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Intellia pauses two CRISPR trials after liver toxicity hospitalizes patient Read in browser
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1. Cigna says it will move to end drug rebates beginning in 2027
2. Organon CEO exits after internal probe over 'channel stuffing' to boost sales
3. Intellia pauses two CRISPR trials after liver toxicity hospitalizes patient
4. FDA names Mary Thanh Hai as permanent director of Office of New Drugs
5. 'Poor children of very rich parents': How Verily plans to grow out of Alphabet's shadow
6. WuXi AppTec to divest clinical services to focus on manufacturing business
7. Novo ended Akero deal talks before returning for $4.7B MASH acquisition
8. BridgeBio shifts filing plans for rare disease drug after Phase 3 success
9. Zenas’ multiple sclerosis drug slows new brain lesions in mid-stage trial
10. Novartis CEO says $12B Avidity deal could have been 'twice as big'
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Alexis Kramer
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The NIH will once again defend its planned payment cap for research grantees in court. Next Wednesday, the First Circuit is slated to hear oral arguments in the litigation over indirect cost reimbursements. A lower court had blocked the NIH’s plan nationwide, and it’s been over six months since the government appealed that decision.

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Alexis Kramer
Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Max Bayer

Cigna said it will move away from re­ceiv­ing drug re­bates, an opaque part of the US drug pric­ing for­mu­la that has drawn in­creased scruti­ny from fed­er­al and state law­mak­ers.

The health in­sur­er, which owns phar­ma­cy ben­e­fit man­ag­er Ex­press Scripts, said Mon­day that dis­counts will be avail­able up­front for ful­ly in­sured pa­tients in 2027, and that it will be the “stan­dard mod­el” for all cus­tomers be­gin­ning in 2028.

PBMs get dis­counts from drug­mak­ers in the form of re­bates when pa­tients fill pre­scrip­tions, but PBMs don't have to pass on those sav­ings to con­sumers. Drug­mak­ers ar­gue that these re­bates have caused their own costs to rise. PBMs will typ­i­cal­ly charge a high­er re­bate for more fa­vor­able prod­uct place­ment on their for­mu­la­ries.

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Kevin Ali, who resigned as CEO of Organon (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
2
by Nicole DeFeudis

Organon’s CEO has stepped down and the com­pa­ny’s stock tanked af­ter an in­ter­nal in­ves­ti­ga­tion found ev­i­dence of “im­prop­er” sales prac­tices for the con­tra­cep­tive im­plant Nex­planon.

Ac­cord­ing to the com­pa­ny, the board­'s au­dit com­mit­tee found that Organon asked some US whole­salers to buy more Nex­planon than need­ed at the end of sev­er­al quar­ters, which helped boost the com­pa­ny's re­sults.

“With­out these sales prac­tices, the com­pa­ny’s con­sol­i­dat­ed rev­enue for cer­tain of those pe­ri­ods would have fall­en short of the Com­pa­ny’s guid­ance and/or cer­tain ex­ter­nal rev­enue ex­pec­ta­tions," Organon said in a se­cu­ri­ties fil­ing.

The prac­tice, col­lo­qui­al­ly known as “chan­nel stuff­ing,” can make sales ap­pear ar­ti­fi­cial­ly high­er than they re­al­ly are.

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3
by Ryan Cross

In­tel­lia Ther­a­peu­tics has paused en­roll­ment and dos­ing in two clin­i­cal tri­als of its CRISPR ther­a­py, called nex-z, for the ge­net­ic dis­ease transthyretin amy­loi­do­sis (AT­TR), the com­pa­ny an­nounced Mon­day morn­ing.

In a call with in­vestors, CEO John Leonard said a pa­tient who re­ceived In­tel­lia’s ther­a­py on Sept. 30 went to the emer­gency room a few weeks lat­er af­ter ex­pe­ri­enc­ing ab­dom­i­nal pain. On Oct. 24, he was found to have grade 4 el­e­va­tions of liv­er transam­i­nas­es and biliru­bin — bio­mark­ers that can in­di­cate se­vere liv­er in­jury, ac­cord­ing to the com­pa­ny.

The pa­tient is a man in his ear­ly 80s who is cur­rent­ly sta­ble, but re­mains hos­pi­tal­ized. Leonard said the pa­tient had a high BMI, but that it was “pre­ma­ture” to sug­gest that any par­tic­u­lar sub­sets of pa­tients are at high­er risk. “Ob­vi­ous­ly we’re look­ing in­to that,” he added.

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4
by Zachary Brennan

The FDA last week tran­si­tioned Mary Thanh Hai from act­ing to per­ma­nent di­rec­tor of the Of­fice of New Drugs, two peo­ple with knowl­edge of the move told End­points News.

Thanh Hai took over as act­ing OND di­rec­tor from Pe­ter Stein, who was pushed out of his po­si­tion in April as part of a wider re­duc­tion in force. OND is re­spon­si­ble for ap­prov­ing all new drugs.

Stein told End­points on Mon­day that he thought Thanh Hai was "a great choice — she’s high­ly ex­pe­ri­enced, an­a­lyt­ic and thor­ough, ex­treme­ly knowl­edge­able."

The FDA, CDER Di­rec­tor George Tid­marsh, and Thanh Hai did not im­me­di­ate­ly re­spond to re­quests for com­ment.

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