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11 March, 2026 |
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sponsored by
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Built for Speed: Integrated Early‑to‑Late Phase CDMO Solutions
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| Avid Bioservices delivers solution‑focused capabilities and the capacity biopharma innovators need to advance programs with confidence. Our new Early Phase Center of Excellence, centrally located in Costa Mesa, California, provides rapid, flexible support for early development with a direct, seamless transition into our late‑stage and commercial manufacturing facility. This integrated approach reduces handoffs, accelerates timelines, and helps keep your therapy moving efficiently toward patients.
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ACIP’s first meeting of the year is scheduled for next week, but we’re still waiting to see whether a federal court decides to stop it from happening. A decision could come down any day in a case brought by leading clinician groups. |
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Alexis Kramer |
Editor, Endpoints News
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by Max Bayer
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The FDA unveiled a new database that will ultimately house all of the agency’s adverse event reporting systems, including a vaccine side effect tracker that’s co-run with the CDC. The Adverse Event Monitoring System (AEMS) includes data from three preexisting systems that span drugs, biologics, cosmetics, color additives,
vaccines, animal drugs and animal food. Another three systems will be melded in by the end of May, covering adverse events tied to medical devices, human foods, dietary supplements and tobacco products. Legacy systems will stay online until they migrate to AEMS, an HHS spokesperson said. When asked whether the FDA will change what data are collected, the spokesperson said that “data collection is the same for now.” | |
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by Nicole DeFeudis
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Evotec plans to close another four sites and cut about a sixth of its staff amid a broader, multi-year shake-up. It’s the latest round of layoffs for the German biotech and manufacturer, which has cut hundreds of employees over the last two years. The company also changed CEOs, shuttered its gene therapy unit, and closed five sites between 2024 and 2025. Evotec said Tuesday it will reduce its footprint to 10 facilities. As a result, the company expects to eliminate up to 800 positions. Last
month, Evotec said it had roughly 4,800 global employees. Evotec’s CEO Christian Wojczewski said in a news release that the next phase of its reorganization will “position the company for sustainable,
high-quality growth.” The company expects its plans will be “substantially implemented by the end of 2027.” | |
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by Anna Brown
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Eli Lilly is making moves in East Asia. The Indianapolis drugmaker said Wednesday it is earmarking $3 billion over the next decade to increase its manufacturing footprint
in China. Earlier this week, Lilly said it is investing $500 million in South Korea over the next five years through a memorandum of understanding with the government. Lilly’s China budget will be used to boost local production of its GLP-1 pill orforglipron and other oral drugs. Orforglipron is under review by Chinese regulators for obesity and type 2 diabetes. There are currently no GLP-1 weight loss pills available in China, meaning Lilly could be the first to market there, with no reports of Novo Nordisk filing for approval in the country. Novo’s Rybelsus, which is an oral version of semaglutide, is approved in China for type 2 diabetes. | |
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by Kyle LaHucik
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For the second month in a row, it appears Forbion and RA Capital are the main backers behind a new biotech formed around an investigational drug in-licensed from China. Solstice Oncology was forced out of stealth last month when its partner Harbour BioMed disclosed it had out-licensed an anti-CTLA-4 medicine to the startup. At the time, Solstice was characterized as receiving backing from "major venture capital investors." Now, a regulatory filing this week hints at a nine-figure fundraising haul for the Boston-based startup. The filing
indicates Solstice has gotten $121 million so far from eight investors in an up to $298 million fundraise. The money will likely support development of the clinical-stage cancer drug and pay for part of the licensing deal. The February pact carried with it a $50 million upfront cash payment from Solstice to Harbour, a global biotech with hubs in China, the US and the Netherlands. | |
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