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18 March, 2026
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top stories
1. House lawmakers signal willingness to counter China’s biotech gains
2. FDA approves J&J's psoriasis pill Icotyde with $5B+ peak sales potential
3. Four major drugmakers will face revived case over 340B prices
4. FDA opens door to RMAT designations for therapies on clinical hold
5. FDA seeks to encourage fewer animal studies with new draft guidance
6. With its first AI model release, Xaira tests scaling laws in virtual cells
7. Aspen's personalized Parkinson's therapy shows early promise
8. Shanghai's Excalipoint gains $68.7M for T cell engagers as founders bet on Chinese system's speed
9. Basecamp debuts an ambitious plan to sequence a trillion genes, but questions remain
more stories
 
Alexis Kramer
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Last year, the FDA outlined a plan to phase out animal testing, with Commissioner Marty Makary calling for the practice to become “the exception rather than the norm.” Today, the agency unveiled new guidance as part of that wide-ranging initiative. Read more here.

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Alexis Kramer
Editor, Endpoints News
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by Max Bayer

Law­mak­ers on a bi­par­ti­san House pan­el con­veyed they are ready to tack­le Chi­na’s grow­ing dom­i­nance in the de­vel­op­ment of new med­i­cines and the in­gre­di­ents that un­der­pin the gener­ic drug mar­ket.

Dur­ing a Wednes­day hear­ing of the House Se­lect Com­mit­tee on Chi­na, wit­ness­es in­clud­ing Strand Ther­a­peu­tics CEO Jake Be­craft and 8VC part­ner Fran­cis­co Gimenez de­scribed Chi­na's grow­ing share of the glob­al clin­i­cal tri­al ecosys­tem. The core rea­son for the shift, they said, was that get­ting hu­man da­ta in the US takes too long and is too cost­ly com­pared to Chi­na, where it is cheap­er and quick­er to ac­crue.

Law­mak­ers ap­peared con­cerned with Chi­na’s gains and fre­quent­ly asked wit­ness­es how the US gov­ern­ment could help make up for lost ground.

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2
by Max Gelman

John­son & John­son se­cured an FDA ap­proval on Wednes­day for a pso­ri­a­sis pill it ex­pects to be­come a megablock­buster.

Reg­u­la­tors gave the green light to icotrokin­ra, which will be brand­ed as Ico­tyde, in pa­tients 12 and old­er with mod­er­ate-to-se­vere plaque pso­ri­a­sis. There was no im­me­di­ate in­for­ma­tion on pric­ing, but J&J ex­pects peak sales to sur­pass $5 bil­lion an­nu­al­ly if it gets ap­proved in oth­er im­muno­log­ic dis­eases.

As a once-dai­ly oral op­tion, Ico­tyde is ex­pect­ed to com­pete with es­tab­lished pso­ri­a­sis drugs not just on ef­fi­ca­cy but al­so con­ve­nience. Both Ico­tyde and Ab­b­Vie’s Skyrizi — the run­away mar­ket leader with more than $17 bil­lion in sales last year — tar­get IL-23. But Skyrizi is an in­jectable drug, giv­en every 12 weeks. J&J’s Trem­fya is al­so a pso­ri­a­sis in­jectable.

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3
by Nicole DeFeudis

As­traZeneca, Sanofi, Ab­b­Vie and No­var­tis will again face claims that they charged “un­law­ful­ly in­flat­ed prices” un­der the 340B drug dis­count pro­gram, af­ter the case was dis­missed in 2024.

On Tues­day, a fed­er­al ap­peals court re­vived the law­suit, in which Ad­ven­tist Health Sys­tem/West al­leges that the drug­mak­ers “know­ing­ly charged ma­te­ri­al­ly false, un­law­ful­ly in­flat­ed prices for their drugs” and that fed­er­al and state gov­ern­ments lost “hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars” as a re­sult. Ad­ven­tist op­er­ates med­ical clin­ics and fa­cil­i­ties on the West Coast and Hawaii.

The health sys­tem op­er­a­tor brought the case on be­half of the gov­ern­ment. Drug­mak­ers are re­quired to of­fer dis­counts un­der the 340B pro­gram to cer­tain health or­ga­ni­za­tions that serve low-in­come pa­tients.

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4
by Zachary Brennan

The FDA will now con­sid­er grant­i­ng its re­gen­er­a­tive med­i­cine des­ig­na­tions to ex­per­i­men­tal ther­a­pies even if they are on clin­i­cal hold, a shift in op­er­at­ing pro­ce­dures that could help small­er biotechs de­vel­op­ing cell and gene ther­a­pies to treat se­ri­ous con­di­tions.

The Re­gen­er­a­tive Med­i­cine Ad­vanced Ther­a­py (RMAT) des­ig­na­tion al­lows com­pa­nies to work ear­li­er and more close­ly with the FDA on an ap­pli­ca­tion, and it in­cludes all the ben­e­fits of the agen­cy's oth­er fast track and break­through des­ig­na­tion pro­grams.

While the agency pre­vi­ous­ly made clear in guid­ance and on its web­site that it will not grant an RMAT des­ig­na­tion "if an IND is on hold or is placed on hold dur­ing the des­ig­na­tion re­view," the Cen­ter for Bi­o­log­ics Eval­u­a­tion and Re­search said in an up­date this week that it's chang­ing course.