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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 24th Preview)
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FDA approval—first gene therapy under new priority voucher for hearing loss
Regeneron’s gene therapy Otarmeni (lunsotogene parvec) won U.S. FDA approval for a rare inherited form of hearing loss caused by variants in the otoferlin gene. The approval marks the first clearance under the agency’s National Priority Voucher program and positions Otarmeni as a potential milestone for the accelerated gene-therapy pathway. According to Regeneron and coverage of the approval, the company plans to offer the treatment at no cost to eligible patients in the U.S. Early study results described at the time of clearance reported modest hearing gains in participants with ultra-rare disease. The FDA’s action also comes alongside a policy backdrop: Regeneron previously linked the voucher program to the value of an additional pediatric priority voucher, highlighting how new regulatory tools can change gene-therapy commercial economics. Bottom line for biotech developers and investors: Otarmeni’s approval adds another datapoint for how the National Priority Voucher program is being used to shorten time to market for gene therapies targeting rare pediatric conditions.
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Gene editing—base editing corrects hard-to-treat CFTR splicing mutation in cell models
A new cell-model study reports functional correction of the “untreatable” cystic fibrosis mutation 1717-1G>A using CRISPR base editing. Researchers from the University of Trento and collaborators targeted the splicing defect by deploying an adenine base editor delivered with optimized RNAs and single-guide RNA design. The work, published in Science Translational Medicine, uses a SpRY-ABE9 system intended to correct the mutation while limiting off-target activity. The authors report editing efficiencies up to 30% across human embryonic kidney cell lines and patient-derived airway epithelial cells. For CF drug developers, the main signal is that the approach is aimed at a patient subset that has historically been excluded from available CFTR modulator therapies—splicing mutations that produce little to no functional CFTR protein. A base-editing strategy offers a different therapeutic mechanism than small-molecule modulators and could expand addressable populations if safety and delivery can be demonstrated in vivo. While only preclinical cell data are provided here, the study adds technical detail to how SpRY-based editing can be tuned for therapeutic-grade correction of clinically relevant CFTR variants.
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Dealmaking—Ray Therapeutics raises $125M to advance retinal gene therapy into registrational study
Ray Therapeutics closed a $125 million Series B financing to accelerate development of its optogenetic retinal gene therapy RTx-015 for retinitis pigmentosa. The funding is earmarked for late-stage clinical development, including an upcoming registrational Phase II/III study, and for capabilities aimed at commercial readiness. The company is pursuing a “mutation-agnostic” strategy by delivering highly light-sensitive proteins to retinal cells, with the goal of improving visual function regardless of the underlying genetic variant. Ray positions the approach as a way to extend benefit beyond the narrow patient groups typical of mutation-specific retinal gene therapies. RTx-015’s value proposition is closely tied to the regulatory and trial-planning path: the company plans to use the financing to support late-stage execution and scale efforts that often become limiting factors as therapies move from early proof into pivotal programs. For investors monitoring retinal degeneration, this round underscores continuing appetite for gene-therapy franchises that can broaden addressable populations through platform design rather than single-mutation targeting.
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Oncology—AACR early data spotlight new ADCs and targeted agents
At AACR 2026, multiple early-phase oncology readouts reinforced the sector’s continued focus on ADCs and targeted therapies in hard-to-treat populations. In separate presentations, researchers reported activity signals for a KRAS G12D inhibitor and for a CLDN6-targeting ADC in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. In one study, early-phase data for zoldonrasib in KRAS G12D–mutant non-small cell lung cancer showed an objective response rate of 52% at the recommended Phase 2 dose, alongside a disease control rate of 93%, with the safety profile described as manageable. Another AACR presentation described first-in-human Phase I results for QLS5132, an antibody-drug conjugate targeting CLDN6 in advanced platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. The study reported partial responses in nine patients after dosing in an IV regimen every three weeks, with no treatment discontinuations or deaths attributed to adverse events in the summary. Together, the readouts highlight how ADC makers are aiming to preserve target-driven potency while managing systemic toxicity, while RAS-targeted drug developers pursue tumor genotype-defined strategies beyond the most common KRAS settings. For biotech professionals, the key takeaway is not late-stage efficacy but the early proof-of-concept signals and the dose-to-activity framing being used to justify Phase 2 expansion.
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Immunotherapy in autoimmune disease—Kyverna’s miv-cel shows positive registrational Phase II primary analysis
Kyverna Therapeutics reported positive primary-analysis results from its registrational Phase II trial KYSA-8 of mivocabtagene autoleucel (miv-cel, KYV-101) in stiff-person syndrome. The company presented the data as a potential step toward a first-in-class CAR T in an autoimmune indication. The trial design centers on a single dose intended to avoid chronic immunotherapy and address disease progression in a population where current options are limited. Kyverna reported statistically significant improvements across primary and secondary endpoints at 16 weeks, with a majority of patients regaining function and all stopping chronic immunotherapies. The update also included tolerability commentary, supporting the case for continued development and regulatory submission timing. Kyverna said it plans to submit a BLA to the FDA in the first half of the year. For the autoimmune-cell-therapy field, the key watch item is whether the efficacy and safety signal holds up as Kyverna moves from registrational trial execution toward submission-level data expectations.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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