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House passes Biosecure Act; Moderna outlines more cost cuts; What's happening at #ESMO24; and more

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Welcome back to Endpoints Weekly, your review of the week’s top biopharma headlines. Want this in your inbox every Saturday morning? Current Endpoints readers can visit their reader profile to add Endpoints Weekly. New to Endpoints? Sign up here.

Endpoints will be covering #ESMO24 throughout the weekend, so make sure to follow along online. Deputy editor Reynald Castañeda and reporters Kyle LaHucik, Lei Lei Wu and Ayisha Sharma will be reporting from Barcelona. — Max Gelman

House passes Biosecure Act 

On Monday, the US House of Representatives passed the Biosecure Act with broad bipartisan support. The bill would force biopharma companies to cut ties or restrict their work with contract manufacturers WuXi AppTec, WuXi Biologics and three genetic sequencing companies by 2032. However, it still faces an uncertain future in the Senate. Opponents have argued that the bill was written to quickly and too broadly. Zachary Brennan has the latest.

Moderna revises projections downward

Biotech’s Covid-19 superstar has faced a rough go of it since the pandemic ended, saying since late last year that it would adopt a more “restrained” approach. But after leading off 2024 with $4 billion in expected cuts, Moderna said this week that it’s planning even more. Executives mapped out an additional $1.1 billion in cuts by 2027 and pushed back the company’s breakeven point by two years, from 2026 to 2028. Moderna’s stock is down more than 80% over the last three years. Our Andrew Dunn also framed how to think about this news in our Post-Hoc newsletter.

What’s happening at #ESMO24

Our reporters shared updates from #ESMO24, including lackluster data on Amgen’s PRMT5 inhibitor, a Phase 2 look at Jazz’s HER2 antibody, Bicycle’s early case for its Padcev competitor, mid-stage data for GSK and iTeos’ PD-1 and TIGIT doublet, and more. Stay tuned for more conference coverage throughout the weekend.

Summit backs up Keytruda competitor data

In May, Summit surprised the industry by claiming its PD-1/VEGF bispecific antibody called ivonescimab beat Merck’s Keytruda in a head-to-head Phase 3 study. This Sunday, Summit backed up its case. Ivonescimab reduced the risk of lung cancer progression or death by 49% in the study, with patients going an average of 11.1 months before their disease worsened. Keytruda recorded an average of 5.8 months. Summit’s stock is up more than 800% since the May reveal, and more than 900% for the whole year.

SEC’s Illumina probe 

Friday afternoon, Jared Whitlock reported that the SEC’s probe of the Illumina-Grail deal is focused on sales forecasts made by Grail’s management in the run-up to the 2021 transaction. In June, Illumina spun off Grail and it began trading as a public company.

GLP-1 readouts 

We covered a string of early-stage GLP-1 readouts this week, including from Roche’s dual GLP-1/GIP candidate which showed promising weight loss, but also high rates of vomiting in a Phase 1b study. Terns also offered an early look at its oral GLP-1 agonist, which it says could be more tolerable at higher doses than currently marketed GLP-1s that are administered the same way. And Zealand’s GLP-1/GLP-2 receptor dual agonist showed promising weight loss after a previous effort with lower doses ended with “underwhelming” efficacy.


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