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19 March, 2026
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7 Re­al-World Ways RWE Is Trans­form­ing Health­care
top stories
1. Novo wins FDA approval for high-dose Wegovy under commissioner's voucher
2. FDA approves GSK liver drug at center of Alfasigma deal
3. Exclusive: Verily raises $300M, sheds Alphabet’s majority control
4. CSL says hemophilia B gene therapy is temporarily out of stock, warns of treatment delays
5. Updated: Lilly’s triple-G comparable with Mounjaro, first Phase 3 diabetes data suggest
6. Collegium is acquiring Corium's approved ADHD drug for $650M
7. Pfizer seeks earlier use of Talzenna in prostate cancer with Phase 3 win
8. AstraZeneca deepens UK-China ties with cell therapy R&D hub, manufacturing plans
more stories
 
Alexis Kramer
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The DOJ has repeatedly asked for more time to file responses in the various Inflation Reduction Act cases before the Supreme Court. The next deadline for the government is coming up on March 30 (in the Novo Nordisk case), so we’ll see if the justices can move that case forward.

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Alexis Kramer
Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Zachary Brennan

The FDA ap­proved a high-dose ver­sion of No­vo Nordisk's block­buster weight loss in­jec­tion We­govy, giv­ing its go-ahead about two months faster than nor­mal thanks to a vouch­er re­ceived from the com­mis­sion­er's pro­gram.

Thurs­day's ap­proval is based on da­ta re­leased in Jan­u­ary, when No­vo re­port­ed that pa­tients giv­en the 7.2 mg dose had an av­er­age weight loss of 20.7% af­ter 72 weeks. That was bet­ter than the 17.5% weight loss for peo­ple giv­en the al­ready-ap­proved 2.4 mg dose in the tri­al.

While the high-dose We­govy is stronger than the pre­vi­ous­ly ap­proved ver­sion, it is slight­ly be­hind its com­peti­tor, Eli Lil­ly's Zep­bound. In its piv­otal tri­al, the 15 mg dose of Lil­ly’s GIP/GLP-1 ag­o­nist, ap­proved in No­vem­ber 2023, achieved 22.5% weight loss at 72 weeks.

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2
by Nicole DeFeudis

GSK’s re­cent deal to li­cense out a rare liv­er dis­ease drug just got sweet­er.

The FDA on Thurs­day ap­proved liner­ix­i­bat to treat cholesta­t­ic itch in pa­tients with the au­toim­mune liv­er dis­ease pri­ma­ry bil­iary cholan­gi­tis, or PBC. The ap­proval makes GSK el­i­gi­ble for a $100 mil­lion pay­ment un­der a deal an­nounced ear­li­er this month that would give rights to Ital­ian phar­ma Al­fasig­ma. The deal has yet to close.

GSK will al­so get $300 mil­lion up­front, and there’s still $20 mil­lion on the ta­ble if liner­ix­i­bat gets ap­proved in the UK and Eu­rope, plus an­oth­er $270 mil­lion in mile­stones and cer­tain roy­al­ties on glob­al sales.

The ap­proval will like­ly fill a gap in Al­fasig­ma’s com­mer­cial port­fo­lio, af­ter its sub­sidiary In­ter­cept Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals pulled PBC drug Ocali­va from the mar­ket last year. Liner­ix­i­bat will be mar­ket­ed as Ly­navoy. GSK did not im­me­di­ate­ly re­spond to a re­quest for com­ment on pric­ing.

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3
by Shelby Livingston

Ver­i­ly has raised $300 mil­lion in new, out­side fund­ing that ends par­ent com­pa­ny Al­pha­bet's con­trol­ling po­si­tion in the health­care in­no­va­tion com­pa­ny, End­points News has learned ex­clu­sive­ly.

The fund­ing round was led by Se­ries X Cap­i­tal, a ven­ture fund formed with Google’s X moon­shot lab, along with par­tic­i­pa­tion from Al­pha­bet, UCHealth, the Uni­ver­si­ty of Col­orado An­schutz and oth­er in­vestors, Ver­i­ly said Thurs­day. Al­pha­bet re­mains a sig­nif­i­cant mi­nor­i­ty in­vestor.

Ver­i­ly has been mak­ing moves to step out of Al­pha­bet’s shad­ow, with plans to even­tu­al­ly go pub­lic. It’s been di­vest­ing busi­ness units, in­clud­ing its in­sur­ance busi­ness Gran­u­lar, and sharp­en­ing its fo­cus. Most re­cent­ly, it’s ze­roed in on an AI health­care plat­form, Pre, that pow­ers all Ver­i­ly so­lu­tions.

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Drug Discovery Day 2026
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4
by Max Bayer

CSL Behring dis­closed a "tem­po­rary glob­al stock­out" of its gene ther­a­py for he­mo­phil­ia B that it says could de­lay treat­ment for some pa­tients.

In a let­ter to the pa­tient com­mu­ni­ty pub­lished this week, Deb­o­rah Long, CSL se­nior vice pres­i­dent of med­ical af­fairs, said the short­age of Hem­genix “re­flects the com­plex­i­ty of man­u­fac­tur­ing gene ther­a­pies.” She wrote that there was no is­sue with safe­ty or ef­fec­tive­ness and that the com­pa­ny was work­ing with reg­u­la­to­ry bod­ies to en­sure sta­ble sup­ply of the ther­a­py mov­ing for­ward.

A com­pa­ny spokesper­son said in an emailed state­ment that “the glob­al stock­out is due to a pre­lim­i­nary test re­sult that is cur­rent­ly un­der in­ves­ti­ga­tion.”

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