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What’s in Today’s Brief? (April 9th Preview)
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GLP-1 oral obesity drug launch sparks head-to-head competitive pressure
Eli Lilly launched Foundayo, its long-anticipated oral obesity medicine, after receiving FDA approval last week and began offering the lowest dose at $149 per month for self-pay customers. The company framed the pill as a practical alternative to oral semaglutide regimens that require specific morning fasting conditions. The launch follows Novo Nordisk’s clearance for an oral version of Wegovy and comes as both companies anticipate demand acceleration tied to Medicare coverage expansion for GLP-1s on July 1. Lilly also said co-pays may drop as low as $25 with a savings card and that Medicare pricing is expected to align with the companies’ government deal structure. Analysts and patient-access stakeholders are likely to watch whether oral formulations expand the overall GLP-1 market or simply redistribute share away from injectable therapies—especially as payer design, adherence patterns, and dosing convenience diverge between products.
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Rising 340B and Medicaid reconciliation risk under US pricing rules
Pharma finance and access leaders highlighted mounting complexity at the 340B and Medicaid intersection, pointing to reconciliation risk that can produce prohibited “double-dipping” scenarios. Panelists underscored the need for cross-functional alignment between finance, pricing, commercial teams, and access groups to avoid paying both a 340B discount and a Medicaid rebate for the same covered patient. The discussion also addressed volatility in Medicaid forecasting for generics, including unit rebate amount uncertainty versus patient utilization. Speakers emphasized that brands must be tracked across lifecycle phases to understand payer mix changes that can destabilize gross-to-net planning. Regulatory and enforcement scrutiny of government pricing and contracting practices is expected to remain a live operational issue as manufacturers continue to modernize GTN accounting, payer controls, and audit-ready documentation.
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Gilead expands real-world data and AI collaboration with Tempus
Gilead expanded its Tempus partnership, granting the drugmaker broader access to Tempus’s multimodal real-world cancer dataset library and its AI platform. Tempus said the multi-year collaboration includes additional data across indications beyond de-identified records already used to support trial design and biomarker-defined strategies. The expanded deal also positions Tempus’s Lens analytics stack—built on a cloud-based workflow integrating tumor and matched normal DNA/RNA and H&E slide data—as a layer for cohort discovery and trial simulation. Tempus added that Lens includes a large language model to support researchers querying datasets and retrieving detailed information about datapoints. For Gilead, the move signals a continued shift toward data-driven oncology development cycles, where real-world evidence is used to de-risk biomarker targeting and accelerate decision-making across programs.
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Gilead pays for molecular glue degrader option from Kymera
Gilead agreed to pay Kymera Therapeutics $45 million to exercise an option on a preclinical anticancer molecular glue degrader, adding another oncology asset to a pipeline built through dealmaking. The transaction reflects continued investor and partner emphasis on molecular-glue modalities as a route to new target coverage. The added program comes as Gilead pursues portfolio expansion through multiple acquisitions and partnerships, positioning new oncology mechanisms alongside its existing franchises in cancer and immunology. Industry participants will track follow-on milestones and the degrader’s ability to translate from preclinical activity into differentiated clinical profiles, particularly in biomarker-defined settings.
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Neuroblastoma target points to nNOS–mTOR axis for therapy development
Researchers from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem reported that blocking neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) suppresses neuroblastoma growth by disrupting an AKT–TSC–mTOR signaling cascade. The group combined findings from human neuroblastoma cells with a mouse xenograft model and reported tumor growth suppression after nNOS inhibition. The work, published in Brain Medicine, frames the nNOS–mTOR axis as a therapeutic target, with nitric oxide positioned as a regulatory driver of carcinogenesis in neuroblastoma biology. Senior author Haitham Amal said the results identify a pathway that could be therapeutically exploited for high-risk disease. Given neuroblastoma’s pediatric burden and relapse risk, the pathway-level mechanism may guide future target validation and combination strategies aimed at widening treatment windows.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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