Diagonal Therapeutics develops agonist antibodies to treat rare cardiovascular conditions. Using artificial intelligence, the startup’s technology sorts through billions of antibody/receptor combinations to identify the ones that reactivate signaling pathways lost to disease.In a drug discovery career spanning more than two decades, Alex Lugovskoy has seen a lot of antibodies come and go. The vast majority of them work by inhibiting a cellular function. Lugovskoy, now the CEO of startup Diagonal Therapeutics, said he long hoped someone would come up with a way to develop antibodies that activate their targets. With each passing year, no one did. So he took up the challenge himself. Diagonal uses computational and experimental techniques to understand what happens when an antibody binds to a receptor and which binding combinations will yield the desired effect. After developing its platform for the past two years, the startup this past week pulled back the curtain on its ...
• Pfizer’s PARP inhibitor Talzenna has gained European approval when used in combination with Pfizer and Astellas’ Xtandi to treat adult patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) in whom chemotherapy is not clinically indicated. This approval makes Talzenna the first PARP inhibitor in Europe to be licensed in combination with Xtandi in mCRPC, Pfizer said in a release. The European Commission approved Pfizer’s application based on data from the phase 3 TALAPRO-2 trial, which showed that the combo cut the risk of disease progression or death in patients with mCRPC compared with placebo and Xtandi. Last June, the FDA approved the combination to treat adults with HRR gene-mutated mCRPC. • In another regulatory win for Pfizer, the FDA is reviewing the company’s full approval application on Genmab-partnered Tivdak. Under its priority review timeline, the FDA is assessing whether to convert Tivdak’s accelerated approval into a full nod to treat ...
In 2022, fueled by its powerhouse COVID products, Pfizer became the first company in the history of the biopharma industry to top $100 billion in annual revenue. What would the New York drugmaker do for an encore? In 2023, Pfizer went from generating the most sales in the industry to gaining the most approvals. With seven FDA nods in 2023, Pfizer had more than double that of any other company. It’s also more than twice as many as every drugmaker over each of the last three years. You need to go back to 2019, when Novartis scored six approvals, to find a company that approached what Pfizer accomplished in 2023. Pfizer’s splurge included four approvals in a dizzying five weeks in May and June. And all but one of the seven products has been pegged by analysts as a potential blockbuster. Two of the newly approved Pfizer treatments were acquired ...
Big Pharma companies have often talked about the major opportunities that await in China. But as price cuts play out and internal priorities shift, multinational companies are reworking their business models in the country. In the last few months of 2023, Pfizer, GSK, Sanofi and Biogen have each tapped local partners to help commercialize their products in China. With marketing responsibilities shifting to other firms, job cuts were expected at each of those large drugmakers. It’s not a new approach for foreign drugmakers to tap local partners in China, Justin Wang, head of L.E.K. Consulting’s China practice, pointed out in an email interview with Fierce Pharma. But these deals are on the rise lately, Wang explained, partly because “there is increasing pricing and competitive pressure in the market, especially for mature products, leaving reduced [return on investment] for in-house commercial resources.” Pfizer in November unveiled a deal with Keyuan Pharma, ...
Novartis woke up one morning and hired itself a mom, putting Jamie-Lynn Sigler of The Sopranos fame at the center of a new TV spot focused on how Kesimpta empowers multiple sclerosis patients to use their time their way. Sigler, who played Tony Soprano’s daughter Meadow in the show, was diagnosed with MS aged 20 but only discussed her condition publicly almost 15 years later. At that time, the actor was taking Biogen’s Tecfidera, having previously “run the gamut” with MS drugs, but had suffered damage that prevented her from walking for long periods of time without resting and made stairs challenging. Today, Sigler is taking Kesimpta, a targeted B-cell therapy for patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis that received FDA approval shortly before Sigler first spoke about her MS diagnosis publicly. Novartis has made Sigler as the front of push to maintain the momentum of the Kesimpta launch. The ad ...
