The FDA has approved Cobenfy, a dual M1/M4 muscarinic agonist that offers a fundamentally different approach to treating schizophrenia. The fixed dose combination of xanomeline-trospium is the first to act via a novel mechanism for the serious psychiatric disorder in over 50 years, finally expanding the treatment options beyond dopamine-targeted therapies. Bristol Myers Squibb Co., which acquired Cobenfy developer Karuna Therapeutics Inc. for $14 billion in a deal that closed in March 2024, said the drug will be available in the U.S. from late October.
Both chambers of the U.S. Congress put aside their election year politicking Sept. 25 long enough to pass a continuing resolution that will keep the government running at its current funding level through Dec. 20.
Both chambers of the U.S. Congress put aside their election year politicking Sept. 25 long enough to pass a continuing resolution that will keep the government running at its current funding level through Dec. 20. The spending bill is now awaiting President Joe Biden’s signature.
The FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee (ODAC) met for what chairperson Christopher Lieu called, at the end, “an incredibly long day” to decide whether approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors should be restricted in accordance with expression levels of PD-L1.
Nine years on from securing $3.84 million for a phase I clinical trial to test the formulation, with results showing it overcame side effects that had confounded its forerunner, the schizophrenia treatment Karxt met its PDUFA date Sept. 26 with no decision by midday. If approved, the fixed combination of xanomeline-trospium will be the first in a new drug class, and as a dual M1/M4 muscarinic agonist, the first new therapy to act via a novel mechanism for the serious psychiatric disorder in over 50 years.
Neo Medical SA raised $68 million in a series B financing round to accelerate the growth of its spine surgical technologies in the U.S. The infusion of funds allows the company to deploy new products and enhance its artificial intelligence-driven augmented reality platform.
Neuros Medical Inc.’s Altius direct electrical nerve stimulation system significantly reduced pain in 30 minutes and continued to reduce pain for a year, a study published Sept. 24, 2024, in Neuromodulation: Technology at the Neural Interface found.
The U.S. FDA’s inspection of two facilities run by San Francisco-based Irhythm Technologies Inc., illuminated some of the usual problems with corrective and preventive action. The agency indicated that problems with skin irritation associated with the company’s Zio device should have been handled as medical device reports, a view the company apparently did not share.
Given the demand for Ozempic and Wegovy and the revenue the GLP-1 drugs are generating for Novo Nordisk A/S in the U.S., a lot of generic companies are clamoring to cash in on the drugs’ current popularity. And there are some U.S. lawmakers more than willing to oblige.
As Eli Lilly and Co. launches its recently approved Ebglyss (lebrikizumab) in an atopic dermatitis market already dominated by established biologic Dupixent (dupilumab, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.), investors tuned into an Amgen Inc. investor call disclosing positive top-line phase III results for rocatinlimab, a monoclonal antibody that could potentially offer patients a new mechanism of action. While data from the Rocket Horizon study showed rocatinlimab hit all co-primary and secondary endpoints, the early findings fell below expectations in a highly competitive market.