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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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FDA approvals drop 24% in H1 2025; GSK’s UTI med, Vertex’s non-opioid painkiller lead pack of first-in-class meds
It has been a turbulent year for the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), marked by reductions in both staff and budget, shake-ups at the top and a reduction in inspections. This upheaval has clearly impacted the functioning of the agency, with reports of missed deadlines and reduced responsiveness. This disruption resulted in a slowdown in new drug approvals in the first half of 2025 (H1 2025), as opposed to the same period last year. Incidentally, drug approvals in H1 2024 were also down by 19 percent compared to H1 2023. FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) approved 16 novel drugs in H1 2025, down from 21 in H1 2024, a decline of nearly 24 percent. Of these, nine were small molecules and seven were biologics. The period saw eight first-in-class therapies get CDER’s approval, as opposed to 17 in H1 2024. FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) approved seven biologics in H1 2025, compared to eight in the same period last year. In comparison, both Health Canada and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) reported a strong rebound in approvals and authorizations, respectively. Health Canada approved 20 drugs in H1 2025, as opposed to 10 in H1 2024. Similarly, EMA authorized 19 new therapies in H1 2025, compared to 15 in H1 2024. Notably, EMA’s pending decisions increased to 25 in H1 2025, from 14 in the same period last year, while conditional authorizations remained static at five. This underscores EMA’s active regulatory pipeline, suggesting that more drugs could be approved in Europe soon.   View New Drug Approvals in H1 2025 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available) Vertex’s non-opioid painkiller, GSK’s antibiotic for UTI, Merck’s RSV antibody bag FDA nods Oncology remained the single largest category in H1 2025 with seven new drugs being approved by the FDA, followed by four rare diseases and disorders and as many infections and infective diseases.  The eight drugs that were designated first-in-class in H1 2025 are: Journavx (Suzetrigine), Imaavy (nipocalimab), Emrelis (telisotuzumab vedotin), Blujepa (gepotidacin mesylate), Qfitlia (fitusiran), Avmapki Fakzynja Co-Pack (avutometinib potassium/defactinib hydrochloride), Tryptyr (acoltremon), and Andembry (garadacimab). In January, a new class of non-opioid pain therapy made a debut — FDA approved Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ Journavx (suzetrigine). This first-in-class oral analgesic could bring in US$ 2.9 billion in sales for Vertex by 2030. The half year also saw a new oral antibiotic — GSK’s Blujepa (gepotidacin) — for treating uncomplicated urinary tract infections (uUTIs) bag FDA approval. This is the first new antibiotic for uUTIs in nearly three decades. It treats infections caused by resistant pathogens such as E. coli and K. pneumoniae. In June, Merck’s Enflonsia (clesrovimab), a long-acting monoclonal antibody, won FDA approval to prevent respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory tract disease in neonates and infants entering their first RSV season. A single 105 mg dose provides protection for about five months, the length of a typical RSV season. Enflonsia could bring in US$844 million in annual sales by 2030.   View New Drug Approvals in H1 2025 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available)  FDA approves four meds for rare diseases, including SpringWorks’ Gomekli, Novartis’ Vanrafia In H1 2024, rare genetic diseases had witnessed some significant approvals. The trend continued in H1 2025. In February, Gomekli (mirdametinib), developed by SpringWorks Therapeutics, became the first approved therapy for neurofibromatosis type 1 (a genetic disorder that causes tumors to grow on nerve tissues) in adult and pediatric patients who have symptomatic plexiform neurofibromas (benign, complex nerve tumors) not amenable to complete resection. Analysts expect peak sales of around US$ 0.8 billion by 2030. Post this approval, SpringWorks got acquired by Merck KGaA for approximately US$ 3.9 billion. The same month, Ono Pharma-owned Deciphera’s Romvimza (vimseltinib) became the first oral therapy approved for another rare disease known as symptomatic tenosynovial giant cell tumor. This is a benign but aggressive growth that can be painful. This new drug offers patients an option beyond surgery. In March, Sanofi’s Qfitlia (fitusiran) was approved for routine prophylaxis in hemophilia A or B, with or without inhibitors. And in April, Novartis’ Vanrafia (atrasentan) was granted accelerated approval for IgA nephropathy (a chronic autoimmune kidney disease), which is at the risk of rapid progression. Vanrafia could bring in sales of over US$ 735 million by 2030. Johnson & Johnson secured approval for Imaavy (nipocalimab-aahu) for generalized myasthenia gravis (a chronic autoimmune disease that causes muscle weakness) in adults and adolescents. Imaavy’s sales could cross US$1.17 billion by 2030. Rare diseases continue to attract regulatory attention, with the trend carrying into the current quarter. July witnessed two noteworthy rare-disease approvals — Ekterly (garadacimab), CSL’s once-monthly prophylactic treatment for hereditary angioedema (a genetic disorder that causes recurrent episodes of swellings), and Sephience (pegvaliase-abcx), BioMarin’s new therapy for phenylketonuria (a rare metabolic disorder).   View New Drug Approvals in H1 2025 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available)  FDA greenlights new oncology therapies, including Astra’s Datroway, AbbVie’s Emrelis The field of oncology saw some notable new drug approvals. In January, Datroway (datopotamab deruxtecan), an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) developed by AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo, was granted approval for adults with unresectable or metastatic, hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer. Later, in June, the FDA granted accelerated approval  to AstraZeneca;s Datroway for adults with locally advanced or metastatic, EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer. The drug’s peak annual sales are projected at about US$ 4.2 billion by 2030. In May, Emrelis (telisotuzumab vedotin-tllv), AbbVie’s ADC was granted FDA’s accelerated approval. Emrelis treats locally advanced or metastatic non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) characterized by significantly increased levels of the c-Met protein in cancer cells. FDA also approved a companion diagnostic test — Roche's Ventana — in May to determine the c-Met protein biomarker status in order to identify patients eligible for Emrelis.  The same month, FDA also granted accelerated approval to Verastem’s Avmapki Fakzynja Co-pack, a dual oral therapy for adults with KRAS‑mutated recurrent low‑grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC). This novel regimen combines two inhibitors — avutometinib and defactinib — to disrupt critical signaling pathways that fuel tumor growth. In ophthalmology, Alcon re-entered the prescription pharmaceutical market with Tryptry (acoltremon), a first-in-class TRPM8 agonist for dry eye disease, which stimulates corneal nerves to increase tear production.   View New Drug Approvals in H1 2025 with Estimated Sales (Free Excel Available)  Our view The changes in the FDA are clearly having a far-reaching impact on the global pharmaceutical industry. There have been reports of drugmakers losing confidence in the FDA, which has been a gold standard for drug regulation. Some American biotechs are shifting early trials outside of the US. With EMA and Health Canada authorizing/approving a larger number of drugs in H1 2025, we do see some changes underway that may eventually reshape drug development.  

