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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 3rd Preview)
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FDA and Companion-Diagnostics Updates
Agilent Technologies expanded FDA approval for its Keytruda companion diagnostic, enabling its PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx Code GE006 assay to be used across additional cancers on the automated Dako Omnis platform. The update broadens the menu of malignancies that can be stratified using the same standardized workflow, strengthening the path for scaled adoption in routine pathology settings. The approval centers on automating the testing process on Dako Omnis, a key differentiator for high-throughput labs managing payer and guideline-driven demand for biomarker testing. For clinicians, it supports consistent PD-L1 assessment tied to pembrolizumab treatment decisions. From an industry perspective, the move also underlines the continued regulatory momentum around IHC-based CDx products as oncology programs expand. As PD-(L)1 testing becomes further embedded in clinical pathways, platform-enabled automation is increasingly positioned as a compliance and throughput advantage. Overall, Agilent’s expanded clearance is an operational update with downstream implications for diagnostic availability and turnaround times across accredited testing sites.
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Phase 3 Oncology Readouts and Label-Relevant Signals
Revolution Medicines’ daraxonrasib delivered a major phase 3 result in previously treated metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, with the drug extending overall survival by more than six months on average versus standard chemotherapy. The RASolute 302 trial, presented at ASCO 2026 and published concurrently in the New England Journal of Medicine, reported 13.2 months median survival with daraxonrasib versus 6.7 months with investigator’s-choice chemotherapy. The study also showed disease progression slowing, with time-to-worsening of 7.2 months versus 3.6 months for chemotherapy, and benefits largely tracked across the RAS-mutation subset as well as the overall population. Principal investigator Eileen O’Reilly of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center said the results were “practice-changing” in remarks tied to the data. The trial targets the RAS pathway, with over 90% of enrolled patients carrying common RAS mutations. For clinicians, the readout adds high-quality survival evidence in a field where new approaches have historically struggled to produce durable benefit. For the biotech market, the ASCO-to-publication linkage highlights the scale of investor attention around next-generation RAS-directed therapies as competitors line up with alternate strategies.
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Big Pharma Genetics Dealmaking
Eli Lilly and Ascidian Therapeutics launched an RNA exon editing research collaboration targeting inherited kidney diseases that could be worth up to $1.9 billion. The pact funds discovery and development for undisclosed monogenic kidney disease targets, with options to expand to additional programs. Under the agreement, Lilly provides potentially milestone-heavy funding tied to research, clinical development, and commercialization. Ascidian’s approach is based on RNA exon editors designed to use endogenous cellular machinery via trans-splicing, with the aim of correcting disease-causing exon instructions without permanently changing DNA. The companies framed kidney disease as especially tractable for exon replacement, with Ascidian also pointing to other early human testing experience in areas such as Stargardt disease. In collaboration discussions, Ascidian leadership emphasized using differentiated delivery strategies and clinically precedented components. The deal extends Lilly’s genetic medicines footprint and further validates interest in RNA editing technologies positioned between conventional gene therapy and CRISPR-style genome editing.
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Biotech Licensing and Pipeline Expansion in Rare Kidney Disease
Travere Therapeutics broadened its rare kidney portfolio by exclusively licensing civorebrutinib from Everest Medicines in a deal potentially worth more than $1.14 billion. The agreement adds development and commercialization rights across all markets outside China and certain East and Southeast Asian countries. Travere will pay $112.5 million upfront to Everest, with the biotech eligible to receive up to $1.03 billion in additional milestones plus royalties. Initial efforts will focus on primary membranous nephropathy, after Everest generated proof-of-concept data for the target. The transaction comes shortly after Travere secured FDA approval for a second indication for Filspari (sparsentan), highlighting a continued push to build adjacency in immune-mediated kidney diseases. For patients and clinicians, the move signals potential diversification of mechanistically distinct options in a space that has increasingly emphasized targeted immunology approaches rather than purely symptomatic management.
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Sickle Cell Program Disruption After FDA Safety Concerns
Fulcrum Therapeutics halted development of its sickle cell disease candidate pociredir and initiated a strategic review after the FDA raised heightened concerns about risks and benefits in the modality class. Fulcrum said FDA feedback followed safety signals linked to a recently withdrawn PRC2 inhibitor, Ipsen’s Tazverik (tazemetostat), from an ongoing Phase Ib/III SYMPHONY-1 trial. The FDA’s concerns centered on an unexpectedly high rate of secondary blood cancers seen in patients exposed to the tazemetostat regimen, which led to Ipsen voluntarily withdrawing Tazverik from the market in March. Fulcrum argued that pociredir’s mechanistic and subunit differences may matter for benefit-risk assessment, but the agency concluded the malignancy risk is equivalent across PRC2 complex targeting. Fulcrum reported that no new safety signals had been observed to date in pociredir, but the agency rejected the possibility of a viable regulatory path forward. The company said it would discontinue the program and consider options including selling the company or assets, while also working to reduce operating expenses. The decision underscores how safety signals from related assets can rapidly constrain the future of precision epigenetic approaches—especially in genetically targeted, chronic conditions like sickle cell disease.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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