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9 March, 2026 |
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sponsored by
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Built for Speed: Integrated Early‑to‑Late Phase CDMO Solutions
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| Avid Bioservices delivers solution‑focused capabilities and the capacity biopharma innovators need to advance programs with confidence. Our new Early Phase Center of Excellence, centrally located in Costa Mesa, California, provides rapid, flexible support for early development with a direct, seamless transition into our late‑stage and commercial manufacturing facility. This integrated approach reduces handoffs, accelerates timelines, and helps keep your therapy moving efficiently toward patients.
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The saga between Novo Nordisk and Hims & Hers is over, for now. Under a deal between the two companies, Hims will offer Novo’s semaglutide products on its platform and will no longer advertise compounded GLP-1 offerings. Novo also dropped its lawsuit against the telehealth company. |
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Alexis Kramer |
Editor, Endpoints News
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by Zachary Brennan
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Vinay Prasad's second exit from FDA leadership after less than a year in his positions didn't come as a major surprise. But with his two positions now left to fill — as the director of CBER and as chief medical and scientific officer — there are questions about the agency's future direction with vaccine and rare disease drug reviews. Hailed as a
genius by FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, Prasad left amid a series of missteps over the last few weeks that included holding a press conference — on background as a "senior official" but now widely and publicly named as Prasad — on a drug application that's still under review, and walking back a refuse-to-file letter for Moderna's flu vaccine in February that fueled frustration at the White House. | |
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by Anna Brown
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The FDA has handed Incyte a complete response letter for a label expansion of the company's monoclonal antibody Zynyz over issues at a third-party manufacturing site in Indiana that was formerly owned by Catalent. Incyte’s supplemental BLA for Zynyz as a treatment for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer was rejected
due to problems with the factory’s “regulatory compliance,” according to an SEC filing. There were no issues directly related to Zynyz, including with the drug's efficacy, safety and third-party drug substance manufacturer, the filing states. The application was supported with data from Incyte’s Phase 3 POD1UM-304 study. Incyte is now the third company to receive a CRL due to ongoing issues at the troubled facility in Bloomington, IN. Last year, Regeneron and Scholar Rock were also hit with CRLs for drugs made at the
factory, which is now owned by Novo Nordisk. | |
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by Shelby Livingston
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Hims & Hers has agreed to offer Novo Nordisk’s GLP-1 obesity and diabetes treatments on its website and limit access to compounded versions. The move seemingly ends a conflict that escalated last month when the telehealth company launched a compounded version of Novo’s newly approved Wegovy weight loss pill, drawing a lawsuit from the pharma giant and intense scrutiny from regulators including the FDA and HHS. As part of the agreement announcement Monday, Hims said it would no longer advertise compounded GLP-1 offerings on its platform or in its marketing. Also on Monday, Novo Nordisk filed a notice that it has dismissed all claims against Hims without prejudice, but it said in a news release that it reserved the
right to refile in the future. | |
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by Nicole DeFeudis
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Ipsen is pulling its cancer drug Tazverik from the market after an independent data monitoring committee found safety concerns in a confirmatory trial. The committee reported cases of secondary cancers that begin in blood-forming tissue, also known as hematologic malignancies, in a follicular lymphoma
study dubbed SYMPHONY-1. The trial pitted Tazverik plus the immunotherapies lenalidomide and rituximab as a second-line treatment against the latter two standard-of-care medicines alone. Ipsen said it’s withdrawing Tazverik immediately for all of its approved uses, including follicular lymphoma and epithelioid sarcoma. A spokesperson declined to comment on the number of
hematologic malignan& |
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