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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 16th Preview)
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FDA and mRNA flu vaccine approval pathway
The FDA and Moderna appear aligned as the agency heads into its June 18 Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee meeting for the seasonal mRNA-1010 shot, now marketed as mFLUSIVA. The development comes after the FDA issued a February refusal-to-file letter, citing shortcomings in the evidence base, including the lack of a high-dose comparator in older adults. Documents for the adcomm now indicate the regulator has softened its stance. Moderna is seeking full approval for adults ages 50–64 and accelerated approval for adults 65 and older, with a post-marketing study required for full approval. FDA documentation also flags residual evidence uncertainties, including that the dataset is drawn from a single flu season. Jefferies framed the shift as an improvement in the regulator’s posture, highlighting that the FDA saw no major safety concerns or imbalances versus placebo. The FDA further stated that mRNA-1010 “met all prespecified sequential success criteria,” while still requesting focused review of certain gaps ahead of the advisory vote.
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Biotech cost cuts and late-stage clinical failures
Neumora Therapeutics announced it is discontinuing navacaprant, its kappa opioid receptor antagonist for major depressive disorder, after two Phase 3 failures. The KOASTAL-2 and KOASTAL-3 studies did not deliver statistically significant improvement at six weeks versus placebo (and showed numerically worse outcomes in KOASTAL-3), following the earlier KOASTAL-1 setback. The company’s stock fell sharply in premarket trading as the layoffs plan followed. Neumora said it will lay off 35% of its workforce, projecting annual savings of about $10 million. The company attributed the restructuring to runway preservation as it shifts attention to its remaining clinical pipeline, including NMRA-511 for Alzheimer’s disease agitation, the schizophrenia program NMRA-898, and the obesity candidate NMRA-215. Analysts cited prior skepticism about the class and referenced efficacy disappointments seen with discontinued KOR programs. The move underlines how quickly capital and labor can reallocate once late-stage clinical readouts miss key endpoints, and how biotech investors are increasingly treating Phase 3 results as “clearing events” for strategy and valuation.
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Depression drug developer restructures alongside Phase 3 setbacks
As part of a broader wave of 2026 cost-saving moves, the layoff tracker reports that enGene Therapeutics is halving its workforce while preparing an eventual BLA submission for its sole clinical program, detalimogene voraplasmid. enGene said it will reduce staff by about 50%, with three C-suite exits planned, and aims to start BLA activities in the second half of the year. The report situates enGene’s decision alongside Neumora’s restructuring following its late-stage depression setbacks and notes Genentech’s earlier internal research leadership changes. For industry teams, the comparison highlights two distinct dynamics: workforce reductions tied to cash preservation for clinical catalysts, and rapid labor reallocation after clinical efficacy failures. For operators, these signals matter for planning—talent pipelines, trial execution bandwidth, and the ability to maintain parallel programs while corporate bandwidth tightens.
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Cardiometabolic pipeline accelerates toward registrational study
Edgewise Therapeutics said it plans to move its heart disease candidate into Phase 3 after an update to its Phase 2 data package. The company is advancing a genetic cardiomyopathy program, framing the new readout as sufficient to support a registrational pathway. Separate reporting also indicates the Phase 2 results cleared a “key trial test,” although questions remain about how Edgewise’s therapy compares with existing market leaders in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, including Bristol Myers Squibb and Cytokinetics products. Together, the updates reinforce that Edgewise is positioning for competitive differentiation in a space where endpoints and subgroup efficacy drive payer and label outcomes. For investors and clinical teams, the announcement shifts attention from efficacy signals to trial design details—Phase 3 comparator selection, endpoint hierarchy, and how the updated Phase 2 findings will map to the pivotal protocol.
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Germany backs away from variable drug discount pricing
Germany has reportedly scrapped a plan to introduce variable discount pricing for branded pharmaceuticals after strong pushback from drugmakers, according to Reuters. The initiative was part of a proposed healthcare reform package aimed at cutting drug spending, with Reuters citing an unnamed government source that the variable framework will be replaced by a fixed approach. The earlier plan would have required manufacturers to pay increased markdowns to German health insurers on list prices, on top of other cost-control measures. Industry leaders warned they could reduce investment, and some publicly discussed cuts tied to the reform. Eli Lilly and Boehringer Ingelheim said they would scale down planned spending by at least $1 billion, while Pfizer’s CEO Albert Bourla said the company was considering a similar pullback. The policy shift is a sign that German pricing mechanics can materially affect capital allocation decisions for global biopharma—and it mirrors international sensitivity to aggressive reimbursement reforms.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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