The European Commission has granted marketing authorisation to EirGenix’s Herceptin (trastuzumab) biosimilar for marketing in the European Union. The biosimilar has been approved as a treatment for human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 positive (HER2-positive) breast cancer and metastatic gastric cancers, as per a 22 November press release. Herceptin is a monoclonal antibody that binds to HER2 receptors, thereby priming these receptors for immune system targeting. The drug generated SFr1.26bn ($1.4bn) in year-to-date (YTD) sales in September, as per Roche’s Q3 financials. Sandoz is responsible for the worldwide commercialisation of EirGenix’s Herceptin biosimilar, except in Taiwan, China, Russia, and some Asian countries, based on the 22 November press release. Meanwhile, EirGenix holds the developmental, commercialisation and manufacturing rights for the biosimilar in countries not covered by Sandoz. In September, EirGenix’s Herceptin biosimilar received a positive recommendation from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines ...
In a bid to further restructure operations, Sangamo plans to close its facility in Brisbane, California early in 2024, which will see 162 employees facing another round of layoffs. During the transition, the company will move its headquarters to its facility in Richmond, California, effective January 1, 2024. Sangamo will direct any freed resources towards advancing adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsid delivery technologies and its neurology epigenetic regulation portfolio via its investigational Nav1.7 and Prion disease therapies, said Sangamo CEO Sandy Macrae. Additionally, the company has decided to defer new investments for its Phase III Fabry and CAR-Treg studies and is instead actively seeking collaboration and investment partners for both programs. Sangamo is the latest to be swept in the wave of layoffs, following companies like NexImmune and Kinnate Biopharma, which sacked 53% and 70% of their respective workforces in September to redirect cash towards priority projects. In a conference call ...
Pictured: Handshake over a deal/iStock, PeopleImages Biopharma’s biggest royalties buyer is upping its stake in a popular spinal muscular atrophy drug. Royalty Pharma announced Thursday a $1 billion upfront payment to beleaguered PTC Therapeutics for additional royalties in Evrysdi, licensed and marketed by Roche. Royalty initially bought into Evrysdi in July 2020, just before its approval by the FDA. The drug has already been used to treat over 11,000 patients worldwide. Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a rare and often fatal genetic disease that typically presents in infants and young children. The deal increases Royalty’s ownership of the Evrysdi royalty from 43% to 81%, equating to 13% of the royalties Roche pays on worldwide net product sales. Roche reported $801.4 million in sales for the first half of 2023. GlobalData predicts sales to rise to just under $3 billion in 2029. In Thursday’s announced deal, PTC has the option to sell the remainder of the Evrysdi royalty to Royalty for up ...
Takeda Pharmaceutical drug Exkivity failed the confirmatory study required of its 2021 accelerated approval. Our recap of other recent regulatory developments includes a partial clinical hold on a cancer drug, a Covid-19 vaccine authorization, and several drug approvals in the U.S. and beyond. By FRANK VINLUAN Accelerated approval offers a way to more quickly bring patients drugs for diseases that have few treatment options. But that speedy path to the market comes with the understanding that the FDA can take its regulatory blessing away—unless the company takes its drug away first. That is what Takeda Pharmaceutical has decided to do with its cancer drug, Exkivity. Following discussions with the FDA, the Japanese pharmaceutical giant is voluntarily withdrawing Exkivity from the market. Exkivity treats non-small cell lung cancer by targeting epidermal growth factor (EGFR). That cancer protein must have exon 20 mutations—the same genetic signature addressed by Johnson & Johnson’s Rybrevant. ...
Ionis Pharmaceuticals’ olezarsen has Phase 3 results showing the therapy handily beat a placebo at reducing fat levels in the blood due to a rare, inherited metabolic disorder with no FDA-approved drugs. Ionis plans early 2024 submissions for what could become the first medicine it commercializes without a partner. By FRANK VINLUAN Ionis Pharmaceuticals has revenue from commercialized medicines, but those products reached the market in the hands of biopharma industry partners. The genetic medicines company does have wholly owned assets, and one of them now has preliminary Phase 3 data that put it on the path for an FDA submission. The drug, olezarsen, is a potential treatment for familial chylomicronemia syndrome, or FCS. The rare, inherited disease leads to the inability to break down triglycerides, which are fats consumed from food. High triglyceride levels can lead to acute pancreatitis, severe inflammation of the pancreas that can become fatal. Patients ...
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