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top stories
1. Proposed FDA budget aligns Makary, Trump behind rivaling China biotech
2. Amgen's Phase 3 success sets up an eye drug showdown with Viridian
3. Takeda ends partnership with Denali amid restructuring
4. Neurocrine will pay $2.9B for Soleno and its Prader-Willi medicine
more stories
 
Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer
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The White House's proposed budget, released Friday, throws some support to some of the policy changes FDA Commissioner Marty Makary has been pushing for. Max Bayer has the story today on how the biotech industry's feeling about the boost to US biotech competition.

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Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary speaks alongside President Donald Trump in the Oval Office (Francis Chung/Politico via AP Images)
1
by Max Bayer

The White House threw its weight be­hind ef­forts to help US biotech com­pete with Chi­na, us­ing the ad­min­is­tra­tion's bud­get pro­pos­al to out­line FDA pol­i­cy changes to speed up tri­als, cut costs for com­pa­nies that do ex­per­i­men­tal work in the US and ex­pe­dite reg­u­la­to­ry re­views.

One of the re­forms is a new clin­i­cal tri­al path­way that re­flects the quick­er process­es oth­er coun­tries have. The ex­pe­dit­ed path­way would be for some Phase 1 tri­als where there’s enough ex­ist­ing pre­clin­i­cal da­ta to sat­is­fy reg­u­la­tors. The FDA specif­i­cal­ly ex­pects the path­way to help “small­er biotech­nol­o­gy firms,” say­ing that the US’ ex­ist­ing IND process has fu­eled growth in Chi­na and Aus­tralia.

“The goal of this new path­way is to ac­cel­er­ate the drug de­vel­op­ment time­line and en­cour­age US biotech­nol­o­gy in­vest­ment – in line with the Pres­i­dent’s ac­tions to on­shore the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal in­dus­try,” ac­cord­ing to the bud­get re­quest.

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2
by Lei Lei Wu

Am­gen said that an in­jectable ver­sion of its eye drug Te­pez­za suc­ceed­ed in a Phase 3 study for thy­roid eye dis­ease, set­ting up a show­down with Virid­i­an Ther­a­peu­tics, which last week al­so post­ed Phase 3 re­sults on an in­jectable treat­ment.

In a Phase 3 tri­al for pa­tients with mod­er­ate-to-se­vere dis­ease, in­jectable Te­pez­za sub­stan­tial­ly cut prop­to­sis, or bulging of the eye, in 77% of pa­tients com­pared to 19.6% with place­bo at 24 weeks.

That’s about a 57 per­cent­age-point im­prove­ment over place­bo, com­pared to the 36 per­cent­age-point im­prove­ment that Virid­i­an re­port­ed last week.

Am­gen is try­ing to keep its place atop the thy­roid eye dis­ease mar­ket in the face of up­com­ing com­pe­ti­tion. Te­pez­za is cur­rent­ly the on­ly ap­proved treat­ment for thy­roid eye dis­ease, but is de­liv­ered by IV in­fu­sion.

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US Deals Outlook 20226: What's ahead for pharma and life sciences
US biopharma still leads the world in high-risk drug development, but the road from innovation to access has never been harder to predict. Hear from top executives and investors on how they’re navigating what’s next. Join us.
3
by Max Gelman

Take­da’s on­go­ing re­struc­tur­ing has hit an­oth­er De­nali pro­gram as an eight-year-old part­ner­ship comes to an end be­tween the two com­pa­nies.

Take­da re­turned the full rights to a De­nali drug called DNL593 ahead of a Phase 1/2 read­out. The pro­gram is de­signed to treat fron­totem­po­ral de­men­tia caused by mu­ta­tions in the gran­ulin gene, one of the most com­mon ge­net­ic caus­es of the dis­ease.

The de­ci­sion was “not re­lat­ed” to any of the pro­gram’s ef­fi­ca­cy or safe­ty da­ta, ac­cord­ing to a De­nali press re­lease. De­nali has led DNL593’s de­vel­op­ment so far and is aim­ing to re­port da­ta by the end of 2026.

Take­da and De­nali orig­i­nal­ly signed their col­lab­o­ra­tion in 2018 to work on three pro­grams in neu­rode­gen­er­a­tive dis­eases. Take­da orig­i­nal­ly paid $150 mil­lion up­front and promised more than $1 bil­lion in to­tal mile­stones. For DNL593, De­nali could have earned up to $315 mil­lion in biobucks, ac­cord­ing to SEC doc­u­ments.

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4
by Kyle LaHucik

Neu­ro­crine Bio­sciences is join­ing the M&A bo­nan­za with a $2.9 bil­lion takeover of prof­itable rare dis­ease drug­mak­er Soleno Ther­a­peu­tics.

Neu­ro­crine will pay $53 per share in cash, a 34% pre­mi­um to its last clos­ing price, the com­pa­nies said Mon­day morn­ing. The deal gives Neu­ro­crine ac­cess to Soleno's Vykat XR, ap­proved last year to squelch in­sa­tiable hunger in peo­ple with the rare ge­net­ic con­di­tion Prad­er-Willi syn­drome, which can lead to obe­si­ty and mus­cle im­pair­ments.

The move ex­tends a phar­ma buy­ing spree as drug­mak­ers look to shore up their near-term pipelines and fu­ture gaps. It adds to a 10-deal, $31.5 bil­lion March in which a few oth­er com­mer­cial-stage biotechs were al­so bought, in­clud­ing Apel­lis Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals and Day One Bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals.

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