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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 2nd Preview)
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Obesity pills go oral—Lilly secures FDA approval
The U.S. FDA approved Eli Lilly’s once-daily oral GLP-1 obesity drug orforglipron, branded Foundayo, giving the company a direct shot at Novo Nordisk’s oral weight-loss offering after Novo’s Wegovy pill launch. The approval clears Foundayo for adults with obesity or overweight plus at least one weight-related comorbidity, in combination with a reduced-calorie diet and increased physical activity. Foundayo follows a fast-moving review path tied to the FDA’s commissioner’s voucher program and is expected to ship shortly, positioning Lilly to compete in a category increasingly focused on convenient dosing. In comparative trial readouts highlighted by the companies, both daily oral regimens delivered meaningful weight reduction, but head-to-head superiority hasn’t been established. The approval intensifies the pricing and access battleground in obesity care, where insurers and telehealth channels shape real-world uptake. Lilly and Novo have already been signaling consumer-facing affordability strategies for cash-pay patients and insured populations. For biotech stakeholders, the move reinforces that oral incretin delivery is no longer an R&D bet but an active commercial contest—one that could pull forward additional oral obesity pipeline timelines across the industry.
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Mega M&A reshapes neuro and immunology portfolios
Eli Lilly agreed to acquire Centessa Pharmaceuticals for about $6.3 billion upfront (plus contingent value rights), betting its neuroscience cash flow on orexin receptor 2 (OX2R) agonists. Centessa’s cleminorexton (ORX750) produced Phase 2a results across narcolepsy types 1 and 2 and idiopathic hypersomnia, giving Lilly a clinical-stage entry into a high-unmet-need sleep-disorders market. In a separate landmark deal, Biogen agreed to buy Apellis Pharmaceuticals for about $5.6 billion, adding two approved immunology/eye assets—Empaveli (pegcetacoplan) and Syfovre (pegcetacoplan)—and expanding Biogen’s downstream reach. Syfovre is tied to geographic atrophy secondary to age-related macular degeneration, while Empaveli targets rare complement-mediated kidney diseases. Together, the acquisitions underline how large biopharma is rebalancing portfolios toward commercial products plus late-stage clinical expansion, particularly in immune-mediated disease and neuro areas where growth is tied to pipeline execution and market access. Deal structure also matters: both transactions include contingent payments based on milestones, aligning investor expectations with regulatory progress and sales thresholds.
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FDA tariffs draft signals new cost pressure on drug imports
A draft order obtained by STAT indicates the Trump administration is preparing 100% tariffs on imports of patented medications and their active ingredients, with timing potentially as soon as Thursday. The proposal targets both branded products and the underlying actives used to manufacture them. The immediate implication for biotech is direct input-cost risk for companies dependent on imported APIs, contract manufacturing, or complex cross-border supply chains. Even where drug pricing is managed through rebates and negotiated formularies, tariff-driven changes can ripple into development budgets and near-term gross-to-net economics. Stakeholders are likely to weigh mitigation options such as supply-chain redesign, alternative sourcing, and re-evaluating contract structures with CMOs and raw-material suppliers. While details may change before announcement, the move—if finalized—would be a regulatory-economics story with immediate operational impact for drug developers and manufacturers.
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HIV development disrupted—Gilead terminates long-acting pill trial under FDA hold
Gilead ended a Phase 2/3 trial of two long-acting HIV pills after FDA concerns led to a clinical hold that remained in place. The company discontinued safety follow-up for the Wonders-2 study, effectively terminating it, while Wonders-1 had already been paused. The paused combination regimen tested weekly oral GS-1720 (integrase strand transfer inhibitor) plus GS-4182 (capsid inhibitor) against Gilead’s approved Biktarvy. The FDA’s original hold was triggered by reports of reduced CD4+ T-cell levels and lower total white blood cell counts in some participants. Gilead said measures for Wonder-2 participants have returned to baseline or normal ranges, but the FDA hold itself was not lifted, leaving trial resumption uncertain. The company also referenced work to turn lenacapavir into longer-acting treatment options through partnerships and additional investigational combinations. For biotech leaders, the action highlights how safety signals can become program-level constraints when regulatory timelines and clinical-hold conditions don’t move in parallel with cohort improvements.
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Caris ‘Achieve I’ finalized data lifts confidence in multi-cancer early detection
Caris Life Sciences reported finalized Achieve 1 study results for its multi-cancer early detection test, Caris Detect, sending shares higher. The study enrolled 3,014 patients who were evaluable based on high-risk screening, symptomatic presentation, or findings from imaging. Caris reported sensitivity across stages, including 60.3% for stage I/II cancers and 98.6% for stage IV, alongside high asymptomatic specificity of 99.2%. Cancer-by-cancer sensitivity ranged from 53.7% in breast cancer to 81.3% in head and neck cancer. In the blinded validation set, a subset of patients lacked staging information or failed sample quality metrics and was excluded from the reported results. Caris also said it plans to add additional modalities such as whole-transcriptome sequencing to further strengthen performance. The company stated it expects to launch Caris Detect in Q2 2026, and stakeholders will now watch for how these finalized metrics translate into intended clinical workflow and prospective validation.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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