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10 February, 2026 |
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More than a decade ago, Astra CEO Pascal Soriot fought off Pfizer's takeover bid in part by promising investors that it would hit an aggressive sales target. The company beat the skeptics and did it. Elizabeth Cairns takes a look today at whether the company can repeat that feat with its 2030 goal. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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Pascal Soriot, AstraZeneca CEO (Photographer: Jose Sarmento Matos/Bloomberg via Getty Images) |
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by Elizabeth Cairns
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LONDON — In 2024, AstraZeneca’s CEO Pascal Soriot set a new goal: for the company to pull in $80 billion in annual sales by 2030. At that time, this target looked ambitious. But less than two years
later, the drugmaker is very bullish. Soriot asserted during a media briefing in London on Tuesday that “we have a lot of reason to believe we’re very much on track to deliver our 2030 ambition, but also to grow past 2030.” If AstraZeneca can maintain its current form, he’s right. AstraZeneca’s 2025 revenues totaled $58.7 billion, up 9% from the year prior, and guided to “mid-to-high single-digit percentage” growth in the coming year. Assuming
the company grows at a steady annual rate of 7%, which fits the mid-to-high-single-digit bill, its revenues in 2030 will be $85.5 billion. | |
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by Kyle LaHucik
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The money continues to flow for private obesity and MASH drug developers. The latest pool of capital is headed to a Shanghai biotech called Cascade Pharmaceuticals. The company disclosed a nearly 500 million yuan (about $72 million) financing round via an announcement on WeChat this week. The biotech, founded in December 2017, previously disclosed a 140 million yuan round in August 2023 and two "nearly" 100 million yuan rounds in 2020 and 2022. While many Chinese drug developers have forged partnerships with Western biopharmas during a flurry of cross-border
deals, it appears Cascade is developing its pipeline independently and has global rights to all of the experimental medicines listed on its website. Cascade has conducted clinical trials in both China and the US. | |
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by ENDPOINTS |
Plus, news about Incyte, Evommune, Kainova and Sutro: 📊 Nektar outlines one-year eczema data: The company said its drug rezpegaldesleukin, commonly known as rezpeg, maintained and deepened patients’ skin clearances after a 52-week follow-up period in a Phase 2b study. Rezpeg had previously succeeded in the 16-week induction phase last year, a readout that doubled its stock price NKTR at the time. Responses from Tuesday’s dataset came from patients who had previously reached significant skin clearance, as well as patients who did not but achieved clearance after a longer treatment period. Nektar plans to quickly move into Phase 3 eczema studies, according to a press release, with the intention of
filing for FDA approval in 2029. — Max Gelman | |
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Credit: Kathy Wong for Endpoints News |
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by Elizabeth Cairns, Kyle LaHucik
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The injected obesity med that's being developed by Hengrui Pharma and Kailera Therapeutics looked highly promising when mid-stage data came out last year. The oral form of the same molecule appears rather less
exciting. The daily pill, known as ribupatide or HRS9531, allowed patients in a China-based Phase 2 trial to lose up to 11.9% of their weight after about six months, the partners said Tuesday. Intriguingly, the best weight loss was seen with the 25 mg middle dose of the pill. The 10 mg and 50 mg doses prompted weight loss of 6.7% and 11.4% at the 26-week mark. These numbers came from an intent-to-treat analysis, which counts missing data as treatment failures. Using this analysis, members of the placebo group lost 2.1% of their weight. | |
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