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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 10th Preview)
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Regulatory decision and access for a next-wave gene therapy
The FDA has granted accelerated approval to Regeneron’s Otarmeni (lunsotogene parvec-cwha), positioning it as the first gene therapy designed to restore neurosensory function to normal levels in OTOF-related hearing loss. The therapy is indicated for children and adults with severe-to-profound and profound sensorineural hearing loss tied to biallelic OTOF variants, with preserved outer hair cell function and no prior cochlear implant in the same ear. Approval was based on hearing sensitivity improvements measured by average pure tone audiometry (PTA) at week 24 in the Phase I/II CHORD trial (NCT05788536). In trial results, 80% (16 of 20) met the primary endpoint at ≤70 dB HL at week 24, and 70% (14 of 20) met a key secondary endpoint on auditory brainstem response (ABR) at ≤90 dB. Regeneron said it will make Otarmeni available for free in the U.S., and noted the accelerated approval pathway may require verification and description of clinical benefit in a confirmatory portion of CHORD. The approval also came under the FDA’s Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher (CNPV) pilot program, reflecting a targeted regulatory push for high-need therapies.
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Moderna’s reported hantavirus vaccine effort
Moderna began early-stage work on a hantavirus vaccine, according to reports that sparked a notable investor reaction. The Boston Globe and other outlets described the program as still in its earliest stages, emphasizing that a viable vaccine would typically require years of development and clinical evaluation before reaching patients. The reported effort is framed against the backdrop of heightened public awareness after hantavirus cases associated with cruise travel were reported by the World Health Organization, including confirmed infections and deaths. WHO materials describe hantaviruses as rodent-borne viruses that can cause severe syndromes in humans, and note there is currently no approved vaccine for hantavirus disease. Moderna has not provided extensive public details, but reporting points to collaborations with the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases and Korea University’s Vaccine Innovation Center. The development highlights how infectious-disease pipeline signals can move quickly into equity markets even when clinical timelines remain distant.
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Cardiovascular and metabolic signal from a niche respiratory drug
Researchers at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) reported that the asthma medication formoterol may reverse fatty liver disease biology, including metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). The work suggests the long-used L-type calcium channel blocker could alter disease-relevant pathways in models associated with MASH progression. The findings position formoterol as a repurposing candidate for liver inflammation and metabolic dysfunction, leveraging a drug class already characterized in respiratory indications. While details of study design were not included in the article summary, the report frames the results as a new therapeutic avenue for a condition with major unmet need and substantial burden. For the biotech and pharma pipeline, the development reinforces the ongoing strategy of identifying systemic effects of well-characterized drugs and mapping them to liver outcomes, potentially shortening the time from target biology to clinical testing.
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Sequencing platform competition heats up with a patent infringement suit
10x Genomics filed a lawsuit against Element Biosciences, alleging that Element’s Aviti24 multiomic analysis platform infringes multiple spatial technology patents licensed from Harvard University. The complaint was filed in the US District Court for the District of Delaware, with 10x seeking monetary damages, attorneys’ fees, and a permanent injunction. 10x cited specific patent numbers covering compositions and methods for analyte detection and methods for selectively sequencing amplicons. The company argued that the asserted Aviti24 system uses patented inventions, while Element said it strongly disagrees and believes the claims are without merit, framing the filing as part of a broader pattern of patent disputes. The case arrives as spatial workflows proliferate. Element has said it plans to launch direct in-tissue spatial sequencing products later this year across fresh-frozen and FFPE tissues, adding commercial stakes to an IP fight that could affect customers and platform strategies.
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Immunology financing and early clinical push for tolerance
Tr1X is advancing an off-the-shelf type 1 regulatory T cell platform after raising attention for its approach to inducing long-term immune tolerance. The San Diego biotech’s lead program, built around allogeneic Tr1 cells, is in Phase I/II testing for difficult-to-treat inflammatory and autoimmune conditions. The company’s pipeline design focuses on tolerogenic immune modulation rather than conventional immunosuppression, aiming to address chronicity and disease persistence. The platform is described as scalable and potentially accessible, with an emphasis on repeatable manufacturing and product consistency. The profile underscores the broader gene-and-cell therapy shift toward standardized cellular products that can enter development with clearer comparability frameworks, especially as competition increases across immune tolerance and checkpoint-adjacent strategies.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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