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What’s in Today’s Brief? (July 14th Preview)
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Alzheimer’s disease tau-targeting advances
Biogen’s tau-lowering program diranersen (BIIB-080, BIIB-080) drew fresh attention at AAIC 2026 after published Phase 2 data showed cognitive and biomarker signals that Biogen says support a Phase 3 move. In the Celia trial, each dose arm outperformed placebo on multiple clinical and biomarker measures at 18 months, with tau reductions seen across doses and the clearest cognitive effects reported in the 60-mg group. Independent reporting from the conference noted that Celia missed its primary dose-response endpoint, but multiple secondary endpoints favored diranersen, and PET and clinical results reinforced target engagement. The company is leaning on both clinical outcomes and the consistency of tau reductions to argue for continued development despite the formal mid-stage miss. The program places a second wave of anti-tau strategies in the spotlight alongside ongoing amyloid-focused standards, with AAIC attendees watching whether Celia’s effects can reproduce in a pivotal setting. For biotech observers, the decision highlights how mid-stage efficacy can be weighed when a program demonstrates both target suppression and clinically interpretable slowing of decline.
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Regulatory momentum for oncology immunotherapy
GSK said its Jemperli (dostarlimab) cleared the primary goal in an AZUR-1 Phase 2 setting for dMMR/MSI-H locally advanced rectal cancer, teeing up an FDA filing. The company plans to share data with regulators and pursue a path that uses complete response outcomes from a single-arm study. Separately, the FDA’s evolving approach to evidence requirements for drug approvals remains under scrutiny, with researchers warning that a “one pivotal trial” policy could increase the chance of ineffective medicines reaching the market. That debate matters for oncology developers because many programs rely on accelerating pathways and endpoint strategies designed to fit regulatory expectations. For the field, GSK’s move underscores how immunotherapy evidence in smaller molecularly defined indications can translate into submissions—while the policy debate signals regulators and stakeholders are still actively negotiating the strength of clinical proof needed in practice.
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Biotech financing and public-market repositioning in immunology
A former Akero Therapeutics team, backed by Fairmount, launched Avere Therapeutics through a reverse merger with NextCure, securing a newly disclosed path to go public while adding financing to advance an oral IL-23 targeted psoriasis program. The combined company, expected to trade on Nasdaq as AVRX, will use the funding to complete Phase 2 testing and initiate global Phase 3 work. Avere’s lead candidate, AVR-001, is licensed from Hansoh and is being positioned for psoriasis and ulcerative colitis, with additional Phase 2b efforts planned, including work in Chinese and U.S. populations. The structure and capital raise reflect how immunology assets with late-stage-ready plans are being packaged for faster market access. For biotech investors, the Akero-to-Avere migration also signals continuing talent concentration and deal recycling after large exits—now paired with new capital to sustain clinical timelines.
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AI drug discovery funding and platform-scale investment
AI-focused drug discovery remained a funding magnet, with Chai Discovery reporting a $400 million Series C that more than triples its valuation from a prior round and pushes total funding above $600 million. The company is using its AI-generated molecule modeling approach to support external collaborations, including reported usage by large pharma. In parallel coverage from biotech industry sessions, companies reiterated that AI adoption is expanding across target discovery and preclinical model development, while analysts pointed to persistent gaps in reproducibility and data transparency for in silico models. The combination of new megafunding and ongoing methodological scrutiny highlights a two-track picture: scale-up capital is moving quickly, but practical validation and reproducibility remain gating factors. For the sector, the Chai round signals that investors are still willing to underwrite early-stage AI molecule platforms—especially when they can point to integration with established drug-development pipelines and partner workflows.
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Neuropsychiatry financing for Phase III-track depression therapy
Draig Therapeutics raised an additional $65 million in a Series B led by Deep Track Capital to advance DT-101, an AMPA receptor potentiator for major depressive disorder. The Cardiff University spinout said it can accelerate clinical execution as DT-101 progresses through Phase II studies and is preparing for broader late-stage testing. The financing arrives as the company positions AMPA modulation as an approach intended to recalibrate excitatory/inhibitory balance in depression—targeting a market with significant unmet need where response rates to first-line SSRIs remain limited. Draig also reported initiation activity across multiple studies, including global and U.S. monotherapy and adjunct evaluations. For biotech teams, the raise highlights continued investor appetite for mechanism-led neuropsychiatry assets that already have clinical traction, while emphasizing speed of execution and trial ramp-up capabilities.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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