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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 11th Preview)
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Vertex races to FDA: BLA filing looms after Phase III win
Vertex said it will move rapidly toward U.S. regulatory filings after a Phase III Rainier trial produced strong reductions in proteinuria for povetacicept in immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN). The company plans a biologics license application (BLA) submission by the end of March, positioning povetacicept for potential accelerated approval based on the trial’s surrogate endpoint. The Rainier readout showed a placebo-adjusted, clinically meaningful drop in urine protein:creatinine ratio, drawing analyst commentary that the program has “best‑in‑class” potential and could generate multi‑billion dollar sales if approved. Vertex’s filing comes amid a crowded late‑stage race—Otsuka and Vera have near‑term filings and approvals—which will test the FDA’s willingness to grant accelerated pathways in IgAN.
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FDA narrows leucovorin approval — not for autism
The U.S. FDA approved leucovorin (Wellcovorin) for a specific genetic form of cerebral folate deficiency (CFD‑FOLR1) but declined to broaden the label to autism spectrum disorder. Regulators based the approval on case reports and mechanistic literature rather than randomized trials, and explicitly limited the indication to patients with a confirmed FOLR1 variant. The decision follows months of high‑profile political attention that prompted a surge in off‑label prescriptions. FDA officials and outside clinicians warned that evidence for autism is weak, and experts have flagged increased off‑label use and supply strain as immediate consequences of the publicity surrounding the issue.
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BioNTech founders exit... next‑gen mRNA startup incoming
BioNTech confirmed that co‑founders Ugur Şahin and Özlem Türeci will step down by year‑end to found a new company focused on next‑generation mRNA technologies. BioNTech said it will grant the new venture certain mRNA rights and take a minority stake, while it concentrates on advancing a late‑stage oncology portfolio. The founders’ departure coincides with BioNTech’s shift to multiple late‑stage cancer programs and a planned expansion of Phase III oncology trials. The company said the transition will be managed to ensure continuity for ongoing pivotal programs and collaborations.
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In vivo assay quantifies endosomal escape: guides LNP liver delivery
Two independent Nature Biotechnology reports introduced quantitative, in vivo assays that measure endosomal escape of lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) in the liver and used those readouts to optimize delivery chemistry. One paper described a lysosomal barcoding approach to track nucleic acid escape; the other deployed in vivo functional assays to map how branched ionizable lipids perform inside hepatocytes. Both studies translate a long‑standing bottleneck—poorly characterized endosomal escape—into a measurable design parameter. Authors showed how lipid structure correlates with cytosolic release and potency, offering design principles that could improve RNA therapeutic potency and reduce required doses for hepatic targets.
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Lilly pledges $3B to China — builds GLP‑1 manufacturing; $500M for Korea
Eli Lilly announced a major manufacturing push in East Asia, earmarking roughly $3 billion over the next decade to expand oral solid‑dose capacity in China to support the launch of its GLP‑1 candidate orforglipron and related programs. The company also pledged $500 million to bolster South Korea’s biopharma sector, signaling dual supply‑chain and market commitments. Lilly framed the investments as strategic moves to secure supply ahead of expected global demand for obesity and metabolic medicines. The capital will fund new facilities, scale production and strengthen local supply chains in regions already attracting pharma manufacturing expansion.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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