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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 22nd Preview)
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Novartis pays $2B for mutant‑selective PI3Kα pill – broadens breast cancer arsenal
Novartis agreed to buy Synnovation Therapeutics’ PI3Kα program, paying $2 billion upfront to acquire SNV4818, a mutant‑selective oral inhibitor in early clinical testing. The deal transfers rights to a molecule engineered to spare wild‑type PI3Kα and potentially reduce known class toxicities such as hyperglycemia and rash. Novartis said the acquisition aims to expand options for HR+/HER2‑ breast cancer driven by PIK3CA mutations. SNV4818 is in initial trials across breast and other solid tumors with a primary completion date listed in 2027. Synnovation and Novartis pitched selectivity as the clinical differentiator, positioning the drug for combination regimens and earlier lines of therapy. The move follows similar recent buys in the PI3Kα space and signals continued big‑pharma appetite for next‑generation, mutation‑selective oncology agents.
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AI drugmaker Earendil hauls in $787M – scales biologics pipeline
Earendil Labs closed a $787 million financing round to accelerate an AI‑driven biologics pipeline spanning autoimmune disease and oncology. Founder and CEO Jian Peng said the capital lets the company "operate at a fundamentally different scale," enabling multiple programs to advance toward clinical testing and build a larger R&D organization. Investors include Dimension, Luminous Ventures and Sanofi. Earendil claims more than 40 programs across modalities such as bispecifics, T‑cell engagers and ADCs, with at least one program positioned for Phase 2. The round reinforces investor confidence in companies that combine generative AI with biologics engineering and underlines growing strategic partnerships between AI drug startups and multinational pharmas.
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FDA insists on sham surgery control for uniQure’s Huntington’s gene therapy
The FDA told uniQure it will require a prospective, randomized, double‑blind sham surgery‑controlled study to support a marketing application for AMT‑130, an AAV‑delivered gene‑lowering therapy for Huntington’s disease. AMT‑130 showed marked effects in Phase I/II data, with investigators reporting slowed progression, but the agency said data from earlier trials and external controls are insufficient for approval. Clinicians and patient advocates warned the requirement raises ethical and enrollment concerns because participants in a sham arm could wait 3–5 years before receiving active surgery, potentially progressing beyond eligibility. The FDA’s stance follows a Type A meeting and signals a high evidentiary bar for invasive, one‑time CNS gene therapies.
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Tumor whole‑genome sequencing shows broad clinical utility – Nature Medicine
A real‑world study published in Nature Medicine evaluated paired tumor‑normal whole‑genome sequencing (WGS) in 888 patients and found clinical utility across solid tumors. WGS succeeded in 89% of cases with a median turnaround time of six working days. Investigators identified potentially actionable DNA biomarkers in 73% of patients; 40% started biomarker‑informed therapy within a year, and biomarker‑guided treatment correlated with longer overall survival. The dataset included cancers of unknown primary, where WGS helped resolve diagnoses or reveal reimbursed treatment options in two‑thirds of cases. Authors framed WGS as a comprehensive diagnostic that can consolidate multiple single‑gene and panel tests into one workflow, though implementation challenges such as cost, bioinformatics and reimbursement remain.
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Engineered esophagus restores function in pig model – step toward pediatric therapy
Researchers at Great Ormond Street Hospital and UCL reported in Nature Biotechnology that an autologous, engineered esophageal segment successfully replaced a circumferential portion of esophagus in growing minipigs and restored swallowing without immunosuppression. The team decellularized donor porcine scaffolds, repopulated them with the recipient pig’s pericyte‑like myogenic precursors and fibroblasts, and demonstrated functional integration and growth. The work models treatment for long‑gap esophageal atresia in infants and addresses limitations of current surgical reconstructions. Authors emphasize translational steps remain, including GMP manufacturing, long‑term safety and regulatory pathways for human pediatric trials.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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