Impressions: 7741

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/fda-approvals-drop-24-in-h1-2025-gsk-s-uti-med-vertex-s-non-opioid-painkiller-lead-pack-of-first-in-class-meds

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
28 Aug 2025

WEEKLY NEWS RECAP #Phispers

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Pfizer’s Covid-19 pill retains 89 percent efficacy, works on Omicron; CSL buys Vifor for US$ 11.7 billion
In this week’s Phispers, we bring you news on several M&As and tie-ups along with updates on Covid-19 medications and vaccines.  Pfizer's antiviral pill — Paxlovid — has retained its score of 89 percent efficacy against the coronavirus in the final results from the trial. Paxlovid has also been found to be effective against the Omicron variant.  Moderna came out with results from an early-stage trial of its experimental mRNA flu shot, which has shown efficacy against several common influenza strains. However, it comes with side effects, and has also failed to fare better than two of Sanofi’s existing flu vaccines. In the largest biopharma deal of the year, Australia’s CSL acquired Swiss drugmaker Vifor for US$ 11.7 billion. Another large deal announced was Pfizer’s decision to buy California-based Arena Pharmaceuticals for US$ 6.7 billion in order to strengthen its portfolio of gastroenterology and anti-inflammatory drugs. Among tie-ups of the week, BMS signed a US$ 920 million deal with German biotech Immatics for a promising cancer drug. And Eli Lilly signed two billion-dollar biobucks deals with Foghorn and Chinese firm Regor for cancer and metabolic disorder drugs, respectively. Meanwhile, Biocon and Viatris are reportedly in talks to merge their biosimilar businesses into a US$ 10 billion entity. Pfizer’s Covid pill retains its efficacy estimate in final results; works against Omicron Antiviral Covid-19 pills are being seen as game changers in the world’s fight against the raging pandemic. While molnupiravir, Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics’ oral antiviral med targeting Covid, saw its efficacy at preventing hospitalization drop from 50 to 30 percent between the interim and final results, Pfizer’s Paxlovid has retained its efficacy estimates. According to Pfizer, Paxlovid retained its 89 percent efficacy rate in preventing hospitalizations and deaths in high-risk Covid-19 patients. Last month, the New York-based drugmaker had said its pill was effective when administered within three days of the onset of Covid-19, based on a study on 1,219 patients. None of the trial patients who received the Pfizer treatment died. The final analysis of the study on 2,246 high-risk patients confirmed the earlier results. The oral pill also retains its effectiveness against the Omicron variant, the company added, citing recent lab data. The data have been submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as part of a rolling submission for an emergency use authorization (EUA). Pfizer’s chief scientific officer Mikael Dolsten said he expects an EUA for use in high-risk patients from the FDA and other regulatory agencies sometime soon. Pfizer also released interim results from an ongoing second study on standard-risk adults. While Paxlovid reduced hospitalizations by 70 percent and no deaths were recorded, it did not meet its primary endpoint in alleviation of all symptoms of the disease in four days. The company said it will release the final data later.  Pfizer said it can manufacture 180,000 courses this year and at least another 80 million in 2022. The US government has already secured 10 million courses of the pill for US$ 5.29 billion. Meanwhile, rival Merck has also asked the FDA to authorize its antiviral pill molnupiravir. Scientists have raised safety concerns about potential birth defects as well as worries that it could cause the virus to mutate. Booster shots help neutralize Omicron, says US study: All three Covid-19 vaccines authorized in the US — i.e. Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and J&J — are significantly less protective against Omicron in laboratory testing, but a booster dose restores most of the protection, a study undertaken by researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard and MIT has found. The researchers found “low to absent” antibody neutralization of the new coronavirus variant from the regular regimens, but blood from recent recipients of an additional booster dose exhibited potent neutralization of the variant. The results are in line with another study undertaken by the University of Oxford, which found that the two-dose Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccine regimens were unable to produce enough neutralizing antibodies against Omicron. Early-stage data from