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Tenaya wins sup­port from Al­ny­lam in car­dio dis­ease pact Read in browser
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5 March, 2026
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top stories
1.
in focus
Multimillion-dollar gene therapies weren’t supposed to face competition. China has other plans
2. Tenaya wins support from Alnylam in cardio disease pact
3. Merck KGaA drops two cancer trials on assets from SpringWorks deal
4. FDA puts PepGen’s Phase 2 muscle disease trial on partial hold
5. Yale’s Craig Crews builds model to guide biotech startups out of academia’s ‘valley of death’
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Drew Armstrong
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Competition from China has been a major theme for us over the last year, and Jared Whitlock's feature today looks at a less-examined — but also important — part of that story. Dozens of Chinese biopharma companies are developing competitors to gene therapies from Western biotechs, but doing so at what could be a fraction of the multimillion-dollar costs in the US. Not all will be successful, but it has big implications for access to these advanced therapies around the world.

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Drew Armstrong
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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Endpoints In Focus
1
by Jared Whitlock

Last April, Chi­nese reg­u­la­tors ap­proved Be­lief Bio­Med’s gene ther­a­py for the bleed­ing dis­or­der he­mo­phil­ia B, set­ting up a chal­lenge to one of the prici­est med­i­cines.

The treat­ment marked the first he­mo­phil­ia gene ther­a­py in Chi­na to be de­vel­oped and man­u­fac­tured en­tire­ly by a do­mes­tic com­pa­ny. Be­lief Bio­Med priced it at $350,000, one-tenth the cost of a ri­val ther­a­py that sells for $3.5 mil­lion in the US.

In the year since, it's be­come clear that Be­lief Bio­Med’s ap­proval is a bell­wether: In a glob­al race to de­vel­op cheap­er and po­ten­tial­ly bet­ter al­ter­na­tives to the world’s 10 most ex­pen­sive med­i­cines, Chi­na has pulled ahead.

An End­points News analy­sis of clin­i­cal tri­al data­bas­es shows that Chi­na ac­counts for 48 of the 77 pro­grams tar­get­ing this group of ul­tra-ex­pen­sive gene ther­a­pies. Chi­na's to­tal is more than dou­ble the num­ber in the US and sev­en times as many as Eu­rope.

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2
by Kyle LaHucik

Tenaya Ther­a­peu­tics, a heart health biotech with three clin­i­cal-stage med­i­cines, is gain­ing a well-known part­ner to val­i­date its ge­net­ic tar­get plat­form.

RNAi whiz Al­ny­lam Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals is send­ing a small $10 mil­lion up­front check to Tenaya for ac­cess to new hu­man ge­net­ic tar­gets that could serve as the ba­sis for fu­ture car­dio­vas­cu­lar treat­ments. If the col­lab­o­ra­tion goes smooth­ly, and all 15 gene tar­gets are act­ed up­on, then Tenaya could gain up to $1.13 bil­lion across de­vel­op­ment, reg­u­la­to­ry and sales mile­stones, ac­cord­ing to the Thurs­day pact.

The move marks a key part­ner­ship for Tenaya, which has cut back on its work­force over the past few years, with lay­offs in 2025 and 2024 to con­serve cash. The Bay Area biotech then se­cured more than $100 mil­lion from two pub­lic of­fer­ings last year as it pre­pares for po­ten­tial late-stage de­vel­op­ment in the cost­ly gene ther­a­py are­na.

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3
by Reynald Castaneda

Mer­ck KGaA has trimmed its R&D pipeline af­ter a strate­gic re­view.

The Ger­man phar­ma has re­moved stud­ies of two drugs it picked up from the Spring­Works Ther­a­peu­tics buy­out. As it stands, there are no oth­er on­go­ing clin­i­cal tri­als from that pur­chase, al­though it could still have pre­clin­i­cal as­sets from Spring­Works that are yet to en­ter tri­als.

Mer­ck KGaA has al­so cut M9466 (al­so known as HRS-1167), a PARP1 in­hibitor that it li­censed from Hen­grui in Oc­to­ber 2023.

Mer­ck KGaA's full-year earn­ings pre­sen­ta­tion no longer lists Og­siveo (nirogace­s­tat) as un­der in­ves­ti­ga­tion for ovar­i­an gran­u­losa cell tu­mors. The Phase 2 tri­al is list­ed as com­plet­ed on Clin­i­cal­Tri­als.gov, with a 53-pa­tient en­roll­ment tar­get. In late 2024, Spring­Works said that ini­tial da­ta would be re­port­ed in the first half of last year.

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4
by Elizabeth Cairns

The mid-stage tri­al of Pep­Gen’s on­ly pipeline prod­uct, a po­ten­tial ther­a­py for a rare ge­net­ic mus­cle dis­or­der, has been placed on par­tial clin­i­cal hold by the FDA.

The agency raised ques­tions about the pro­duc­t's pre­vi­ous­ly sub­mit­ted pre­clin­i­cal phar­ma­col­o­gy and tox­i­col­o­gy stud­ies, the com­pa­ny said af­ter mar­ket close on Wednes­day. An­a­lysts at Stifel of­fered more con­text in a March 4 note, writ­ing that the FDA’s con­cerns are “specif­i­cal­ly re­lat­ed to blood pres­sure de­creas­es in mice that were ob­served in a sub-chron­ic tox­i­col­o­gy study.”

This has not been seen in pri­mates or hu­mans, the an­a­lysts wrote. The FDA had the mouse da­ta since mid-2024, they added, and it is like­ly that Pep­Gen’s re­quest to amend its Phase 2 tri­al pro­to­col to in­clude US sites “might have spurred the agency to re­vis­it the da­ta,” the Stifel an­a­lysts wrote.

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