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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 7th Preview)
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Gilead accelerates ADC pipeline with Tubulis buyout
Gilead Sciences moved deeper into antibody-drug conjugates by agreeing to buy German ADC specialist Tubulis in a deal structured around a $3.15 billion upfront payment and up to $1.85 billion in milestones. Tubulis’ lead asset, TUB-040, is a NaPi2b-directed topoisomerase I inhibitor ADC in Phase Ib/II trials for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer and non-small cell lung cancer. The FDA granted fast track designation to TUB-040 in June 2024. The acquisition also adds TUB-030, a 5T4-targeted ADC in development for multiple solid tumors. Management framed the transaction as a continuation of Gilead’s recent oncology M&A streak and as an expansion of next-generation ADC capabilities, including technologies intended to reduce off-target toxicity. Tubulis will operate as a dedicated ADC research organization within Gilead after the transaction closes, expected in Q2 2026. Investors will now watch how quickly Gilead integrates Tubulis discovery, manufacturing, and clinical development resources—and whether TUB-040’s clinical readouts support a rapid path toward pivotal trials and broader label expansion.
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Merck revises Terns offer after clinical data
Merck lowered its bid for Terns Pharmaceuticals after receiving new clinical-data signals, underscoring how ADC and oncology deals are increasingly sensitive to real-world efficacy and safety interpretation. The transaction value was adjusted downward to reflect clinical information that did not match earlier expectations, according to reporting describing why the final terms deviated from the pharma’s initial offer. The deal still fits the broader sector pattern of consolidating ADC and oncology platforms. For biotech dealmaking, the episode highlights a tight feedback loop between emerging clinical evidence and acquisition economics—especially when bidders seek to de-risk late-stage programs. Companies will likely face renewed diligence pressure on translational rationale, tolerability, and biomarker alignment as acquirers calibrate risk-adjusted pricing in a fast-moving M&A market.
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FDA pushes regulatory reforms to speed first-in-human trials
The U.S. FDA is proposing new pathways aimed at cutting time to first-in-human studies, using the 2027 budget to support more streamlined trial entry for sponsors with adequate preclinical packages. The plan would make certain elements of the development process less burdensome by introducing an optional, risk-based expedited Investigational New Drug pathway and potentially expanding flexibility for early-stage trial planning. The budget proposal also emphasizes “radical transparency” and a shift toward a more proactive regulatory posture. A related reporting brief notes the FDA’s approach is designed to accelerate development schedules and reduce cost—particularly in contexts where companies want to confirm key preclinical findings without repeating high-friction steps such as certain animal testing. For the biotech sector, the practical impact will depend on congressional approval, operational details, and how broadly the agency defines “adequate” preclinical data for expedited pathways.
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AbbVie offers steep Humira discount via TrumpRx to avoid tariffs
AbbVie agreed to sell Humira through the government’s TrumpRx direct-to-consumer platform at a reported 86% discount as the administration works to manage tariff threats and broader pricing policy. According to the reporting, Humira would be priced at about $950 through TrumpRx for uninsured patients, versus list prices that can exceed $6,900. AbbVie is also offering Synthroid and certain ophthalmology products (Combigan and Alphagan) on the same platform. The structure ties TrumpRx participation to tariff and potential price-mandate exemptions, with discount pricing applying mainly to patients without insurance or plans that do not cover the relevant medicines. TrumpRx launched earlier than expected after delays. For commercial strategy, the key near-term variable will be how quickly payers and manufacturers re-route pricing dynamics under the policy—especially once tariff timing and onshoring conditions are fully realized.
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Novo Nordisk expands Wegovy to high-dose 7.2 mg
Novo Nordisk launched a higher-dose version of Wegovy in the U.S., adding a 7.2 mg injection to its chronic weight management regimen. The product expansion focuses on patients requiring step-up dosing within the semaglutide obesity treatment framework. The move arrives as GLP-1 competition intensifies on both efficacy and dosing convenience across obesity portfolios. For manufacturers and clinicians, the immediate operational questions are dosing accessibility, patient retention through dose escalation, and how payers will handle coverage for the higher strength. The high-dose introduction will also be watched for downstream effects on market share dynamics, given ongoing rivalry with oral and injectable GLP-1 programs.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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