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3 February, 2026 |
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sponsored by
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Report: 7 Talent Trends for the Life Sciences in 2026
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| The life sciences landscape is shifting – are you ready? Mix’s 2026 Talent Trends Report offers data-driven insights from our annual survey of life sciences industry leaders into the forces reshaping workforce strategy. With regulatory volatility, blended workforce models, and rising pressure on teams all coming into sharper focus, this year’s report helps you stay grounded and ready to pivot. See what’s ahead for talent in pharma and biotech – because hiring the right people has never mattered more.
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We finally have a data readout on Pfizer's Metsera deal. Elizabeth Cairns unpacks how the monthly weight loss injection performed against the sky-high expectations that seem to follow any new therapy in the space. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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by Elizabeth Cairns
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Pfizer said Tuesday that the monthly injection that was one of the cornerstones of its $10 billion buyout of Metsera allowed obesity patients to lose up to 10.5% of their weight, on a placebo-adjusted basis, after
just over six months. Shareholders were unimpressed with the data, appearing to doubt whether the results were good enough to vindicate Pfizer’s acquisition of the obesity-focused biotech. Pfizer’s shares PFE were down 3% in early trading, on the same day it reported its full-year 2025 earnings. Now the main question for Pfizer is whether
Tuesday’s results justify the enormous investment it is putting into its plans for no fewer than 10 Phase 3 trials for the asset, named PF-08653944, or PF‘3944 for short. | |
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Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO (Photographer: Benjamin Fanjoy/Bloomberg via Getty Images) |
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by Max Bayer
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Pfizer took a write-down on one of its recent high-profile acquisitions while reporting a positive readout from another. The pharma giant said on Tuesday it took a $4.4 billion impairment charge related in part to its $43 billion acquisition of Seagen in 2023. The centerpiece of that deal, Padcev, has reported strong sales. But another
asset, disitamab vedotin, is being "deprioritized," Pfizer said as part of its fourth-quarter earnings call Tuesday. CFO Dave Denton disclosed the charges in his prepared remarks ahead of a call with investors Tuesday, and said they were “related to several medicines in development as well as in-line products.” | |
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Yongzhong Wang, AccurEdit Therapeutics CEO |
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by Ryan Cross
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AccurEdit Therapeutics, a startup based in Suzhou, China, has raised $75 million in Series A funding to advance its growing pipeline of CRISPR-based medicines — among the largest rounds on record for a Chinese gene editing company. The funding, which hasn't previously been reported by Western media, closed in September, AccurEdit
confirmed to Endpoints News. The investment brings total funding to $116 million since AccurEdit's founding in 2021. While the full sum may be small by US standards, AccurEdit — like many other Chinese biotech startups — is already proving it can do more with less. In an exclusive interview with Endpoints, founder and CEO Yongzhong Wang said AccurEdit has already tested CRISPR therapies for two cardiovascular diseases — transthyretin amyloidosis and familial hypercholesterolemia — in about
40 patients. Data from AccurEdit presented last year suggest efficacy and safety are on par with, and perhaps slightly better than, those of similar therapies being developed by companies in the US. | |
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by Max Gelman
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Ultragenyx outlined new data on Tuesday that it hopes will convince the FDA to approve its recently resubmitted rare disease gene therapy. Among 17 patients with Sanfilippo syndrome type A who received the therapy, cognition scores on a measurement of children’s developmental progress improved by an average of 23.2 points
compared to natural history data. That difference — highly statistically significant with a p-value of p<0.0001 — could end up being the new centerpiece o |
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