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What’s in Today’s Brief? (June 2nd Preview)
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Gene therapy manufacturing and analytics
NanoMosaic and Solid Biosciences announced a comarketing agreement focused on improving AAV manufacturing analytics for gene therapy developers. NanoMosaic will promote its Tessie automated plate reader for multiplex testing of AAV vector genome and capsid titers, paired with Solid’s Polaris-101 capsid targeting skeletal muscle and cardiac tissue. The collaboration centers on the Tessie platform’s ability to measure full, partial, and empty capsids while quantifying transgene and capsid titers on the same chip—an approach intended to support safety, dosing, and efficacy decisions during CMC development. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The announcement follows NanoMosaic’s recent FDA AMT designation for Tessie earlier this year, signaling regulatory momentum for automated manufacturing analytics tools in gene therapy.
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Large partnerships and deals in rare neuromuscular disease
Servier will acquire Edgewise Therapeutics’ muscular dystrophy business in a deal valued at up to $2.65 billion, including $1.55 billion upfront and as much as $1.1 billion tied to regulatory and commercial milestones. The centerpiece is sevasemten (EDG-5506), a skeletal myosin inhibitor being evaluated in Becker muscular dystrophy and Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Edgewise’s sevasemten is designed to preserve muscle tissue by limiting contraction-induced damage, with a pivotal program in Becker muscular dystrophy and a Phase 2 study already underway for Duchenne. Servier said it expects to close the transaction in the third quarter of 2026, subject to regulatory clearance and customary conditions. The acquisition expands Servier’s neurology portfolio as it moves to build a broader pipeline in neuromuscular disorders, an area with limited approved therapies and high unmet need.
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Rare kidney disease pipeline expansion via licensing
Travere Therapeutics is stepping up its rare kidney disease pipeline by paying Everest Medicines $112.5 million upfront for a drug program targeting a broader set of rare kidney indications beyond Travere’s approved Filspari. The transaction is structured to support clinical development as Travere expands beyond its existing portfolio. A separate, related coverage piece highlighted Travere’s planned scaling of its partnership with Everest, underscoring the company’s intent to deepen its rare disease footprint while continuing to develop late-stage and emerging candidates. Financial terms beyond the upfront were not fully detailed in the provided excerpts. The deal signals continued investor and corporate appetite for kidney portfolios, where differentiated mechanisms and biomarker-led programs can drive meaningful clinical and commercial differentiation.
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Bipolar depression regulatory acceleration
Autobahn Therapeutics received FDA Fast Track designation for elunetirom (ABX-002) as an adjunctive treatment for depressive episodes in adults with bipolar I or bipolar II disorder. The designation may allow more frequent FDA interactions and, if criteria are met later, eligibility for expedited review pathways. Elunetirom is an oral small-molecule prodrug intended to penetrate the central nervous system and activate CNS thyroid hormone receptors while aiming to limit peripheral thyroid effects. Autobahn is evaluating the drug in the AMPLIFY-BD Phase 2 study; topline results are still expected in the second quarter of 2026. Fast Track does not imply approval or establish efficacy, but it places the program in an accelerated regulatory track at an early-to-mid clinical stage.
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Immunotherapy and oncology: PD-(L)1/VEGF bispecific overall survival win in China
Akeso’s ivonescimab delivered a statistically significant overall survival improvement in a Phase 3 lung cancer regimen presented at ASCO. In interim data from the Harmoni-6 trial in China, ivonescimab plus chemotherapy reduced the risk of death versus a PD-1 inhibitor plus chemotherapy comparator, with a reported 34% improvement and a p-value of 0.0017. The study evaluated ivonescimab in previously untreated, advanced squamous non-small cell lung cancer, addressing prior uncertainty around whether VEGF-targeting could translate into an OS benefit in the first-line setting. Akeso previously posted progression-free survival benefits in head-to-head studies conducted in China. Industry attention now shifts to how the regimen’s survival signal compares with existing standards across patient subgroups and what additional follow-up data could clarify for global development and potential regulatory submissions.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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