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2. Merck touts comparator data for oral cholesterol drug
3. Live tomorrow: MAHA, vaccine politics and the risk for Republicans — with former Congressman Michael Burgess
4. Samsung Bio union workers threaten strike over pay, disclosure of employee data
5. #AAD26: What you need to know from Takeda, Alumis, Priovant and Incyte
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Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer
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Max Bayer reports that not all of pharma is rushing in to meet with the White House over its plans to turn 2025's "most favored nation" drug pricing deals into law. After a year of good-faith talks that yielded voluntary concessions from industry, trust appears to be deteriorating as the Trump administration looks for more permanent policy.

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Lydia Ramsey Pflanzer
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
1
by Max Bayer

At­tempts by the White House to cur­ry in­dus­try sup­port for leg­is­la­tion that would cod­i­fy last year’s vol­un­tary drug pric­ing deals are be­ing ig­nored by some drug­mak­ers who be­lieve there’s lit­tle to ne­go­ti­ate.

Two sources fa­mil­iar with the White House’s en­gage­ment with in­dus­try said that a num­ber of com­pa­nies have de­clined in­vi­ta­tions to re­view draft leg­isla­tive text. It was not im­me­di­ate­ly clear which com­pa­nies have de­clined, af­ter at least four com­pa­nies met with ad­min­is­tra­tion of­fi­cials ear­li­er this month.

The re­fusals to meet sug­gest a con­cert­ed flip in the re­la­tion­ship be­tween drug­mak­ers and the ad­min­is­tra­tion. Mul­ti­ple large drug­mak­ers told End­points News on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty that they weren’t sup­port­ive of the ef­fort and have held off from en­gag­ing with the ad­min­is­tra­tion. One told End­points that pre­vi­ous threats by CMS Ad­min­is­tra­tor Mehmet Oz that cod­i­fy­ing the deals would avoid po­ten­tial­ly harsh­er leg­is­la­tion down the line from a dif­fer­ent ad­min­is­tra­tion have been met with skep­ti­cism.

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2
by Nicole DeFeudis

Mer­ck’s drug en­lic­i­tide beat a hand­ful of com­mon­ly used cho­les­terol-low­er­ing drugs in a com­para­tor tri­al, inch­ing it clos­er to be­com­ing the first oral PC­SK9 in­hibitor.

The com­pa­ny an­nounced back in June that en­lic­i­tide achieved greater re­duc­tions in LDL-C, oth­er­wise known as “bad cho­les­terol,” com­pared to a hand­ful of oth­er non-statin op­tions: Es­pe­ri­on’s Nexle­tol and Nexl­izet and Organon’s Ze­tia. On Mon­day, Mer­ck out­lined the depth of that re­sponse.

En­lic­i­tide re­duced LDL-C by 56.7% com­pared to Nexle­tol and by 28.1% ver­sus Nexl­izet in the Phase 3 tri­al. Com­pared to Ze­tia, which is al­so sold as a gener­ic called eze­tim­ibe, en­lic­i­tide low­ered LDL-C by 36%. Pa­tients in the tri­al, dubbed CORAL­reef Ad­dOn, had high cho­les­terol, and had a his­to­ry, or were at risk of, ath­er­o­scle­rot­ic car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease.

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3
by Drew Armstrong

Two decades ago, when I was a ba­by-faced Capi­tol Hill re­porter, Texas Re­pub­li­can Michael Burgess was a rel­a­tive­ly new mem­ber of Con­gress, swept in with the post-Clin­ton wave of Bush con­ser­v­a­tives.

Burgess, a physi­cian, was one of sev­er­al doc­tors in Con­gress and quick­ly be­came a voice for Re­pub­li­can health pol­i­cy. Since leav­ing in 2025, he’s watched the MA­HA takeover of health and vac­cine pol­i­cy. And he’s been speak­ing out about ma­ter­nal and in­fant health, vac­cine-pre­ventable dis­eases, autism and oth­er is­sues — and warn­ing that Re­pub­li­cans are run­ning a po­lit­i­cal risk by not stick­ing up for sci­ence and pol­i­cy they once be­lieved in.

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4
by Anna Brown

Near­ly all of In­cheon-head­quar­tered Sam­sung Bi­o­log­ic­s' union mem­bers have sup­port­ed plans to strike over wage ne­go­ti­a­tions, af­ter an in­ter­nal em­ploy­ee da­ta leak in No­vem­ber.

The Sam­sung Bi­o­log­ics La­bor Union said Mon­day that 95.52% of its mem­bers vot­ed in fa­vor of the strikes. The union group rep­re­sents about 75% of Sam­sung Bio’s rough­ly 5,000-per­son work­force. The la­bor ac­tion would be­gin in May un­less work­ers reach an agree­ment with the CD­MO be­fore then, ac­cord­ing to the union.

The work­er­s' con­cerns fol­low an in­ter­nal da­ta breach in No­vem­ber that caused per­son­al em­ploy­ee da­ta, in­clud­ing salaries and per­for­mance as­sess­ments, to be ac­ces­si­ble to any Sam­sung Bio work­er, ac­cord­ing to a re­port from Busi­ness Ko­rea. 

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5
by Max Gelman, Nicole DeFeudis

Dur­ing this year's Amer­i­can Acad­e­my of Der­ma­tol­ogy an­nu­al meet­ing in Den­ver, com­pa­nies like Sanofi, Bio­gen and Tan­abe Phar­ma pre­sent­ed da­ta for their re­spec­tive can­di­dates. But there were oth­er phar­ma com­pa­nies that stood out with re­sults from their pre­vi­ous­ly toplined tri­als:

📊 Take­da’s Phase 3 plaque pso­ri­a­sis da­ta: Zasoc­i­tinib, which Take­da ac­quired for $4 bil­lion in its 2022 deal with Nim­bus Ther­a­peu­tics, ap­pears more ef­fi­ca­cious than Bris­tol My­ers Squibb’s sim­i­lar drug So­tyk­tu (cross-tri­al caveats notwith­stand­ing). In its two Phase 3 stud­ies, zasoc­i­tinib saw 76% and 71% of pa­tients, re­spec­tive­ly, achieve skin clear­ance of at least 75% af­ter 16 weeks. In the two stud­ies So­tyk­tu used for its plaque pso­ri­a­sis ap­proval, the Bris­tol My­ers drug helped 58.3% and 53% of pa­tients reach the same lev­el of skin clear­ance. Both zasoc­i­tinib and So­tyk­tu are oral, once-a-day TYK2 in­hibitors. Take­da pre­vi­ous­ly toplined the Phase 3 da­ta in De­cem­ber and says it’s on track to file for FDA ap­proval by March 31, 2027.