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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 11th Preview)
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FDA rejection of Replimune melanoma therapy
The FDA rejected Replimune’s oncolytic virus therapy for advanced melanoma again, citing unresolved doubts about the study results after the company’s resubmission. The latest action extends a regulatory standoff that began with an earlier FDA complete response letter (CRL) and has become a flashpoint for how flexibly the agency will evaluate late-stage evidence in oncology. Replimune’s program, vusolimogene oderparepvec (RP-1), has now faced two FDA denials for the melanoma indication. Replimune had sought reconsideration after an initial rejection last July, but regulators said the company did not adequately address the agency’s concerns around the data package. The decision matters for sponsors watching FDA expectations around immunotherapy end points, trial conduct, and how clearly companies must resolve mechanistic and statistical uncertainties before approval. For investors, it also signals continued selectivity for oncolytic virus datasets in melanoma. The FDA’s response provides a near-term read-through for other late-stage immunotherapy developers on what gaps are most likely to trigger additional CRLs rather than proceed to approval.
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Oricell’s funding push for solid-tumor CAR-T
Oricell Therapeutics closed a pre-IPO funding round raising more than $110 million, aiming to expand its global footprint and advance a GPC3-targeted autologous CAR-T for liver cancer toward registrational trials. The company’s lead asset, Ori-C101, has completed investigator-initiated work and a registrational Phase 1 study in hepatocellular carcinoma. Oricell framed the financing as a runway extension ahead of pivotal development, with investors including Vivo Capital, Beijing Medical and Health Care Industry Investment Fund, and Qiming Venture Partners, alongside a leading global healthcare fund. The company said it is positioning Ori-C101 to pursue global regulatory submissions and is also advancing next-generation modalities. The company’s broader pipeline includes additional programs in solid tumors and blood cancers, with plans that incorporate “armored” CAR-T approaches and in vivo CAR-T concepts. For the sector, the deal underlines how solid-tumor cell therapy remains a capital-attracting area despite manufacturing and efficacy headwinds. For biotech operators, the transaction provides a clear example of how pre-IPO structures are being used to bridge expensive CAR-T development into later-stage clinical milestones.
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Mezagitamab delivers positive Phase 2 signal in ITP
In immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), a Phase 2 trial reported that mezagitamab materially increased platelet counts, providing a fresh clinical read-through for antibody-based options in a space where durable responses remain a high bar. The study evaluated the investigational antibody in patients with ITP and showed significant platelet count improvements. ITP is an autoimmune disorder characterized by low platelet levels due to increased destruction and impaired production. By directly targeting disease biology, mezagitamab is positioned as a potential therapy where response durability and safety profiles could differentiate it from existing treatments. The Phase 2 outcomes also add to the growing pipeline emphasis on earlier control of platelet loss, which can reduce bleeding risk and lessen reliance on steroids or rescue interventions. Sponsors are likely to focus on both magnitude and durability of platelet response as they design subsequent registrational studies. For investors and clinicians, the headline is the availability of a clinically meaningful biomarker outcome—platelet count—as the trial endpoint driving next-step development decisions.
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Telix FDA accepts resubmitted NDA for glioma imaging agent
The FDA accepted Telix Pharmaceuticals’ resubmitted NDA for TLX101-Px (Pixclara), a radiolabeled imaging agent for characterizing progressive or recurrent glioma across adult and pediatric patients. The agency set a Sept. 11, 2026 PDUFA date, putting the product on a defined regulatory timeline. TLX101-Px is intended to support imaging workflows in glioma, where accurate characterization of progression status can affect treatment selection. For diagnostic developers, NDA acceptance after resubmission is a critical step that signals regulators found the package sufficient to proceed. The accepted review also provides a near-term catalyst for the company’s commercial planning, including imaging center readiness and reimbursement strategy. In parallel, it highlights the FDA’s willingness to restart formal review when companies correct earlier issues. For the broader biotech community, this is another datapoint that radiopharmaceutical diagnostic NDAs continue to clear regulatory hurdles when clinical and chemistry controls are aligned with FDA expectations.
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Gilead expands Kymera licensing for CDK2 molecular glue degrader
Gilead Sciences exercised its option to exclusively license Kymera Therapeutics’ KT-200, an oral CDK2 molecular glue degrader candidate. The move follows a strategic collaboration in which Gilead previously paid Kymera for an option and then advanced to an exclusive license after preclinical data package delivery. KT-200 is designed to degrade CDK2 rather than inhibit kinases through traditional small-molecule binding, which Kymera says aims to improve selectivity and reduce dose-limiting toxicities associated with CDK1 inhibition. Gilead will run IND-enabling studies with an eye toward filing to test in humans. The deal adds to a flurry of oncology-focused “protein degrader” licensing and strengthens the competitive set across targeted degradation modalities. It also reinforces CDK2 as a continued oncology target as companies seek next-generation cell-cycle control strategies. For biotech leaders, this is a clear example of how big pharma continues to acquire preclinical differentiation when regulatory pathways remain uncertain in later stages, using option-to-license structures to manage risk.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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