Moderna’s mRNA flu shot disappoints experts, stock tumbles 14 percent Pharma majors such as Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech, Translate Bio (a Sanofi subsidiary) and GSK-CureVac are spending millions of dollars on the idea that mRNA vaccines can replace existing flu shots. Last week, Moderna was first off the block in publishing early-stage trial data of its mRNA vaccine candidate. Though the drugmaker said the vaccine holds promise and may prove effective against several common influenza strains, analysts and investors didn’t seem to concur. As a result, the stock tumbled 14 percent, as several investors began selling the stock. Releasing the data, the drugmaker said a 50-microgram dose of the vaccine, dubbed mRNA-1010, increased antibodies against four influenza strains manifold in younger and older adults without “significant safety findings.” Safety data were almost the same as its Covid-19 vaccine, with fatigue, muscle ache and headache being the most common side effects. This was far more than the side-effects seen in protein-based or live virus vaccines already available in the market. Experts said the efficacy did not seem to be significantly higher in older adults when compared with vaccines that have already been approved. And the company’s own data on antibodies comparing the shot to Sanofi’s approved protein-based flu vaccine Fluzone found that the results were largely similar. “On one hand, the antibodies increased to good levels, but on the other hand, the levels aren't necessarily seen as high or necessarily better than some high-efficacy vaccines such as Flublok or Fluzone HD,” Jefferies analyst Michael Yee said. The company’s shares tumbled 14 percent after the drugmaker made the results public. Moderna had to call on the investors to wait for more data following the sharp sell-off. Moderna president Stephen Hoge also cautioned against making comparisons between shots before head-to-head trials came out. The early-stage study, testing the vaccine in 180 subjects, is ongoing and a mid-stage study that is testing it against an already approved flu vaccine is fully enrolled with 500 participants, the company said. An interim analysis is expected in early 2022. Australian biopharma CSL acquires Swiss drugmaker Vifor for US$ 11.7 billion In the largest biopharma deal of the year, Australian giant CSL has acquired 88-year-old Swiss drugmaker Vifor for US$ 11.7 billion (about 10.9 billion Swiss francs) in an all-cash deal as part of its plan to diversify beyond its blood plasma collection business that has been hit by the Covid-19 pandemic. CSL offered Vifor US$ 179.25 per share, a 61 percent premium over its closing market price on December 1. The deal would give the biopharma, heavily dependent on vaccines and blood plasma products, access to Vifor’s treatments for iron deficiency, kidney and cardio-renal diseases, along with its production sites in Switzerland and Portugal. Following the acquisition, CSL's pipeline of products will increase to 37 in the development phase – a 32 percent increase over its existing suite of drugs in the pipeline.  The offer was unanimously recommended by Vifor Pharma’s board. Its largest shareholder Patinex AG, which holds 23.2 percent shares, has also agreed to tender its shares. The deal, which is expected to commence in January and get completed by the middle of next year, is subject to a minimum acceptance rate of 80 percent of all Vifor Pharma shares and further customary offer conditions, including regulatory approvals. Iron supplement Ferinject, Vifor’s best-selling product, accounts for 30 percent of the firm’s sales and will face generic competition between 2024 and 2026. Pfizer buys Arena for US$ 6.7 billion to strengthen its gastroenterology portfolio Pfizer announced it is acquiring California-based Arena Pharmaceuticals for US$ 6.7 billion in cash to help strengthen its portfolio of gastroenterology and inflammatory drugs. The New York-based pharma giant has agreed to pay US$ 100 per share, twice that of Arena’s trading price at the close of the market last Friday. Following the announcement, Arena’s shares surged by over 80 percent. The deal will help Pfizer gain access to Arena’s lead candidate — etrasimod — which is undergoing a late-stage trial in ulcerative colitis and a mid-to-late-stage study in Crohn’s disease. Both are inflammatory bowel diseases that cause ulcers in the digestive tract. If approved, the drug would help Pfizer challenge Bristol Myers Squibb’s ulcerative colitis drug — Zeposia (ozanimod) — which received FDA approval earlier this year. Jones Trading analyst Prakhar Agrawal said etrasimod’s strong show in a mid-stage trial looked better than Zeposia. “(Etrasimod) … could be a multi-billion