BioSpace

BioSpace

Unravel the business of science with BioSpace. We dive into biopharma's top stories and biggest challenges, whether it’s layoffs, pipeline shake-ups, acquisitions, new FDA approvals or how to regulate AI in drug development.

  1. Pfizer Wins Metsera, Trump Strikes GLP-1 Pricing Deal, FDA Awards More Priority Vouchers

    HÁ 1 DIA

    Pfizer Wins Metsera, Trump Strikes GLP-1 Pricing Deal, FDA Awards More Priority Vouchers

    One of biopharma’s most memorable bidding wars finally came to an end on Friday—with Metsera right back in the arms of its original suitor, but with Pfizer paying around $10 billion for the rights to the obesity biotech, a nearly $3 billion increase over its original bid. But while Novo Nordisk may have bowed out of that race, the company still made headlines this past week, with CEO Maziar Mike Doustdar joining Eli Lilly head David Ricks at the White House on Thursday to announce a deal that will see their GLP-1 drugs offered at about $350 per month.     This marks a significant discount to the current list prices of $1086 and $1350 for Lilly’s obesity drug Zepbound and Novo’s comparator Wegovy, respectively. No matter how low they go, however, the GLP-1 leaders can still be undercut by compounders, Steven Grossman, policy and regulatory consultant and author of the FDA Matters blog, told BioSpace this week.     Speaking of Lilly, the Indianapolis-based pharma had a busy week, reporting 20% weight loss in a mid-stage study of its amylin agonist eloralintide that William Blair analysts said “validates [the] amylin agonist class.” Lilly also netted two new partners, inking a $1.2 billion RNAi pact with SangeneBio to target metabolic diseases and licensing a genetic eye disease therapy from MeiraGTx Holdings for up to $475 million.     On the regulatory front, the FDA awarded the second round of priority review vouchers under its new Commissioner’s National Priority Vouchers program. Unlike the first cohort of vouchers, which was announced in October, this group mostly consisted of products already on the market—with the exception of Lilly’s orforglipron.     Finally, BioSpace dives into one the hottest trends in the immunology and inflammation (I&I) space—pipeline-in-a-product. Possibly motivated by blockbuster drugs like AbbVie’s Skyrizi and Rinvoq and Regeneron and Sanofi’s Dupixent, companies are optimizing shots on multiple goals in this lucrative space.

    28min
  2. Pfizer and Novo Battle Over Metsera, Tidmarsh Fights FDA Exit, UniQure and Sarepta Face Setbacks

    5 DE NOV.

    Pfizer and Novo Battle Over Metsera, Tidmarsh Fights FDA Exit, UniQure and Sarepta Face Setbacks

    Many of the top stories of 2025 are currently being written. We’re on the edge of our keyboards, watching and waiting as Pfizer and Novo Nordisk duke it out over the right to acquire glittery obesity startup Metsera. In the latest development, Pfizer raised its original bid of around $7.27 billion to about $8.1 billion on Monday—only to be usurped again by the indefatigable Novo, which upped its own bid to a cool $10 billion.   Meanwhile, the unprecedented drama in the uppermost ranks of the FDA—another top story of 2025—continues as CDER Director George Tidmarsh exits the agency. Tidmarsh reportedly resigned Sunday after being placed on administrative leave amid an investigation into his “personal conduct” at the agency. On Monday, however, Tidmarsh told Endpoints News that he was “second-guessing” his decision.   Speaking of the FDA, the regulator appears to have done its own 180—on uniQure’s investigational gene therapy for Huntington’s disease, three-year data from which sent the biotech’s stock into the stratosphere just five weeks ago. Despite previous agreements on protocols and statistical analyses, the agency “no longer agrees” that Phase I/II data for AMT-130 are adequate to provide primary evidence for the application, uniQure said, throwing the timeline for the BLA into question.   Another gene therapy player, Sarepta Therapeutics, took a hit this week, as two of its Duchenne muscular dystrophy drugs, Vyondys 53 and Amondys 45, failed a confirmatory trial. Sarepta still plans to file for full approval of the two exon-skipping therapies, however, based on what it called “encouraging trends” in efficacy. Finally, on the genetic medicine front, CBER director Vinay Prasad teased an upcoming paper that will detail the regulator’s thinking and a new approach to gene editing approvals.   On top of all that, Q3 earnings continue to roll in, with Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Vertex, Bristol Myers Squibb, AbbVie, and more reporting results.   One more thing: Have you ever wanted to know more about the inner workings of the Biogen-Eisai Alzheimer’s partnership? Check out this profile on BioSpace 40 under 40 honoree Neena Bitritto-Garg, Eisai alum and current CEO of Ensho Therapeutics.

