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BioWorld - Friday, February 20, 2026
Home » Topics » U.S., BioWorld

U.S., BioWorld
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FDA clears Satsuma’s Atzumi for migraine

May 1, 2025
By Karen Carey
Following a complete response letter last year, Satsuma Pharmaceuticals Inc. received U.S. FDA approval of dihydroergotamine nasal powder to treat acute migraine with or without aura. Branded Atzumi, it is the first product that uses Satsuma’s SMART (Simple MucoAdhesive Release Technology) platform that combines an advanced powder and device technology aimed at making delivery more simple.
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Bladder

AUA hoorays in bladder cancer for J&J, Urogen, more

May 1, 2025
By Randy Osborne
Clinical results offered at the recent meeting of the American Urological Association in Las Vegas signal that better treatments may lie ahead for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.
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Kidneys

Dimerix strikes $601M Amicus deal for kidney disease drug DMX-200

May 1, 2025
By Tamra Sami
Dimerix Ltd. sealed an exclusive license agreement with Amicus Therapeutics Inc. for commercialization of its phase III kidney disease candidate, DMX-200, in a deal valued at AU$940 million (US$601.22 million).
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‘Everything is possible’: Pharmas navigate US market uncertainties

May 1, 2025
By Nuala Moran
“We are prepared for every scenario, even though we don’t know what some of those are.” That sums up the message from executives of Astrazeneca plc, GSK plc and Sanofi SA, when quizzed during presentations of their first-quarter 2025 results this week, about the fallout if pharmaceuticals they import to the U.S. are subject to tariffs.
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With new leadership, Creyon enters a $1B-plus deal with Lilly

May 1, 2025
By Lee Landenberger
Less than a week after announcing it had a new CEO, privately held Creyon Bio Inc. began a licensing and research partnership with Eli Lilly and Co. Creyon is getting $13 million up front and could bring in more than $1 billion in milestone payments. The two plan to find, develop and commercialize RNA-targeted oligonucleotide treatments for a range of diseases.
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Stacks of coins separated by a crack

Filling the NIH funding gap to protect biopharma research

May 1, 2025
By Karen Carey
The Trump administration’s broad slash to university research budgets raises pertinent questions over impacts to the biopharma ecosystem, specifically how a changed trajectory of early research programs will affect tomorrow’s treatments and cures. Who is going to bridge research from idea to company if grants from the U.S. NIH are no longer an option?
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Imvaay packaging

With FDA approval, J&J enters the myasthenia gravis fray

April 30, 2025
By Lee Landenberger
No Comments
The U.S. FDA approval of Johnson & Johnson’s Imaavy (nipocalimab-aahu) for myasthenia gravis brings the monoclonal antibody into a treatment space that teems with competition, both approved and in-development candidates. The human Fc receptor inhibitor was approved to treat generalized myasthenia gravis in patients who are 12 years and older. Patients must be anti-acetylcholine receptor [AChR] or anti-muscle-specific kinase [MuSK] antibody positive. Anti-AChR and anti-MuSK antibody-positive individuals make up more than 90% of all antibody-positive gMG patients.
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Exterior of NIH Vaccine Research Center

Senate hearing: US biomedical research at a crossroads

April 30, 2025
By Mari Serebrov
If the April 30 hearing on biomedical research before the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee is any indication, the Trump administration could face a big challenge if it tries to cut more than 40% of the NIH’s budget in fiscal 2026 as proposed and slap a 15% cap on indirect costs.
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Regulus’ rare kidney disease drug draws Novartis in potential $1.7B buyout

April 30, 2025
By Jennifer Boggs
Regulus Therapeutics Inc. CEO Jay Hagan told investors in a January call the company had no interest in “simply out-licensing” rights to lead candidate farabursen, an oligonucleotide targeting autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease set to start phase III testing on a path to a potential accelerated approval. And now, there’s no need to, as Regulus found a buyer for the whole company in a deal with Novartis AG valued at about $1.7 billion.
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Arm wrapped with gauze

Abeona’s rare skin disease gene therapy approved by FDA

April 29, 2025
By Lee Landenberger
No Comments
Barely a year after the U.S. FDA shackled Abeona Therapeutics Inc.’s cell-based gene therapy with a complete response letter, the agency has approved it for treating a rare and genetic skin disease. Zevaskyn (prademagene zamikeracel), for treating wounds in adult and pediatric patients with recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, will be priced in the U.S. at $3.1 million.
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