blockbuster drug in just Crohn's and ulcerative colitis and we forecast risk adjusted revenue of US$ 3.8 billion.” As part of the deal, Pfizer will also get access to two other cardiovascular drugs – phase 2 drug APD418 and mid-stage candidate temanogrel. The Pfizer-Arena deal is expected to close in the first half of 2022. Novo invests US$ 2.6 billion in Denmark; BMS inks oncology deal with Immatics Novo Nordisk, the world’s largest producer of diabetes drugs, will invest US$ 2.58 billion (17 billion Danish crowns) to increase production capacity in Denmark. The Danish drugmaker will build three new manufacturing plants as well as expand its existing facility at its sprawling site in Kalundborg. These new facilities will mainly produce active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), while a smaller segment will focus on assembly and packaging of oral and injectable products. The company expects to complete the project in 2027 and generate 400 jobs at its Kalundborg site. Meanwhile, Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) will spend up to US$ 920 million for global exclusive rights to an experimental immunotherapy developed by German biotech company Immatics NV. Under the deal, Immatics will receive an upfront payment of US$ 150 million and up to US$ 770 million in milestone payments along with royalties to license, develop and commercialize the experimental cancer drug — IMA401. The German biopharma retains the option to co-fund the drug’s US development in return for enhanced US royalty payments and co-promotion of the medicine.  The drug, currently in the pre-clinical stage, aims to activate T-cells – a part of the body’s immune system – against cancer cells. Immatics had asked the German regulators last month to approve a clinical trial of the drug in various solid tumors. The trial is slated to begin in the first half of 2022. Immatics also has a cell therapy partnership with BMS through a deal with Celgene that dates back to 2019. Biocon, Viatris in talks to merge biosimilar businesses; to create US$ 10 billion entity Indian biopharmaceutical company Biocon is in advanced talks with US-headquartered Viatris to merge their biosimilar businesses in order to form a standalone company that could be valued at US$ 10 billion, a report by financial news website Moneycontrol said. Biocon is considering buying out Viatris’ stake to own a majority in the new entity, the report said. Biocon’s biosimilar business — Biocon Biologics — and Viatris are already collaborating to develop, manufacture and commercialize biosimilar and diabetes drugs. Earlier this year, the two companies won their first interchangeability designation for the biosimilar Semglee, an insulin that’s interchangeable with Sanofi’s Lantus. The companies are also partnering on developing biosimilars to AbbVie’s Humira, Roche’s Herceptin and Avastin, Amgen’s Neulasta. Viatris has exclusive commercialization rights for the biosimilars in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the EU and European Free Trade Association countries. Biocon Biologics has exclusive commercialization rights for Japan and certain emerging markets, along with co-exclusive commercialization rights in the rest of the world. Both companies have refused to comment on the possible merger. Lilly signs two over US$ 1 billion biobucks deals with Foghorn, China’s Regor Eli Lilly has signed two biobucks deals worth over US$ 1 billion. First, Eli Lilly’s research and development subsidiary Loxo Oncology has entered into a US$ 380 million collaboration with Foghorn Therapeutics to develop new cancer treatments by using the latter’s Gene Traffic Control platform. As part of the deal, Loxo will pay Foghorn US$ 300 million in cash and invest another US$ 80 million in equity at US$ 20 per share.  The two firms will jointly develop and commercialize Foghorn’s BRM oncology program along with an additional undisclosed oncology target. The collaboration also includes three additional discovery programs, for which Foghorn may receive up to US$ 1.3 billion in development and commercialization milestones along with royalties. Second, Lilly reached a deal with Chinese biotech Regor Therapeutics to discover and develop new medicines for metabolic disorders such as diabetes and obesity. Lilly will also buy an equity stake in the company for an undisclosed amount. The Chinese firm could receive up to US$ 1.5 billion from Lilly in milestone payments. Lilly will gain access to the biotech’s so-called CARD (Computer Accelerated Rational Discovery) platform and also get license to select Regor research and be responsible for any subsequent clinical testing, manufacturing and commercialization, except in China, Macau, Hong Kong and Taiwan.  

