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23andMe inks new part­ner­ship as it winds down in­ter­nal drug de­vel­op­ment ef­forts Read in browser
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20 November, 2024
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1. Novo and Viking present new MASH data, but analysts remain confident in Madrigal's Rezdiffra
2. Pfizer partners with two more Flagship biotechs on obesity, cancer
3. 23andMe inks new research partnership as it winds down internal drug development efforts
4. Updated: Sage reports Phase 2 failure in Huntington's disease, ends drug's development
5. Pfizer taps oncology head Boshoff as Dolsten's chief scientific officer successor
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in focus
Jaimy Lee
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We’ve been closely tracking the story of Sage Therapeutics over the past year, most recently with Max Gelman and Ryan Cross examining what a looming Phase 2 readout in Huntington’s disease would mean for the company. Those data arrived this morning, and they're bad news for Sage.

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Jaimy Lee
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Max Bayer

No­vo Nordisk and Viking Ther­a­peu­tics took to the an­nu­al Liv­er Meet­ing to make the case for their ex­per­i­men­tal MASH drugs as they chase Madri­gal Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal­s' first-ever ap­proved treat­ment for the dis­ease.

No­vo on Tues­day de­tailed sec­ondary end­points from topline Phase 3 da­ta an­nounced ear­li­er this month. The Dan­ish drug­mak­er re­port­ed that 32.8% of pa­tients re­ceiv­ing semaglu­tide showed both res­o­lu­tion of fat buildup in the liv­er and im­prove­ment of fi­bro­sis, com­pared to 16.2% of pa­tients giv­en place­bo.

It's a sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ence for an end­point that is con­sid­ered a hard­er bar to hit than im­prov­ing steato­hep­ati­tis and fi­bro­sis in­de­pen­dent­ly with­out wors­en­ing the oth­er. (MASH, or meta­bol­ic dys­func­tion-as­so­ci­at­ed steato­hep­ati­tis, is al­so re­ferred to as NASH.)

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2
by Kyle LaHucik

Pfiz­er is en­list­ing an­oth­er Flag­ship start­up to help it cre­ate new obe­si­ty med­i­cines.

Af­ter June's Pro­Found Ther­a­peu­tics tie-up, Pfiz­er will work with the in­cu­ba­tor's Am­per­sand Bio­med­i­cines in the hunt for new bi­o­log­ics for obe­si­ty.

The New York phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­ny is al­so tap­ping in­to Flag­ship-found­ed Mon­tai Ther­a­peu­tics to find new small mol­e­cules for po­ten­tial­ly treat­ing lung can­cer, the com­pa­nies said Wednes­day morn­ing.

The two pacts are part of Pfiz­er's broad­er al­liance with the Cam­bridge, MA-based Flag­ship, which re­cent­ly reeled in about $3.6 bil­lion in new funds as phar­ma part­ner­ships be­come a "big­ger and big­ger deal."

Pfiz­er has had an un­even few years in obe­si­ty, par­tic­u­lar­ly with its danuglipron pro­gram. Last month, it re­vealed more de­tails about its oth­er ear­ly-stage bets: a GIP an­tag­o­nist and a once-dai­ly oral GLP-1.

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3
by Shelby Livingston

23andMe has notched a re­search part­ner­ship with Mi­rador Ther­a­peu­tics to pro­vide the biotech com­pa­ny with ac­cess to its trove of ge­net­ic da­ta.

Mi­rador, which launched with more than $400 mil­lion in March to fo­cus on im­mune and in­flam­ma­to­ry dis­eases, will use the de-iden­ti­fied ge­net­ic and phe­no­typ­ic da­ta for tar­get val­i­da­tion and pre­ci­sion med­i­cine, the com­pa­nies said Wednes­day. The com­pa­nies didn’t dis­close the terms of the deal.

The new col­lab­o­ra­tion comes as 23andMe winds down its own in­ter­nal drug de­vel­op­ment ef­forts to fo­cus on its con­sumer DNA test­ing kits and re­search part­ner­ships. Ear­li­er this month, the strug­gling com­pa­ny shut­tered its ther­a­peu­tics di­vi­sion and cut 40% of its work­force.

In 2018, 23andMe inked a $300 mil­lion five-year deal to give GSK ex­clu­sive ac­cess to its ge­net­ic data­base. The British phar­ma com­pa­ny then paid $20 mil­lion in 2023 to ex­tend the part­ner­ship for an­oth­er year of non-ex­clu­sive ac­cess.

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4
by Max Gelman

Sage’s fi­nal hope to turn its busi­ness around has failed, leav­ing the fu­ture of the once high-fly­ing com­pa­ny and its post­par­tum de­pres­sion drug un­cer­tain.

The com­pa­ny an­nounced Wednes­day morn­ing that a Phase 2 study for dalzanem­dor, pre­vi­ous­ly known as SAGE-718, failed in Hunt­ing­ton’s dis­ease, say­ing it missed the pri­ma­ry and all sec­ondary end­points. As a re­sult, Sage will stop all fur­ther dalzanem­dor de­vel­op­ment and sus­pend an on­go­ing open-la­bel safe­ty study in Hunt­ing­ton’s.