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sponsored by
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Webinar series: Navigating CGT launch complexity
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| These webinars are part of a new series designed to help you better navigate CGT launch complexity. They’re built on more than 10 years of experience supporting complex therapies like yours — and a deep understanding of what it takes to succeed in advanced therapy commercialization. |
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Novartis became the third big pharma company to announce recent expansions in China, following AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly. Meanwhile, an AbbVie exec visited the country this week, noting that the company is open for local collaborations. Read more below. |
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Anna Brown |
Biopharma Breaking News Reporter, Endpoints News
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by Anna Brown
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WuXi AppTec’s sales are becoming even more increasingly dependent on the US despite the service provider not yet fully shaking off concerns over its ties with the Chinese military. The company said its US revenue reached 31.25 billion Chinese yuan ($4.5 billion) last year, which is a 34.3% increase compared to the year prior. The US now makes up 72% of its total revenue, the highest it's been since 2022. Meanwhile, its full-year sales in Europe and China have dipped. The threat of the Biosecure Act to WuXi AppTec’s sales has been fading.
While its US revenue declined through 2024, it saw an increase starting at the beginning of last year. But WuXi AppTec is still under watch from US lawmakers. Last month, the Pentagon added the manufacturer to a list of companies it said aid the Chinese military, but quickly withdrew the document. | |
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by Anna Brown
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Novartis is the latest drugmaker to invest in its Chinese footprint, with a pledge of more than 3.3 billion yuan ($480 million) to bolster two manufacturing and R&D sites. The company will pour 1.5 billion yuan ($218 million) into expanding its tablets and capsules site in the Changping district of Beijing, according to a Sunday release in Chinese. Around 1.8 billion yuan ($262 million) will go to launching the "second phase" of the drugmaker’s China headquarters and R&D facility in Shanghai. It wasn't clear what that phase entailed, and Novartis didn't immediately comment before publication. Novartis joins the ranks of AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly, which have also made recent investments in China. The
pledges come at a time when Western drugmakers are looking to tap into China's early-stage research. | |
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by Zachary Brennan
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In a rare move, the FDA last week posted photographs of dilapidated buildings as part of a warning letter for a Daman, India-based drug manufacturing facility. The photographs are the latest sign that FDA Commissioner Marty Makary is taking a tougher stance on foreign drug manufacturers. Following a five-day unannounced inspection last July, the FDA warning letter issued to Patcos Cosmetics describes "insanitary conditions," particularly in the sinks in the production area that Patcos used "as a source of water for cleaning production equipment." The company's website says that it manufactures oral care and aerosols on a contract basis. The agency published the following photo of the sinks as part of the letter: | |
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by Max Bayer
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A group of biotech investors will meet with members of a congressional commission that's been charged with keeping the US competitive in biotech and protecting national security, amid the rise of China's own life sciences industry and shifting pricing dynamics around the globe. Known as the National Security Commission on Emerging
Biotechnology (NSCEB), the group was established in 2021, and has been holding sessions with biotech stakeholders, as well as holding listening events around the US. On Tuesday, it will meet with at least seven biotech investors, including representatives from JP Morgan, Pfizer, and several other venture capital firms, Endpoints News has learned. According to an agenda and attendee list reviewed by Endpoints, the group will discuss the commission’s priorities, the impacts of the Trump administration’s push to lower drug prices, FDA
uncertainty and IP protections. | |
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by Zachary Brennan
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The FDA approved a high-dose version of Novo Nordisk's blockbuster weight loss injection Wegovy, giving its go-ahead about two months faster than normal thanks to a voucher received from the commissioner's program. Thursday's approval is based on data released in January, when Novo reported that patients given the 7.2 mg dose had an average weight loss of 20.7%
after 72 weeks. That was better than the 17.5% weight loss for people given the already-approved 2.4 mg dose in the trial. While the high-dose Wegovy is stronger than the previously approved version, it is slightly behind its competitor, Eli Lilly's Zepbound. In its pivotal trial, the 15 mg dose of Lilly’s GIP/GLP-1 agonist, approved in November 2023, achieved 22.5% weight loss at 72
weeks. | |
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by Anna Brown
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UCB has selected Gwinnett County, GA, as the location for its new biologics factory. The 460,000-square-foot facility is expected to cost $2 billion and will supply biologics to the US
market, a spokesperson told Endpoints News. The site will create 330 new jobs. China is on the forefront of pharma companies’ minds, and AbbVie is no exception. The company’s senior vice president Jerome Bouyer visited China this week, noting that AbbVie is “actively” looking to partner with local clinical research centers and
“innovative” companies. |
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