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Speeding up the new drug trial process Read in browser
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1 April, 2026
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1. Making custom CRISPR therapies could be harder than initially thought
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3. Updated: Lilly wins FDA approval of anti-obesity pill orforglipron, setting up new battle with Novo
4. Novo cuts 400 jobs in Indiana as Scholar Rock refiles drug linked to the factory
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Max Bayer
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The Trump administration hasn't yet decided what legal route to take, if any, to counter a federal judge's ruling earlier this month pausing a slew of major vaccine decisions. Reuters reports, citing administration officials, that conversations are still ongoing.

The indecisiveness underscores how little the White House wants to continue wading into contentious vaccine-related policy moves. Recent polling indicates that the decisions made last year have been politically perilous, and all eyes are now on the midterms. We expect some kind of action in the coming weeks.

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Max Bayer
Pharma Reporter, Endpoints News
Researchers Kiran Musunuru (L) and Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas (Photo credit: Ryan Collerd)
1
by Ryan Cross

Last year's suc­cess­ful treat­ment of an in­fant known as Ba­by KJ en­cour­aged sci­en­tists to try again. But now, five weeks af­ter the FDA out­lined its plans to make such in­di­vid­u­al­ized ge­net­ic med­i­cines more ac­ces­si­ble, re­searchers are re­al­iz­ing how dif­fi­cult it will be to meet those new re­quire­ments.

“The door is open. It's just not very wide­ly open,” Ki­ran Musunuru, the gene edit­ing sci­en­tist at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Penn­syl­va­nia who co-led the cre­ation of Ba­by KJ’s ther­a­py, told End­points News in an in­ter­view.

The Ba­by KJ sto­ry has been tout­ed by US health of­fi­cials as a shin­ing ex­am­ple of the type of drug de­vel­op­ment they want to make eas­i­er and faster. But many times over the last year, the agency has pub­licly promised to dereg­u­late or cre­ate new path­ways, on­ly for com­pa­nies to run in­to road­blocks.

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FDA Commissioner Marty Makary (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
2
by Max Bayer

The FDA plans to re­duce the amount of da­ta re­quired to start a new drug tri­al in the US, cut­ting out most parts that aren’t safe­ty-re­lat­ed, FDA Com­mis­sion­er Mar­ty Makary told re­porters on Wednes­day.

The goal is to sim­pli­fy and ex­pe­dite the process of ap­ply­ing for an in­ves­ti­ga­tion­al new drug (IND) ap­pli­ca­tion, said Makary, who is en­ter­ing his sec­ond year lead­ing the FDA un­der the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion. It’s a goal sup­port­ed by drug de­vel­op­ers, who have framed these re­forms as es­sen­tial to com­pet­ing against Chi­na's speedy clin­i­cal tri­al process.

“We are go­ing to re­duce the re­quire­ments of the IND ap­pli­ca­tion, re­mov­ing parts of the ap­pli­ca­tion that are not im­por­tant for safe­ty,” Makary said on the call. Ca­reer sci­en­tists at the agency will de­cide what parts aren’t nec­es­sary or could be re­viewed lat­er in the ap­proval process, he said.

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3
by Elizabeth Cairns

Now Eli Lil­ly has an obe­si­ty pill, too.

On Wednes­day, the FDA ap­proved or­for­glipron, the agency an­nounced. It will be sold as Foun­dayo, and Lil­ly has pre­vi­ous­ly said it plans to sell a start­ing dose for $149 a month and high­er dos­es for up to $349 a month.

The ini­tial price ris­es to $349 for sub­se­quent dos­es if the pa­tient does not re­fill with­in a 45-day win­dow, a Lil­ly spokesper­son con­firmed to End­points News. If they do re­fill with­in that time, it would be a max­i­mum of $299 per month through the Foun­dayo self-pay pro­gram.

The pill was ap­proved un­der the FDA's new Com­mis­sion­er's Na­tion­al Pri­or­i­ty Vouch­er pro­gram, an ex­pe­dit­ed re­view path­way that sparked both promise and con­cern when it launched last year. The agency claimed that Foun­dayo was the fastest ap­proval of a new mol­e­c­u­lar en­ti­ty in more than two decades.

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US Deals Outlook 20226: What's ahead for pharma and life sciences
US biopharma still leads the world in high-risk drug development, but the road from innovation to access has never been harder to predict. Hear from top executives and investors on how they’re navigating what’s next. Join us.
4
by Anna Brown

No­vo Nordisk is lay­ing off rough­ly 400 staffers at the Bloom­ing­ton, IN, fac­to­ry it re­cent­ly ac­quired, af­ter man­u­fac­tur­ing is­sues led the FDA to re­ject drugs from three sep­a­rate com­pa­nies that had con­tract­ed with the fa­cil­i­ty.

The job cuts will take place in May, and are most­ly man­u­fac­tur­ing po­si­tions, a No­vo spokesper­son told End­points News. Once com­plet­ed, the fa­cil­i­ty will em­ploy around 1,400 work­ers, the spokesper­son said.

The Dan­ish drug­mak­er told End­points it is re­duc­ing its head­count over "busi­ness re­al­i­ties" in a com­pet­i­tive mar­ket. “It's work that re­quires a fo­cused, right-sized team. We're align­ing our staffing ac­cord­ing­ly,” the spokesper­son said.

No­vo ac­quired the In­di­ana fac­to­ry in a deal with its par­ent en­ti­ty, No­vo Hold­ings, fol­low­ing the lat­ter’s $16.5 bil­lion pur­chase of the con­tract man­u­fac­tur­er Catal­ent. The trans­ac­tion was first an­nounced in Feb­ru­ary 2024.

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