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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 12th Preview)
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Big Pharma makes a China push via a large cross-pipeline deal
Bristol Myers Squibb moved deeper into China’s oncology R&D ecosystem by signing a broad partnership with Hengrui Pharma, agreeing to pay $600 million upfront for 13 early-stage programs spanning both companies’ pipelines. The deal is structured to be worth up to $15.2 billion in total potential consideration as development and commercial milestones are achieved. Hengrui, long viewed as a pipeline heavyweight, will collaborate with BMS to advance the asset set, with the transaction designed to tap Hengrui’s development engine while giving BMS exposure to additional drug candidates. For BMS, the agreement adds near-term optionality as Western portfolios face patent and competitive pressure; for Hengrui, it reinforces the company’s strategy of expanding global reach through partnering with major multinationals.
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FDA approval lands for a bispecific targeting an ultra-rare NRG1-driven cancer
Partner Therapeutics secured its first FDA approval with Bizengri, a bispecific antibody for advanced cholangiocarcinoma driven by NRG1 gene fusions. The approval adds a new targeted option for a biologically defined subgroup where treatment choices can be limited. Partner previously acquired U.S. rights to the asset from Merus in 2024, positioning the company to commercialize the therapy in the United States after regulatory review. The approval also highlights continued momentum for bispecific antibodies in genomically selected tumors, particularly where single-molecule targeted approaches may not be sufficient.
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Roche buys PathAI to accelerate AI digital pathology inside pharma workflows
Roche announced it will acquire PathAI in a deal valued at $750 million upfront, aiming to expand AI-powered digital pathology capabilities for pathology labs and biopharma development. PathAI’s technology focuses on applying machine learning to pathology workflows to help standardize analyses and speed decisions. The acquisition underscores how large platforms are consolidating around digital pathology as a data layer for drug development, clinical trials, and biomarker efforts. Roche’s move positions it to integrate PathAI’s tools more tightly across its diagnostics and pharmaceutical R&D operations, while strengthening its ability to serve partners building AI-enabled translational programs.
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Gene therapy setbacks and investor repricing in nonviral delivery
enGene’s stock tumbled after updated Phase II LEGEND trial data for its nonviral gene therapy candidate detalimogene voraplasmid in high-risk BCG-unresponsive nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer. The updated readout showed lower complete response rates than prior results, with the any-time complete response at 54% and a six-month rate of 43%, down from earlier benchmarks reported for earlier cohorts. The repricing accelerated as investors absorbed concerns about durability and the gap versus expectations set by the November 2025 dataset. enGene said data remain preliminary and that longer-term durability analysis is planned for later in the year, alongside continued discussions with the FDA about potential regulatory pathways. The episode illustrates how quickly investors can recalibrate around clinical readouts in gene delivery, even when programs are still maturing across cohorts.
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AAV redosing pressure grows as ASGCT spotlights one-and-done constraints
ASGCT highlighted a core challenge for AAV gene therapy: redosing constraints driven by pre-existing immunity and immune responses that can limit future administrations. In a roundup of developments, the focus was on how strategies to overcome immunity could restore the ability to treat patients beyond an initial “one-and-done” course, particularly in rare disease settings where long-term disease control may require repeat dosing. The discussion also reflected policy and clinical trial momentum around next-generation capsids and immunomodulatory approaches designed to reduce neutralizing antibody barriers. For developers, the takeaway is operational and clinical—redosing strategies may be essential for broader patient populations and for indications where durability or disease progression demands additional therapy.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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