Asieris Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd plans to submit a China NDA in the second quarter following positive phase III data for its cold light photodynamic drug-device combination product, Cevira, which is used as nonsurgical therapy for treating high-grade cervical dysplasia.
China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) approved Kechow Pharma Inc.’s MEK inhibitor, tunlametinib, for treatment of patients with NRAS-mutated advanced melanoma who were previously treated with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors. The Center for Drug Evaluation granted tunlametinib a priority review. The approval marks the first targeted therapy for this patient population and the first product that originated from Kechow, a privately held firm founded in 2014 to develop small-molecule therapeutics against cancer.
Fennec Pharmaceuticals Inc. has out-licensed its chemoprotective formulation of sodium thiosulfate, Pedmarqsi, to Norgine BV for €40 million (US$44 million) up front and up to an additional €210 million (US$229 million) in commercial and regulatory milestones. The injectable drug reduces the risk of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity in pediatric patients 1 month and older with localized, nonmetastatic solid tumors.
Aquestive Therapeutics Inc.’s oral epinephrine prodrug to treat life-threatening allergic reactions, Anaphylm, produced a faster time to maximum concentration than currently available autoinjectors in healthy adults, early pivotal phase III data show, meeting both pharmacokinetic (PK) primary and secondary endpoints.
Top-line phase II results of privately held Ocuterra Therapeutics Inc.’s novel selective small-molecule RGD integrin inhibitor, nesvategrast (OTT-166), showed it failed to meet primary and key secondary endpoints in patients with diabetic retinopathy, prompting the Boston-based company to seek strategic alternatives.
Spruce Biosciences Inc.’s results from two studies with tildacerfont in adult and pediatric classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) spurred Wall Street to speculate – further, again – about the prospect’s odds against a drug in the works from Neurocrine Biosciences Inc.
After hearing two conflicting presentations of the safety and efficacy of Geron Corp.’s imetelstat, the U.S. FDA’s Oncology Drugs Advisory Committee (ODAC) voted 12-2 March 14 that the drug’s benefit outweighed its risks as a treatment for transfusion-dependent anemia in adults with low- to intermediate-1 risk myelodysplastic syndromes in patients who have failed or no longer respond to erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs), or who are not eligible for ESA treatment.
Atrogi AB is raising a €30 million to €35 million (US$32.9 million to $38.4 million) series B round after announcing positive clinical data for ATR-258, a novel beta-2 adrenergic receptor agonist that is being lined up as a potential first-in-class insulin-independent treatment for type 2 diabetes.
With early phase II trial data from Cognition Therapeutics Inc.’s lead candidate, CT-1812, for Alzheimer’s disease expected in mid-2024, the firm is hoping to raise $11.5 million from an underwritten public offering of about 6.6 million shares, priced at $1.75 each.
Although Geron Corp.’s imetelstat met its primary and key secondary endpoints in a phase III study, the U.S. FDA is questioning the magnitude and durability of the effect of the first-in-class telomerase inhibitor as a second-line treatment of transfusion-dependent anemia in adults with low- to intermediate-1 risk myelodysplastic syndromes. The agency’s concerns resulted in more than an 12% stock tumble March 12 after the FDA released its briefing document two days ahead of an Oncology Drugs Advisory Committee meeting, in which the panel will be asked to vote on whether imetelstat’s benefits outweigh its risks.