options. The announcement highlights continued U.S. government interest in moving gene editing beyond platform innovation toward indication-specific therapeutics.
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FDA transparency policy shift on CRLs
The FDA has paused releasing new publicly available complete response letters (CRLs), seeking to reduce litigation risk around disclosure of sensitive rejection details. The pause follows a citizen’s petition filed in April and comes as the agency works toward a more formal legal basis for future releases. For sponsors, the policy shift changes how quickly application-level feedback becomes visible to the market and may affect how investors and competitors interpret regulatory outcomes before re-submission. The FDA also indicated it is working on a policy framework for disclosure, suggesting a transition rather than a permanent removal of information.
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Parkinson’s stem cell trial results
STEM-PD reported first human data supporting the feasibility and safety of an off-the-shelf stem cell approach for Parkinson’s disease. In the Phase 1/2 open-label trial, eight participants in Lund, Sweden received cryopreserved, human pluripotent stem cell–derived dopaminergic progenitor cells. The trial’s reported early outcomes add to growing evidence that cell-replacement strategies can be delivered safely using scalable manufacturing formats. The study was published in Nature Medicine, marking a notable milestone for translational timing as the field works to demonstrate clinical signal beyond target engagement. Together with related ISSCR 2026 updates, the STEM-PD results keep attention on next-generation dopaminergic progenitors as candidates for disease-modifying goals.
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IgA nephropathy approval
Vera Therapeutics won U.S. accelerated approval for TRUTAKNA (atacicept-vymj) to treat adults with primary IgA nephropathy at risk of disease progression. The FDA decision is based on an interim analysis from the ORIGIN 3 trial, in which TRUTAKNA achieved a 46% reduction in proteinuria from baseline and a statistically significant 42% reduction versus placebo at 36 weeks. The therapy targets immunological drivers by binding both BAFF and APRIL. Vera reported the treatment was generally well tolerated; the most common adverse reactions were infections and local administration reactions. With accelerated approval, Vera positions TRUTAKNA as the first and only available BAFF/APRIL inhibitor for IgAN, setting up competitive dynamics against other pipeline programs in kidney autoimmunity.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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