Impressions: 1661

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/pfizer-s-covid-19-pill-retains-89-percent-efficacy-works-on-omicron-csl-buys-vifor-for-us-11-7-billion

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
16 Dec 2021

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.pharmacompass.com/pdf/news/enforcement-report-week-of-february-18-2026-14056.pdf

FDA
18 Feb 2026

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/pharmaceuticals/aurobindo-pharmas-dyrupeg-faces-health-canada-compliance-notice/articleshow/126435665.cms

ECONOMICTIMES
09 Jan 2026

https://www.lupin.com/lupin-and-valorum-enter-into-an-exclusive-licensing-agreement-for-biosimilar-armlupeg-pegfilgrastim-unne-in-the-united-states/

PRESS RELEASE
06 Dec 2025

https://www.indianpharmapost.com/biotech/lupin-receives-fda-approval-for-biosimilar-armlupeg-18407

INDPHARMAPOST
01 Dec 2025

https://www.contractpharma.com/breaking-news/bora-pharmaceuticals-to-scale-supply-of-oncology-therapy/

CONTRACTPHARMA
27 Oct 2025

https://www.pharmiweb.com/press-release/2025-09-24/kashiv-biosciences-and-jamp-pharma-corporation-announce-the-launch-of-pexegra-and-filra-biosimilar

PHARMIWEB
24 Sep 2025