It’s the end of the development line for Acadia Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s main asset, pimavanserin. The company said it won’t conduct any more clinical studies on the selective serotonin inverse agonist and antagonist targeting 5-HT2A receptors after a phase III fail in schizophrenia.
Wegovy (semaglutide) has racked up another indication. The U.S. FDA approved the injectable for reducing risk of major adverse cardiovascular events such as death, heart attack or stroke and for long-term weight management. The approval expands the drug’s potential. The mighty glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist from Novo Nordisk A/S was already approved for those age 12 and older who are obese and for some overweight adults with weight-related problems.
The phase II Initium study of Ultimovacs ASA’s therapeutic cancer vaccine in treating unresectable or metastatic malignant melanoma did not meet the primary endpoint. The company framed the loss by saying the UV-1 vaccine still has other indications where it could succeed.
The biosimilars revolution continues with the U.S. FDA’s approval of the first denosumab biosimilars: Wyost (denosumab-bbdz) and Jubbonti (denosumab-bbdz) from Sandoz Inc. for treating osteoporosis and to prevent bone problems in cancer. The approval puts up a strong challenge to Amgen Inc.’s Prolia, the first biologic for osteoporosis, and Xgeva, for bone cancer.
While preparing a follow-on phase III study of its Cardiamp cell therapy, Biocardia Inc. has mined positive interim data at a mean 20-month follow-up of all patients in the original Cardiamp HF Trial.
As Cardiff Oncology Inc. dosed the first patient in its phase II study of onvansertib (CRDF-004) in a first-line setting to treat RAS-mutated metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), the company also revealed positive efficacy data from its discontinued phase II of onvansertib as a second-line treatment of bevacizumab-naïve RAS-mutated mCRC.
In a panel discussion with executives at the 2024 BIO CEO conference this week in New York, the consensus emerged that artificial intelligence is here to stay, despite its occasional moments of hype, as its applications continually grow.
Drug pricing is playing an outsized role in the dynamics of the November U.S. election, creating turbulence for drug companies and for patients that will extend years after the votes are counted. During a Feb. 27 morning session on drug pricing trends during an election year at the BIO CEO & Investor Conference in New York, key opinion leaders spoke about their concerns, including the need to explain drug-pricing rationale to voters and patients in plain terms.
Companies and investors, well aware of the natural up and down fluctuations of the market, keep expecting the current downturn to end. They’ve been expecting it to begin an upturn for the past two years. During a Feb. 26 session on venture capital trends at the BIO CEO & Investor Conference in New York, investors said the tough times might well extend further into 2024 than they would like.
In its second big collaboration of the past six months, privately held Tentarix Biotherapeutics LP plans to discover and develop biologics for treating oncology and immunology indications with Abbvie Inc. The deal comes at a time of change at Abbvie, which is getting a new CEO, watching the marketplace erosion of bestselling Humira (adalimumab) and digesting two major acquisitions at a cost of billions.