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13 January, 2026
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top stories
1. AbbVie reaches MFN deal with the White House, pledges billions to US manufacturing
2. Marea takes drug for rare hormone disease acromegaly to Phase 2
3. Sentynl gets the first US approval for rare copper absorption disease
4.
news briefing
VantAI gets $80M and new name; Dynavax discloses it had pre-Sanofi suitor
5. Novartis licenses mysterious radiopharma asset from Chinese biotech
6. Treg biotech Sonoma sheds staff after getting new CEO
7. Pretzel Therapeutics buys Rome and its ‘dark genome’ work
8. Congress' biotech panel pitches FDA policy upgrades to help performance
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Reynald Castaneda
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Now that AbbVie has secured its “most favored nation” deal with the White House, eyes are on Regeneron. It is the only company among the 17 drugmakers that President Donald Trump wrote to, demanding MFN pricing, that has yet to announce a deal.

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Reynald Castaneda
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Anna Brown

Ab­b­Vie has struck a "most fa­vored na­tion" deal with the White House to low­er drug prices, the sec­ond-to-last of the 17 phar­ma com­pa­nies to reach an agree­ment af­ter fac­ing a de­mand from Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump last sum­mer.

The com­pa­ny said it will pro­vide low­er prices in Med­ic­aid and par­tic­i­pate in Trump’s di­rect-to-pa­tient plat­form TrumpRx, which is ex­pect­ed to launch ear­ly this year. In ex­change, Ab­b­Vie said it will be ex­empt from tar­iffs and fu­ture price man­dates, but did­n't give fur­ther de­tails. Oth­er drug­mak­ers, in­clud­ing Am­gen, Bris­tol My­ers Squibb and GSK, have se­cured a three-year re­prieve from tar­iffs un­der their re­spec­tive deals.

“Ab­b­Vie is fol­low­ing Pres­i­dent Trump's call to ac­tion by reach­ing this agree­ment, al­low­ing us to col­lec­tive­ly move be­yond poli­cies that harm Amer­i­can in­no­va­tion,” CEO Rob Michael said in a Mon­day re­lease.

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Marea Therapeutics CSO Ethan Weiss (L) and CEO Josh Lehrer
2
by Kyle LaHucik

On Josh Lehrer's first day as CEO of Marea Ther­a­peu­tics in Oc­to­ber 2023, he found out the biotech's sec­ond pipeline drug had­n't lived up to the star­tup's ex­pec­ta­tions in a mon­key study.

The Bay Area biotech al­ready had a clin­i­cal-stage car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease treat­ment that it had li­censed from No­var­tis. But Marea want­ed to take a sec­ond drug in­to the clin­ic, for the rare dis­ease acromegaly, to fill out its pipeline.

Luck­i­ly, Marea had been work­ing on a back­up, called MAR002, and a few months lat­er, it was ad­vanc­ing — sav­ing the biotech from killing off its work in acromegaly, chief sci­en­tif­ic of­fi­cer Ethan Weiss said in an ex­clu­sive in­ter­view with End­points News on the side­lines of the an­nu­al JP Mor­gan Health­care Con­fer­ence in San Fran­cis­co.

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3
by Elizabeth Cairns

Sen­tynl Ther­a­peu­tics has se­cured the first US ap­proval of a ther­a­py for a rare and fa­tal ge­net­ic con­di­tion called Menkes dis­ease.

The com­pa­ny's as­set Zy­cubo was ap­proved af­ter be­ing knocked back by the FDA in Sep­tem­ber. The green light fi­nal­ly came on Mon­day, a cou­ple of days ahead of the drug’s new PDU­FA date.

Sen­tynl is a US sub­sidiary of the In­di­an com­pa­ny Zy­dus Life­sciences.

Around one in every 100,000 to 250,000 ba­bies is born with the mu­ta­tion that caus­es Menkes dis­ease. The ge­net­ic ab­nor­mal­i­ty af­fects a cop­per trans­porter pro­tein in the gut, pre­vent­ing the cor­rect dis­tri­b­u­tion of cop­per through­out the body. Pa­tients ex­pe­ri­ence seizures, and have im­paired growth, de­vel­op­men­tal de­lays and in­tel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty. Those with the most com­mon form of Menkes rarely live past three years.