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What’s in Today’s Brief? (May 2nd Preview)
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FDA approvals and label expansions in breast cancer
The FDA approved Arvinas and Pfizer’s Veppanu (vepdegestrant) for ESR1-mutated, metastatic estrogen receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer that has progressed after at least one endocrine therapy. The decision was based on results from the VERITAC-2 trial, where Veppanu improved progression-free survival by nearly three months versus fulvestrant for the targeted subgroup. Regulators paired the approval with a companion diagnostic path, with Guardant Health’s tissue and liquid biopsy capabilities supporting ESR1 mutation selection for patients. The approval narrows use to ESR1-mutated patients, reflecting how efficacy for this modality has concentrated in biomarker-defined populations. While the FDA greenlight adds a new class option via PROTAC-enabled estrogen receptor degradation, the program’s broader positioning has faced scrutiny from investors given the ultimate data pattern versus earlier, broader development ambitions.
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FDA label expansion for Alzheimer’s agitation
Axsome Therapeutics’ Auvelity (dextromethorphan/bupropion) won FDA approval to treat agitation in Alzheimer’s disease, giving the company access to a large, previously underserved indication. The expansion follows Auvelity’s 2022 approval for major depressive disorder and arrives on the back of FDA review using data tied to agitation efficacy. Analysts and clinicians are focused on how Auvelity’s safety profile differentiates it in a label set that includes competitive therapies and their warnings. Axsome also flagged that up to three-quarters of Alzheimer’s patients may experience agitation symptoms, which could expand prescribing beyond current depression-focused use. The approval also reinforces continuing interest in oral CNS therapeutics that can compete in rapid-symptom-treatment settings where existing options are limited.
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Regulatory scrutiny and potential withdrawal risk for Tavneos (avacopan)
The FDA is moving toward market withdrawal for ChemoCentryx’ Tavneos (avacopan), after new information surfaced that the agency says undermines evidence of effectiveness. The dispute centers on allegations that unblinded study personnel manipulated results from the pivotal trial and that the original analysis was not disclosed to FDA. The regulatory posture escalates earlier European scrutiny, with the European CHMP initiating an investigation into data integrity. Together, the actions signal heightened tolerance thresholds for clinical trial conduct in rare-disease immunology. The situation matters for investors and clinicians because Tavneos had been established as a complement C5a receptor antagonist used alongside standard immunosuppressants in vasculitis. If withdrawal proceeds, it will affect treatment access and pricing power for a marketed biologics-adjacent small-molecule option.
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Big biotech biotech restart: Arvinas-Pfizer PROTAC approval momentum and ESR1 testing infrastructure
Beyond the single-drug approval, the FDA’s action ties Veppanu access to ESR1 mutation identification, pulling molecular diagnostics further into the center of clinical workflow. Guardant Health’s companion diagnostic efforts support patient selection across tissue and liquid biopsy approaches, enabling targeted use rather than broader trial-indication adoption. For the biotech sector, the development is a reminder that PROTAC differentiation is increasingly evaluated through biomarker-delimited response patterns and diagnostic gatekeeping. Companies building “smart” degradation programs are also likely to plan development around assay reliability and repeatability. The result is an approval that expands the ER-degradation menu while concentrating real-world prescribing on a narrow molecular slice of breast cancer patients.
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Next-wave CAR-T portfolio consolidation at Johnson & Johnson
Johnson & Johnson is discontinuing two CAR-T programs for B-cell lymphoma, ending work on JNJ-9530 and JNJ-4496 months after the company highlighted the assets as potentially best-in-class. The company said the programs were dropped based on portfolio priorities and an assessment of the evolving treatment landscape. Both candidates were in early clinical development when J&J halted the programs. JNJ will continue supporting patients already in ongoing trials under existing study protocols. The move underscores how CAR-T capital allocation is tightening as oncology shareholders demand clearer differentiation, and as antibody- and bispecific-driven strategies continue to expand within large B-cell lymphoma treatment sequences.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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