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6 June, 2025
Advancing cancer care: How Project FrontRunner is shaping oncology treatments.
How to Advance Your Oncology Trials with FDA's Project FrontRunner
sponsored by IQVIA
presented by EurekaBio
Cy­ti­va and Eu­rek­aBio form strate­gic part­ner­ship to ad­vance lentivi­ral vec­tor man­u­fac­tur­ing for cell and gene ther­a­py in Chi­na
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top stories
1. Is there still hope for Summit's cancer drug buried in the data?
2. At a crossroads, biotechs are passing on reverse mergers in 2025
3. MIT scientists’ AI model one-ups AlphaFold 3, takes on ‘fundamental issue’ in drug R&D
4.
news briefing
Kelun's $250M PIPE; Valneva moves chikungunya vaccine to Phase 3 for kids
5.
peer review
GSK taps Sanofi vet to lead vaccine R&D; Bristol Myers names head of corporate affairs
6. Otsuka spells out Phase 3 win in rare kidney disease, Vera’s stock takes a hit
7. Biotech ranks as China’s best shot to surpass US in emerging tech, report finds
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Jaimy Lee
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Heading to BIO next week? Be sure to say hello to our journalists. Andrew Dunn, Drew Armstrong, Lei Lei Wu, Max Bayer, Nicole DeFeudis and Ryan Cross are all attending this year’s conference. And have a great weekend!

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Jaimy Lee
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
Credit: Shutterstock
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by Max Gelman

Al­though Sum­mit Ther­a­peu­tics didn’t present any da­ta at AS­CO's an­nu­al meet­ing, it still dom­i­nat­ed the con­ver­sa­tion at Mc­Cormick Place in Chica­go.

The com­pa­ny put out a press re­lease the same Fri­day morn­ing that the con­fer­ence start­ed in a games­man-like move, out­lin­ing new da­ta for its PD1xVEGF bis­pe­cif­ic called ivonescimab and out­shin­ing many of the late-break­ing and ple­nary pre­sen­ta­tions. An­a­lysts said Sum­mit went on to host sev­er­al meet­ings in Chica­go, as in­vestors grap­pled with a very im­por­tant ques­tion: How ma­ture were the over­all sur­vival da­ta in this spe­cif­ic lung can­cer pop­u­la­tion?

Ac­cord­ing to an­a­lyst notes over the last few days, Sum­mit's po­si­tion is that the sta­tis­ti­cal­ly not-sig­nif­i­cant OS fig­ure it re­port­ed last week is the fi­nal analy­sis. That could pose a chal­lenge to ap­proval as the FDA will re­quire a sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant re­sult, per Sum­mit’s re­lease.

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by Kyle LaHucik

Re­verse merg­ers have once again lost their lus­ter.

An al­ter­na­tive to go­ing pub­lic, re­verse merg­ers once car­ried a neg­a­tive stig­ma. But the fi­nanc­ing ve­hi­cle gained new­found at­ten­tion in re­cent years as the biotech IPO mar­ket soured and pri­vate com­pa­nies lined up to take the place of down-and-out pub­licly-trad­ed drug de­vel­op­ers.

At least 16 such deals were an­nounced in 2024, ac­cord­ing to a tal­ly from William Blair bankers. One com­pa­ny — Vin­cerx Phar­ma — tried two dif­fer­ent re­verse merg­ers be­fore giv­ing up. It de­cid­ed to wind down in April.

Few­er than five re­verse merg­ers have been dis­closed so far in 2025, in­clud­ing the planned com­bi­na­tions of Salarius Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals with De­coy Ther­a­peu­tics and Eye­n­ovia with Be­taliq.

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Shape The Future of Viral Vector Technology in China
Cytiva and EurekaBio Form Strategic Partnership to Advance Lentiviral Vector Manufacturing for Cell and Gene Therapy in China
sponsored by EurekaBio
MIT scientists (from L-R): Gabriele Corso, Jeremy Wohlwend and Saro Passaro
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by Andrew Dunn

A trio of young MIT sci­en­tists un­veiled a new AI bio mod­el on Fri­day that pre­dicts bind­ing affini­ties, a ma­jor chal­lenge to dis­cov­er­ing drugs that has pre­vi­ous­ly evad­ed progress with oth­er AI meth­ods.

Boltz-2 takes a step be­yond the May 2024 re­lease of Al­phaFold 3, the lat­est gen­er­a­tion of Google Deep­Mind's mod­el that pre­dicts bio­mol­e­c­u­lar struc­tures. Boltz-2 pre­dicts struc­tures like Al­phaFold, but it al­so pre­dicts bind­ing affin­i­ty, or how strong­ly a mol­e­cule binds to a tar­get pro­tein.

“Bind­ing affin­i­ty is core to de­vel­op­ing a ther­a­peu­tic, start to fin­ish,” Re­cur­sion R&D head Na­jat Khan said. (Re­cur­sion helped train Boltz-2 with its com­pute pow­er and bench­mark the mod­el.) “It’s been the fun­da­men­tal is­sue that a lot of us have been try­ing to grap­ple through.”

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News Briefing: Quick hits from the biopharma web
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