    26min
  3. Novartis’ Big Buy, Q3 Earnings, Regeneron’s Dropped Cell Therapy, More

    29 DE OUT.

    Novartis’ Big Buy, Q3 Earnings, Regeneron’s Dropped Cell Therapy, More

    Novartis started the week early with a Sunday afternoon announcement of the acquisition of neuromuscular drug developer Avidity Biosciences for $12B. That’s the second biggest buy of the year after Johnson & Johnson’s January acquisition of Intra-Cellular. The Avidity buy could read through positively to Dyne Therapeutics, as both are aiming to treat neuromuscular ailments with RNA-targeting therapies. Dyne shares have nearly doubled over the past month, jumping approximately 40% after Novartis’ news dropped.    The Avidity deal is the latest in an uptick on the pharma M&A front. Also this week, Eli Lilly doubled down on gene therapy with a pick up of Adverum Biotechnologies and its lead program for wet age-related macular degeneration. And Roche, which last month acquired 89bio in a $3.5 billion deal centered on a MASH candidate, said in its third-quarter earnings call on Thursday that more deals could be in the future. Finally, beyond the big guys, Leerink Partners predicts which small- to mid-cap firms might also be on the hunt for new pipeline goodies.    Following the dealmaking news, Novartis held its earning call on Tuesday. CEO Vas Narasimhan downplayed the deals Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Amgen have made with the White House, saying they don’t address the root of the drug pricing problem President Donald Trump hopes to solve.     On other earnings calls, BioMarin announced plans to divest the hemophilia gene therapy Roctavian. Regeneron faced further questions about Eylea and issues with the Catalent plant that’s been tripping up its regulatory applications. But the company didn’t address last week’s news that it was dropping a CAR T asset picked up from 2seventy bio. These are but two of the latest examples of underperforming assets in the cell and gene therapy space.    BridgeBio had positive news for patients with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy this week after acing a Phase III trial for an investigational substrate supplementation therapy. Analysts predict the asset could be before the FDA later this year or early next.     Finally, with the U.S. government shutdown going on a month, BioSpace takes a look at how the FDA is operating.

    27min
  4. Novo Board Upended, ESMO Excitement, FDA Awards, Replimune’s U-Turn

    22 DE OUT.

    Novo Board Upended, ESMO Excitement, FDA Awards, Replimune’s U-Turn

    Novo Nordisk dominated the news cycle this week, with more leadership changes as the Novo Foundation replaced the company’s board, which will now be headed by former CEO Lars Rebien Sørensen. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump promised last week that Novo’s Ozempic will cost about $150 when he and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz are done negotiating, though Oz clarified that said negotiations have not yet begun. Over in Berlin, the 2025 European Society for Medical Oncology featured presentations from Akeso and Summit Therapeutics on PD-1/VEGF inhibitor ivonescimab in first linenon-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and Exelixis’ oralkinase inhibitor zanzalintini in colorectal cancer. In addition to reporting that ivonescimab “significantly improved” progression-free survival in first-line NSCLC, Summit said on a Q3 call Monday that it would submit a regulatory application with the FDA for the drug in second-line EGFR-mutatedNSCLC. In other cancer news, shares of Replimune soared after the FDA accepted its resubmitted biologics license applicationfor RP1 in advanced melanoma, nearly three months after its July rejection. Also on the regulatory front, the FDA named the first nine recipients of its Commissioner’s National Priority Voucherprogram. Winners of the expedited review vouchers include Regeneron, Disc Medicine and Sanofi. The FDA agency also awarded its second-ever platform designation to Krystal Biotech—after granting the first such designation to Sarepta Therapeutics earlier this year for its AAV vector andthen rescinding it after the platform was linked to multiple deaths. Finally, Sandra Retzky, formerly director of the FDA’s Office of Orphan Products Development, joins the lengthy leadership exodus at the agency this year. In BioPharm Executive, BioSpace look at how Johnson & Johnson weathered the erosion of its cornerstone drug Stelara. And is hair loss the new weight loss? Two biopharma companies—Veradermics and Pelage Pharmaceuticals—reeled in large financing rounds for their respective hair loss/regrowth programs. They’re part of an uptick in mega rounds of late, butexperts say it’s not a full biotech comeback just yet.

    31min
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Unravel the business of science with BioSpace. We dive into biopharma's top stories and biggest challenges, whether it’s layoffs, pipeline shake-ups, acquisitions, new FDA approvals or how to regulate AI in drug development.

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