|
|
|
M T W Th Fri |
25 April, 2025 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
AbbVie is the latest drugmaker to talk tariff strategy as the threat of sector-specific tariffs looms over the pharma industry. AbbVie’s CEO said on the company’s first-quarter earnings call that possible mitigation measures include “inventory management actions” or securing alternate sources of API. Read more below. |
|
Alexis Kramer |
Editor, Endpoints News
|
|
|
|
|
by Lei Lei Wu
|
Akeso Biopharma won first-line approval in China for its lung cancer drug ivonescimab, a new immunotherapy that it believes will top Merck's megablockbuster PD-L1 drug. As part of the approval, the company disclosed the additional data from a pivotal trial in which it went head-to-head against Keytruda and won, revealing the first survival data from the
experiment. Ivonescimab, a bispecific antibody that targets PD-1 and VEGF, has quickly become one of the most closely watched cancer drugs in development. In the trial, an interim overall survival analysis showed that ivonescimab reduced the risk of death by 22% compared with Keytruda. The analysis took place earlier than planned for the study, and because of that was not statistically significant. The hazard ratio was 0.77. |
|
|
|
 |
|
by Nicole DeFeudis
|
AbbVie CEO Rob Michael said the company will invest $10 billion in the US over the next decade, as the threat of pharmaceutical-specific tariffs looms. AbbVie announced plans in its first-quarter earnings to add four new manufacturing sites to its US network. It’s the latest pharma company to commit billions of dollars to boosting its US footprint. AbbVie CFO Scott Reents said potential industry-specific tariffs are “difficult to quantify in the absence of actual policy details,” but added that AbbVie is “actively preparing for a number of potential scenarios.” “In terms of potential mitigation in the near term, we could take inventory management actions or secure alternate
sources of API,” Michael said. |
|
|
|
 |
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary at Semafor's World Economy Summit (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Semafor) |
|
by Max Bayer
|
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary is ramping up his public presence, recently sitting for an interview with Megyn Kelly and participating in an HHS event on removing some dyes from the American food system. In an interview with PBS' "NewsHour" co-anchor and co-managing editor Amna Nawaz on Thursday, Makary expanded on his
efforts to expedite drug approvals, especially for rare diseases, and addressed reports that HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is considering the removal of Covid-19 vaccines from the childhood vaccine schedule. The interview was part of the World Economy Summit hosted by the outlet Semafor. Here are four key takeaways from the interview: | - The ‘plausible mechanism’ pathway and fewer randomized studies
|
|
|
|
|
 |
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (George Walker IV/AP Images) |
|
by Shelby Livingston
|
CHARLESTON, SC — HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Friday that 35 states had signed up to participate in a new payment model meant to improve access to and lower costs for gene therapies for sickle cell disease. The level of participation in the voluntary model is “unprecedented” and represents a
“real win-win” for states and patients with Medicaid, Kennedy said during a short speech at the National Council of Insurance Legislators’ spring meeting in Charleston, SC. The program "illustrates a broader principle that I want to realize throughout HHS. People assume that budget cuts translate into worse service for beneficiaries, and I don’t think it has to be that way,” he said. (Republican lawmakers have been considering cuts to federal funding for Medicaid.) “When we adopt cutting-edge technologies and make tough but fair
negotiations with industry, we can cut costs and improve patient care.” |
|
|
|
|