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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 6th Preview)
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Servier expands rare-cancer push: to buy Day One for $2.5B
Servier announced a definitive agreement to acquire Day One Biopharmaceuticals for roughly $2.5 billion, securing the pediatric glioma drug Ojemda and multiple investigational oncology programs. The companies said the deal, expected to close in Q2, will be funded through a mix of existing cash and investments and reflects a ~68% premium to Day One’s closing price prior to the announcement. Day One generated roughly $155 million in sales from Ojemda in 2025, and Servier plans to integrate the asset with its existing glioma franchise that includes Voranigo. The transaction gives Servier immediate commercial presence in rare pediatric brain tumors and access to Day One’s R&D pipeline spanning pediatric and adult solid tumors. Servier emphasized continuity of development and expanded R&D capacity; Day One’s executive team framed the sale as a way to accelerate the company’s mission to serve patients across ages. Financial terms and strategic fit were highlighted by both firms; regulators and payers will now be central to near-term integration planning.
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FDA doubles down: demands sham-controlled trial for uniQure’s Huntington’s gene therapy
A senior FDA official publicly defended the agency’s reviewers and reiterated that uniQure must conduct a randomized sham‑controlled study to support approval of AMT‑130, its intracranial gene therapy for Huntington’s disease. The FDA clarified the requested control would require patients to be anesthetized with scalp incisions rather than partial skull burr holes, disputing uniQure’s characterization of an ethically untenable placebo arm. UniQure had relied on pivotal Phase 1/2 data and external controls showing marked slowing of disease progression, but the agency in late 2025 said those data were no longer adequate as primary evidence for a BLA. The public back-and-forth raises timelines and trial-design stakes for AMT‑130 and underscores broader regulatory scrutiny of invasive gene therapies where effect sizes and trial heterogeneity complicate approval pathways.
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FDA accelerates Tecvayli-Darzalex approval: national priority pathway used
The FDA granted rapid approval to Johnson & Johnson’s Tecvayli paired with Darzalex Faspro for early relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma using the agency’s Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher (CNPV) pilot, completing review in roughly 55 days. The decision followed MajesTEC‑3 Phase 3 results that showed an 83% reduction in risk of progression or death versus standard regimens and supported conversion of Tecvayli’s accelerated monotherapy approval to a full approval. FDA leadership cited the outstanding trial outcomes as justification for expedited action. J&J said the approval will broaden access to the combination in second‑line settings; payers, clinicians and competitors will be watching how the CNPV pilot shapes future oncology review timelines and regulatory expectations for confirmatory data.
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Roche-Zealand amylin misses Lilly bar: phase‑2 efficacy disappoints
Roche and Zealand Pharma reported Phase 2 results for petrelintide showing mean weight loss of 10.7% (9.0% placebo‑adjusted) at 42 weeks and a favorable tolerability profile, but the efficacy missed analyst expectations and fell short of rival data from Eli Lilly’s amylin and GLP‑1 programs. Investors reacted sharply, sending Zealand shares down roughly 30% on the release. Analysts noted the drug’s apparent ceiling in dosing and concluded that the combination of modest incremental efficacy and a crowded obesity market may constrain petrelintide’s commercial prospects despite its tolerability. The readout underscores the competitive pressure in peptide weight‑loss therapeutics and the premium investors place on differentiated efficacy.
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FDA halts PepGen US Phase 2 over preclinical safety questions
The FDA placed a partial clinical hold on PepGen’s Freedom2‑DM1 Phase 2 trial after reviewers flagged preclinical pharmacology and toxicology findings — notably blood-pressure drops in mice — despite the absence of similar signals in human Phase 1 data. PepGen said it is cooperating with the agency, provided additional analyses including unblinded Phase 1 data, and is continuing the Freedom2 trial at non‑U.S. sites. PepGen’s shares fell about 19–20% on the announcement. Analysts called the action surprising given the mouse data had been previously submitted; they view the hold as likely resolvable but stress the delay highlights the FDA’s cautious posture on novel oligonucleotide delivery platforms and the regulatory sensitivity around neuromuscular targets.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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