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3 March, 2026 |
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It seems to be one step forward, one step back for the world of ultra-rare diseases. As Jared Whitlock and Ryan Cross report today, a small startup built to develop custom genetic therapies is shutting down. The news follows the FDA's move to advance a program to try to make it easier to develop similar treatments. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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by Ryan Cross, Jared Whitlock
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EveryOne Medicines, the first biotech company formed to develop individualized therapies for genetically unique diseases, will close, Endpoints News has learned. The decision to wind down operations came less than a week after the FDA released a highly anticipated document outlining a streamlined pathway for the development and approval of those types of bespoke medicines. But the FDA’s draft policy fell short of what EveryOne Medicines anticipated, according to a person familiar with the matter, who was granted anonymity to speak freely. It didn’t go far enough to make the commercialization of custom drugs feasible in the US, and was
more constrained than a UK pilot, the person said. | |
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by Kyle LaHucik
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Theravance Biopharma will wind down its entire R&D organization and lay off 50% of its overall workforce after another Phase 3 fail for an experimental medicine called ampreloxetine. The US-Irish drugmaker said Tuesday that ampreloxetine flopped in a late-stage test in patients with symptomatic neurogenic orthostatic hypotension due to multiple system atrophy. The drug failed a Phase 3 in 2021, leading to a 75% workforce reduction at the time. It missed the mark in another Phase 3 in 2022. Now, with another Phase 3 setback, Theravance said it will end development of the investigational drug and let go its entire R&D organization as well as other employees. The company had 97 workers at the end of 2024. | |
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by Nicole DeFeudis
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Boehringer Ingelheim is giving up on a Phase 2 MASH program using an experimental cancer drug that goes after the CD47 pathway, one of oncology’s most alluring and troublesome therapeutic approaches. The candidate, an anti-SIRPα monoclonal antibody called BI 770371, is designed to block the CD47 “don’t eat
me” signal that cancer cells use to shield themselves from the immune system. For years, drugmakers have tried ways of drugging CD47, but have been thwarted by disappointing readouts and safety concerns. In patients with MASH, Boehringer and its partner OSE Immunotherapeutics had hoped the drug could help improve fibrosis of the liver. But a Phase 2 trial “did not show efficacy supporting further development in this indication,” a Boehringer spokesperson told Endpoints News. | |
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by ENDPOINTS |
Plus, news about Acadia Pharmaceuticals, Poplar Therapeutics and Antiverse: 🅰️ RTW’s Prolium gets $50M: The New York-based biotech Prolium Bioscience has $50 million in Series A funds from RTW Investments. The funding was announced 14 months after Prolium’s T cell engager deal with China-based Keymed Biosciences. That pact got Prolium a CD20xCD3 bispecific, rebranded as PRO-203, that will enter Phase 1/2 in systemic sclerosis next quarter. — Kyle LaHucik 🔬 COUR reports Phase 2a data: One year into the study, the biotech said its candidate CNP-104 demonstrated “durable clinical effects” in patients with a
chronic liver autoimmune disease called primary biliary cholangitis. The company |
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