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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 15th Preview)
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COVID-19 and infectious disease surveillance
Researchers unveiled a wastewater surveillance approach that tracks SARS-CoV-2 genetic diversity rather than relying on viral abundance alone, aiming to improve early outbreak forecasting. The method is designed to capture how variants shift within communities, potentially offering a more actionable signal for public health response. Separately, multiple reports continued to emphasize the limits of standard signals in other pathogen settings, reinforcing that surveillance sensitivity and interpretability are becoming key operational requirements. Together, the updates highlight a move toward diversity-aware monitoring that better reflects real-world viral evolution. For biotech and diagnostics teams, these developments point to growing demand for assays and analytics that can translate sequencing or variant signals into operational thresholds and reporting workflows.
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Biotech funding and platform scale-up
Isomorphic Labs announced a $2.1 billion Series B financing led by Thrive Capital, describing it as a step-change in scaling its AI drug design engine, IsoDDE. The company framed the round as a “global vote of confidence” for an AI-first approach and said proceeds will support scaling, pipeline advancement, and hiring across engineering and clinical development. The round follows other large AI-biotech financings and further increases pressure on computational drug discovery groups to demonstrate translational outputs. Isomorphic also highlighted existing partnerships with major pharma players, positioning the funding to accelerate translation of model predictions into investigational assets. For investors and platform builders, the size and messaging underscore how rapidly AI drug design is moving from research to operational scale—though the company remained light on program-level specificity.
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FDA approvals and regulatory milestones in oncology
BeOne Medicines won U.S. accelerated approval for sonrotoclax (Beqalzi) in relapsed or refractory mantle cell lymphoma, adding a new BCL-2 competition point against AbbVie and Roche’s Venclexta in the segment. The FDA action also expands BeOne’s regulatory footprint after its first clearance in China. The approval is particularly notable because it comes as BCL-2 strategies continue to diversify in aggressive hematologic malignancies, and it may create new combination expectations with BTK backbone therapies. BeOne’s regulatory milestone strengthens the company’s ability to pursue further line extensions and combination studies, with payers likely to scrutinize comparative benefit and safety versus existing regimens.
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Cell therapy development and in vivo CAR-T expansion
Create Medicines raised $122 million to advance its in vivo CAR-T programs for cancers and autoimmune diseases, continuing a push toward therapies manufactured inside the body. The financing supports early clinical progression and expands the company’s pipeline built on mRNA–lipid nanoparticle delivery to reprogram T cells, NK cells, and myeloid cells. Create said it has dosed more than 50 patients across programs and recently initiated a Phase 1/2 trial for MT-304 targeting HER2-positive breast cancer and other HER2-expressing solid tumors. The approach aims to replace multi-step ex vivo cell manufacturing with a “one-day manufacturing process,” potentially improving speed and access. For the sector, the funding underscores that in vivo CAR-T is moving from concept to repeatable clinical execution, with investors rewarding platforms that can generate early efficacy and safety datasets at scale.
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FDA clinical holds and program strategy shifts
Aardvark Therapeutics disclosed it is moving to unblind data from its Phase 3 Prader-Willi syndrome program after the FDA imposed a full clinical hold. The hold follows a cardiac safety signal seen earlier in healthy volunteers, which Aardvark initially paused voluntarily and then expanded across ARD-101 and related studies. Aardvark said it expects unblinding to support an “informed determination of next steps” for ARD-101 and the associated open-label extension. The company reported it had dosed 68 patients in the randomized Phase 3 study and 19 patients in the extension when dosing paused. The decision compresses timelines for data readouts and partnering or fundraising actions, making the next FDA interaction central to preserving the company’s options.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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