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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 15th Preview)
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Drug development wins and rapid FDA action
Travere Therapeutics’ Filspari (sparsentan) won a fresh FDA milestone, becoming the first fully approved therapy for focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). The agency expanded the label based on a regulatory package that validated proteinuria as a surrogate endpoint for the disease, giving the company access to a second large market beyond its initial IgA nephropathy approval. The decision follows an approval path that started with accelerated approval and moved to full approval earlier in the company’s kidney franchise. For clinicians and payers, the expanded label adds a dedicated option for children and adults with FSGS who do not have nephrotic syndrome, a narrower population than some analysts expected.
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Large-scale financing rebounds for public biotechs
Revolution Medicines priced a $2 billion combined stock and debt offering, the largest public financing in the US biotech space since the Covid-era, according to the company’s report. The raise comes after Phase 3 data for its experimental pancreatic cancer drug daraxonrasib showed a doubling of median overall survival versus chemotherapy. The capital market reaction underscores how clinical success—rather than broader sentiment—continues to drive access to large follow-on funding for late-stage developers. It also sets up near-term runway for additional regulatory and manufacturing steps tied to potential accelerated review paths.
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Bain Capital reboots immunology pipeline with Beeline Medicines
Beeline Medicines launched out of stealth with plans to develop licensed immunology assets from Bristol Myers Squibb, backed by Bain Capital’s $300 million Series A. The new company is led by Saqib Islam, a former CEO of SpringWorks Therapeutics, and its lead program is afimetoran, an oral daily therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus. Beeline said a Phase 2 study for afimetoran is underway with expectations to complete in the second half of the year, positioning the company for a pivotal development program thereafter. It also disclosed early assets across atopic dermatitis, plaque psoriasis, and preclinical programs tied to IL-8 and IL-10.
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In vivo CAR-T programs expand for autoimmune disease
Immorna and additional in vivo CAR-T startups moved into first-in-human testing for autoimmune disease, extending a growing push toward therapies that aim to avoid full ex vivo manufacturing. Immorna reported treating a systemic sclerosis patient with an in vivo CAR-T approach, highlighting the continued clinical momentum for RNA-enabled and in vivo targeted immune cell programming. The second startup referenced in the report is also entering the clinic with an in vivo CAR-T strategy aimed at autoimmune indications, signaling that developers are increasingly willing to test systemic delivery formats in early clinical settings.
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AI-enabled diagnostics and lab workflows
Leica Biosystems and Indica Labs expanded their digital pathology footprint in the US with the launch of Aperio HALO AP DX software for the Aperio GT 450 DX scanner workflow. The integrated system is designed for routine on-screen diagnosis and case management across primary diagnosis, tumor boards, consultations, and second opinions. The companies said the launch builds on their earlier partnership agreement and targets clinical workflow efficiency, centralizing whole-slide image access, annotations, and reporting within a browser-based platform.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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