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top stories
1. Trump executive order focuses on stockpiling raw materials for 'critical' drugs
2. AbbVie details nearly $200M API plant as part of new US investments
3. US tariffs could undo generic drugmakers' efforts to be less reliant on Chinese raw materials, experts say
4. Sanofi, Regeneron's cholesterol drug Praluent is in short supply in China due to high demand
5. Autolus says it won’t make money from its cell therapy in Europe until 2027
6. Pfizer says FDA may pull its Covid vaccine for young children
7. More layoffs at Evotec; Savara to work with Fujifilm as manufacturing partner
Anna Brown
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It appears that active pharmaceutical materials are front-of-mind in the biopharma industry, with AbbVie's factory announcement and President Donald Trump signing an executive order to bolster the US' stockpile of raw materials for "critical" medicines. Read more below.

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Anna Brown
Biopharma Breaking News Reporter, Endpoints News
1
by Anna Brown

Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump signed an ex­ec­u­tive or­der on Wednes­day call­ing for health of­fi­cials to build a six-month stock­pile of ac­tive phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal in­gre­di­ents for "crit­i­cal" drugs in the US.

The Of­fice of the As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary for Pre­pared­ness and Re­sponse (AS­PR) with­in HHS has 30 days to com­pile a list of the ap­prox­i­mate­ly 26 drugs, ac­cord­ing to the ex­ec­u­tive or­der.

The or­der comes as the bio­phar­ma in­dus­try awaits de­tails sur­round­ing in­dus­try-spe­cif­ic tar­iffs, fol­low­ing the De­part­ment of Com­merce’s Sec­tion 232 in­ves­ti­ga­tion which start­ed in April.

There are al­so grow­ing con­cerns that drug­mak­ers could turn to cheap­er sources, like Chi­na, for raw ma­te­ri­als to ease the im­pact of US tar­iffs. This week, Ab­b­Vie de­tailed its plan to build an API fac­to­ry in the US.

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2
by Max Bayer

Ab­b­Vie is ex­pand­ing its US man­u­fac­tur­ing foot­print with a new ac­tive phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal in­gre­di­ent plant in the works.

The com­pa­ny said Tues­day that the $195 mil­lion project will ex­pand its North Chica­go man­u­fac­tur­ing out­post and is part of the more than $10 bil­lion in planned US in­vest­ments it com­mit­ted to over the next decade. Con­struc­tion on the API fa­cil­i­ty will be­gin lat­er this year, with the site ex­pect­ed to be ful­ly op­er­a­tional by 2027.

The fa­cil­i­ty will be an added boost for drug man­u­fac­tur­ing in Illi­nois, where Ab­b­Vie is head­quar­tered and has more than 11,000 em­ploy­ees. Ab­b­Vie CEO Rob Michael de­scribed the de­ci­sion as “an im­por­tant step to main­tain U.S. lead­er­ship in phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal in­no­va­tion.”

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3
by Anna Brown

There is the long-term threat that US tar­iffs could lead In­di­an gener­ic drug­mak­ers to move back to get­ting most of their APIs from Chi­na, which runs counter to the broad­er in­dus­try’s vi­sion of di­ver­si­fy­ing where they get their raw ma­te­ri­als.

One rea­son for the US’ phar­ma-spe­cif­ic levies is to reshore drug pro­duc­tion to the US, in­clud­ing APIs. But there is the con­cern that the US would not be com­pet­i­tive soon enough and that gener­ic drug man­u­fac­tur­ers would go to Chi­na for most of their raw ma­te­ri­als, said Mar­ta Wosińs­ka, se­nior fel­low of eco­nom­ic stud­ies at The Brook­ings In­sti­tu­tion.

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4
by Anna Brown

Sup­ply of Sanofi’s cho­les­terol drug Pralu­ent is lim­it­ed in Chi­na due to an in­crease in de­mand, the French phar­ma told End­points News on Tues­day.

“Sanofi has worked with pa­tients and health­care pro­fes­sion­als, as well as in­vest­ed to strength­en glob­al pro­duc­tion of Pralu­ent, to meet a ris­ing glob­al de­mand which ac­cel­er­at­ed sharply over the past two years. The surge in de­mand has led to lim­it­ed avail­abil­i­ty in Chi­na, and some oth­er coun­tries,” a com­pa­ny spokesper­son said in an email.

Sanofi gave no de­tails on when, or if, sup­ply of Pralu­ent will re­cov­er in Chi­na.

Pralu­ent is a PC­SK9 in­hibitor an­ti­body giv­en sub­cu­ta­neous­ly to pa­tients ei­ther every two or four weeks. Sanofi and its part­ner Re­gen­eron se­cured FDA ap­proval for Pralu­ent in Ju­ly 2015. Af­ter re­struc­tur­ing the part­ner­ship in April 2020, Sanofi has been re­spon­si­ble for sup­ply­ing Pralu­ent out­side of the US, while Re­gen­eron con­trols dis­tri­b­u­tion in­side the US.

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Christian Itin, Autolus CEO (Endpoints News' UKBIO19)
5
by Ayisha Sharma

De­spite a re­cent ap­proval in Eu­rope, Au­to­lus Ther­a­peu­tics does not ex­pect to sell its blood can­cer cell ther­a­py in the re­gion un­til 2027 and specif­i­cal­ly not­ed that its Ger­man launch plans are on hold.

The CD19-tar­get­ed cell ther­a­py called Au­catzyl was green­lit by the Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion for re­lapsed or re­frac­to­ry B cell pre­cur­sor acute lym­phoblas­tic leukemia last month, fol­low­ing a pos­i­tive opin­ion from the Com­mit­tee for Med­i­c­i­nal Prod­ucts for Hu­man Use (CHMP) in May.

How­ev­er, the biotech doesn’t an­tic­i­pate any Eu­ro­pean sales this year or next, as the path to mar­ket ac­cess in Eu­rope of­ten re­quires da­ta from ran­dom­ized con­trolled stud­ies. This presents a chal­lenge for treat­ments like its cell ther­a­py, which was eval­u­at­ed in sin­gle-arm reg­is­tra­tional tri­als, Au­to­lus CEO Chris­t­ian Itin said on a Tues­day earn­ings call with an­a­lysts.

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6
by Zachary Brennan

The FDA is con­sid­er­ing re­vok­ing Pfiz­er's emer­gency use au­tho­riza­tion for its Covid-19 vac­cine for chil­dren aged 6 months through 4 years, the com­pa­ny said in a state­ment to End­points News.

"We are cur­rent­ly in dis­cus­sions with the agency on po­ten­tial paths for­ward and have re­quest­ed that the EUA for this age group re­main in place for the 2025-2026 sea­son," a Pfiz­er spokesper­son said. "It is im­por­tant to note that these de­lib­er­a­tions are not re­lat­ed to the safe­ty and ef­fi­ca­cy of the vac­cine which con­tin­ues to demon­strate a fa­vor­able pro­file."

An HHS spokesper­son told End­points the com­pa­ny's com­ment was "pure spec­u­la­tion."

Po­ten­tial changes to who can get Pfiz­er and BioN­Tech's mR­NA-based Covid vac­cine, if they go through, would align with oth­er re­cent re­stric­tions for Covid-19 shots that HHS has put in place since Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took the helm of the agency in Feb­ru­ary.