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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 13th Preview)
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Regulatory approvals and label expansion
The FDA has approved an adjuvant combination of pembrolizumab and belzutifan for high-risk clear cell kidney cancer after surgery, adding a hypoxia-axis HIF-2α inhibitor to standard immune checkpoint strategies. The approval covers eligible adults with clear cell renal cell carcinoma at high risk of recurrence following nephrectomy and reinforces the growing role of HIF-2α targeting in RCC. Separately, Merck’s Welireg plus Keytruda was cleared for this adjuvant setting, signaling regulator acceptance of the dual mechanism in earlier-stage disease rather than only metastatic contexts. For clinicians and payers, the decision expands treatment sequencing options in post-operative oncology care and may affect comparative choices versus other adjuvant immunotherapy backbones. The adjuvant label update is likely to drive additional prescriber and trial activity around biomarker-driven selection between RCC regimens, particularly where hypoxia biology is implicated in recurrence risk.
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FDA crosshairs and post-approval disputes for rare disease therapy
Amgen is asking for an independent review as the FDA weighs whether to withdraw the approval of Tavneos (avacopan), according to the company’s response strategy. The dispute stems from FDA concerns tied to alleged safety risks and claims of manipulation in clinical trial evidence tied to the drug’s originating developer, ChemoCentryx. The situation underscores how rare-disease approvals can be vulnerable to re-litigation of trial integrity allegations—especially when misconduct claims intersect with regulatory endpoints and ongoing patient access. For Amgen, the immediate objective is to preserve the label while the review process evaluates the underlying evidentiary record. The case also highlights a broader operational risk for sponsors that rely on legacy datasets or third-party development histories when responding to FDA enforcement actions.
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Clinical-stage readouts: psoriasis head-to-head and durability
Takeda says its oral TYK2 inhibitor zasocitinib (TAK-279) demonstrated statistical superiority over Bristol Myers Squibb’s Sotyktu (deucravacitinib) in a Phase 3 head-to-head psoriasis readout from the Latitude Atlas program. The company highlighted efficacy across primary and secondary goals, reinforcing the competitive shift toward oral options in plaque psoriasis. The結果 adds pressure to the incumbency position of first-in-class TYK2 inhibition, while also sharpening differentiation within oral TYK2-class competitors as regulators and payers weigh longer-term durability and safety. Separately, the linked reporting emphasizes Takeda’s acquisition path for zasocitinib and its intent to capture a larger share of the oral-treated segment, which may influence future trial designs and combination strategies for moderate-to-severe psoriasis.
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Company financing: large biotech Series B for ultrasound-mediated genetics
SonoThera raised an oversubscribed $125 million in a Series B financing to advance ultrasound-mediated delivery of genetic medicines toward clinical testing. The funding round, led by Vida Ventures with participation from major strategic and financial investors including Otsuka and Illumina Ventures, will support Duchenne muscular dystrophy and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease programs in the clinic. SonoThera’s platform pairs ultrasound-mediated delivery technology (RIPPLE) with engineered payload delivery (PORE), which the company says is designed to address gene-therapy bottlenecks including delivery limits, immune responses, and the ability to redose. The company expects to begin its first DMD clinical trial in 2027. The financing strengthens the competitive landscape for non-viral, locally targeted and potentially redosable gene-delivery approaches, where clinical differentiation will likely hinge on biodistribution, immunogenicity, and repeat dosing feasibility.
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Public market signals: major oncology CAR T moves and next-stage advancement
Oricell Therapeutics says its GPC3-targeted autologous CAR T, Ori-C101, is entering a confirmatory registration-directed Phase 2 trial in patients with GPC3-positive advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. The program positions Ori-C101 as the first GPC3-directed immune cell therapy—and, as stated by the company, the first CAR T for liver cancer to reach the pivotal-stage confirmatory phase. This milestone matters for CAR T development outside hematologic indications, where manufacturing complexity, patient selection, and target biology have constrained registrational progress. A confirmatory Phase 2 effort is designed to strengthen the package for potential regulatory submissions if endpoints support confirmatory efficacy. The advancement also intensifies competition among engineered-cell therapies targeting solid-tumor antigens where tumor accessibility and persistence remain critical determinants of outcomes.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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