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Novartis was the sole bidder in $12B deal to buy Avidity Read in browser
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25 November, 2025
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1. Pharma faces deadline to bring IRA fight to Supreme Court as first set of negotiated prices looms
2. Novartis to reach older spinal muscular atrophy patients as FDA approves new version of Zolgensma
3. Novartis was the sole bidder in $12B deal to buy Avidity
4. Novartis plans to lay off 550 workers at Swiss factory 
5. Novo Nordisk’s amycretin cuts body weight, blood sugar in Phase 2 diabetes trial
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Alexis Kramer
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CMS is expected this week to reveal its second set of negotiated drug prices under the Inflation Reduction Act. Meanwhile, the first round of negotiated prices is slated to take effect in January, and drugmakers are still fighting the process in court. Check out Nicole DeFeudis’ piece on how Supreme Court petitions over the IRA may soon pile up.

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Alexis Kramer
Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Nicole DeFeudis

Court bat­tles over Medicare drug price ne­go­ti­a­tions are com­ing to a head.

Two drug­mak­ers are up against dead­lines next month to ap­peal their In­fla­tion Re­duc­tion Act chal­lenges to the US Supreme Court. Weeks af­ter that, the first set of ne­go­ti­at­ed prices un­der the law is slat­ed to take ef­fect. 

Le­gal ex­perts say it’s un­like­ly the Supreme Court will step in be­fore new prices take ef­fect on Jan. 1 for block­buster drugs like As­traZeneca’s Farx­i­ga and Bris­tol My­ers Squibb’s Eliquis. But some low­er court cas­es have yet to be re­solved, and a high court de­ci­sion af­ter the fact could still change how the ne­go­ti­at­ed prices are im­ple­ment­ed.

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2
by Ayisha Sharma

No­var­tis has se­cured FDA ap­proval for a new ver­sion of its one-time gene ther­a­py for spinal mus­cu­lar at­ro­phy (SMA) that it says could ben­e­fit a much broad­er swathe of pa­tients.

The Swiss drug­mak­er said the agency green­lit Itvis­ma for SMA pa­tients aged two years and old­er with a con­firmed mu­ta­tion in their SMN1 gene. No­var­tis told End­points News that Itvis­ma will car­ry a $2.59 mil­lion price tag to re­flect its “trans­for­ma­tive val­ue.”

Itvis­ma is “iden­ti­cal” to No­var­tis’ old­er SMA gene ther­a­py Zol­gens­ma, ex­cept for a dif­fer­ent con­cen­tra­tion and method of de­liv­ery, ac­cord­ing to an FDA re­lease. Zol­gens­ma is ap­proved for in­fants with SMA un­der the age of two with bial­lel­ic mu­ta­tions in the SMN1 gene.

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Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan (L) and Avidity Biosciences CEO Sarah Boyce
3
by Kyle LaHucik

It took 14 calls be­tween chief ex­ec­u­tives, four months of ne­go­ti­a­tions and four hiked pro­pos­als for No­var­tis and Avid­i­ty Bio­sciences to come to their $12 bil­lion agree­ment in Oc­to­ber, ac­cord­ing to a Mon­day fi­nan­cial fil­ing with the back­ground of 2025's sec­ond-largest bio­phar­ma ac­qui­si­tion.

The doc­u­ment shows the pow­er that a sell­er can have when it's in pos­ses­sion of an as­set that a big­ger com­pa­ny wants. Dur­ing the deal process, Avid­i­ty’s ad­vi­sors reached out to sev­en po­ten­tial coun­ter­par­ties to gauge their in­ter­est in a deal, but none of the com­pa­nies moved for­ward, ac­cord­ing to the fil­ing.

But while No­var­tis was the on­ly bid­der in the process, it had to raise its of­fer from $52 per share in Ju­ly up to $72 per share to close the deal on Oct. 26.

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4
by Anna Brown

No­var­tis plans to re­or­ga­nize two Swiss fa­cil­i­ties, which it says could re­sult in 550 lay­offs as it dis­con­tin­ues some man­u­fac­tur­ing at its site in Stein.

The com­pa­ny in­tends to dis­con­tin­ue tablet and cap­sule man­u­fac­tur­ing and pack­ag­ing at the fa­cil­i­ty by the end of 2027, it said Tues­day in a re­lease. The po­ten­tial job cuts could oc­cur by the end of 2027, but that could change de­pend­ing on a con­sul­ta­tion process, No­var­tis said.

The Stein fac­to­ry will con­tin­ue to fo­cus on cell and gene ther­a­py man­u­fac­tur­ing, with No­var­tis plan­ning to in­vest $26 mil­lion at the site to boost ster­ile dosage form ca­pac­i­ty.

Mean­while, the drug­mak­er is al­so plan­ning to in­vest $80 mil­lion at its Schweiz­er­halle fa­cil­i­ty to ex­pand small in­ter­fer­ing RNA pro­duc­tion for its car­dio­vas­cu­lar, re­nal and meta­bol­ic ther­a­pies. The Schweiz­er­halle ex­pan­sion will cre­ate 80 new jobs.

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5
by Elizabeth Cairns

No­vo Nordisk’s amylin com­bi­na­tion shot amy­cretin al­lowed pa­tients with di­a­betes to lose up to 14.5% of their body weight in just over eight months. Pa­tients in the same mid-stage tri­al who were giv­en a pill form of the drug lost up to 10.1% of their weight at the same time point.

No­vo said Tues­day that these weight-loss fig­ures are sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant com­pared with in­ject­ed and oral place­bos, which yield­ed weight loss of 2.6% and 2.5%, re­spec­tive­ly.

The phar­ma com­pa­ny is plan­ning to start an “ex­ten­sive” Phase 3 pro­gram for amy­cretin in “mul­ti­ple in­di­ca­tions” next year. The drug could one day gen­er­ate con­sid­er­able sales for No­vo, with 2032 sales fore­casts in ex­cess of $4 bil­lion, ac­cord­ing to Eval­u­ate Phar­ma.

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