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Earlier this week, President Donald Trump hinted that pharma-specific tariffs could be coming as early as the end of the month. Meanwhile, pharma exports from Ireland to the US are starting to creep up again after a slowdown in April. Read our coverage below. |
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Anna Brown |
Biopharma Breaking News Reporter, Endpoints News
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by Anna Brown
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New data from Ireland’s Central Statistics Office suggest that pharmaceutical companies are exporting more inventory to the US as the threat of drug tariffs persists. Medical and pharmaceutical product exports from Ireland increased by 73.9% in May compared to the same month last year, reaching a total of €13.7 billion ($15.9
billion), according to trade data published Thursday morning. Exports to the US from Ireland increased by around 86.5% compared to May 2024, according to the data. The mass exodus of pharma products from Ireland reflects an increase compared to the month prior, which reached a total of €10.9 billion ($12.6 billion). Pharma exports had returned largely to normal in April after a previous surge in March. President Donald Trump has hinted that pharma-specific tariffs could be arriving as soon as “the end of the month.” |
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by Anna Brown
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In its next move to boost the life sciences industry, the UK government is earmarking at least £250 million ($335 million) to help build a new research and development site called the National Biosecurity Centre in Harlow, Essex. The center, located just over an hour's drive from London, will be used to develop therapies and vaccines to
prepare for future pandemics, and it aims to be the largest of its kind in Europe, according to the Thursday press release. The government said it will eventually invest “billions of pounds” into the project, which will begin as soon as possible. The exact amount of funding for the Centre will be announced at a later date. |
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by Anna Brown
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Daewoo Pharmaceutical has received a warning letter from the FDA over the potential contamination of a substance known to cause lethal poisonings at its Busan, South Korea, manufacturing site. The letter, published this week and dated July 2, outlines five issues uncovered at the site during an FDA inspection between Jan. 6 and Jan. 15. The Busan-headquartered drugmaker has suspended all manufacturing at the site and deregistered the factory as a manufacturer with the FDA, according to the letter. Daewoo specializes in making ophthalmic over-the-counter drugs for the US market. One key problem the agency outlined was the site’s quality control unit, which the FDA says did not properly sample and
test imported raw materials to see if they included an unnamed substance that can cause lethal poisonings if contaminated. Finished products previously made using these raw materials were not properly tested. |
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by Max Bayer
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A recent drug recall of Pfizer’s penicillin product has put the immediate supply of a key syphilis treatment at risk, according to the company and a coalition of public health officials addressing sexually transmitted diseases. Pfizer disclosed the recall of Bicillin to customers on July 10, detailing in its alert that it was “due to particulates identified during visual inspection.” A hazard assessment conducted by the company put the risk to patients as “medium.” A Pfizer spokesperson said that to date, it has not received any reports of adverse events. The recall was attributed to “stoppers supplied from an external vendor,” and the company is working to resolve the issue. |
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by Anna Brown
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The FDA hit Ultragenyx with a complete response letter for its AAV gene therapy, called UX111, over manufacturing issues. However, the company believes those issues can be solved and that the therapy can be approved next year. The FDA's complaints stemmed from a "recently completed" manufacturing inspection, the company said in a release late Friday. "The company believes that these observations are readily addressable, related to facilities and processes, and are not directly related to the quality of the product," Ultragenyx said Friday. It plans to work with the FDA, resubmit, and expects a six-month review after that. UX111 is a treatment for patients with Sanfilippo syndrome type A,
a neurodegenerative childhood condition for which there is no approved therapy. The FDA "did not note any review issues related to the clinical data package nor clinical inspections," the company said. |
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by Anna Brown
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Capricor Therapeutics said on Friday it received a Complete Response Letter from the FDA for its lead cell therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), citing the agency was not satisfied with its clinical data and certain manufacturing commitments. The agency cited a lack of clinical data showing the effectiveness
of the cell therapy, named deramiocel, and has requested further information, according to a release. Capricor’s BLA was supported by data from its Phase 2 trial called HOPE-2, which investigated the cell therapy in 20 patients with DMD. Those mid-stage data showed clinically meaningful preservation of heart
function over four years compared to a placebo. |
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