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Medical Associations Sue RFK Jr. Over COVID-19 Vaccine Guideline Rollbacks

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – A coalition of major U.S. medical societies has filed a federal lawsuit against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., challenging his directive to remove COVID-19 vaccines from routine immunization schedules for healthy children and pregnant women.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for Massachusetts, responds to Kennedy’s May announcement eliminating these groups from federal COVID-19 vaccine guidelines. The plaintiffs—among them the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Physicians, and the Infectious Diseases Society of America—are seeking immediate legal intervention to reverse the decision.

Medical organizations cite danger to vulnerable populations

Trump’s Tax Law Reshapes Orphan Drug Policy, Slashes Medicaid, and Leaves PBMs Unchecked

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – The newly signed One Big Beautiful Bill from President Donald Trump is poised to reshape the U.S. pharmaceutical policy landscape, restoring expanded orphan drug exemptions from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) while introducing significant Medicaid cuts and dropping regulatory reforms on pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The bill signals a strategic shift that may benefit the biopharma sector, while raising concerns about access and affordability in public healthcare.

Expanded orphan drug exemptions bolster rare disease R&D

Among the most consequential elements for the pharmaceutical industry is the reinstatement of broader protections for orphan drugs from Medicare price negotiations. The IRA had previously limited exemptions to drugs with only a single rare disease indication, but under the new law, those protections will now extend across multiple indications.

BrainStorm’s NurOwn Back in FDA Spotlight as ALS Community Rallies Behind New Petition

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics is once again at the center of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) treatment debate as patients formally petition the FDA to reconsider the approval of its investigational stem cell therapy, NurOwn. Citing new survival data and expanded access outcomes, the Citizens’ Petition seeks regulatory reassessment of the once-rejected therapy, underscoring the shifting landscape of ALS drug development and patient advocacy.

Renewed Push for Regulatory Reevaluation

The Citizens’ Petition, submitted last week by several individuals living with ALS, requests that the agency approve the stem cell therapy based on “new evidence and totality of evidence.”

Regeneron Secures FDA Approval for Lynozyfic, Targets $600M Multiple Myeloma Market

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – Regeneron has received accelerated approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its bispecific antibody linvoseltamab, now branded as Lynozyfic, for the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma—unlocking a market potential estimated at $600 million.

While the therapy enters a space already led by Johnson & Johnson’s Tecvayli, approved in 2022, Regeneron is seeking to distinguish Lynozyfic through its efficacy profile and flexible dosing advantages. According to analysts at BMO Capital Markets, the approval is a “small win” for Regeneron, noting that Lynozyfic will be a “minor contributor to the company’s broader product portfolio.” The firm estimates around $600 million in potential revenues from the drug.

Chugai and Gero Forge Strategic AI Alliance to Tackle Age-Related Diseases

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – In a landmark agreement that underscores the growing convergence of artificial intelligence and drug discovery, Tokyo-based Chugai Pharmaceutical has entered into a multi-phase research collaboration with Singapore-headquartered biotech Gero to target age-related diseases using AI-driven insights. The deal could exceed $1 billion in total value, positioning both companies at the forefront of longevity-focused pharmaceutical innovation.

AI-Powered Discovery for High-Impact Biologics

Chugai, majority-owned by Roche, will leverage Gero’s proprietary AI target discovery platform to identify novel biological targets linked to aging-related conditions. Based on these targets, Chugai will engineer antibody-based drug candidates using its advanced internal capabilities.

Cogent Advances Bezuclastinib Toward FDA Filing Following Positive Phase II Mastocytosis Results

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – Cogent Biosciences is accelerating its strategic trajectory with plans to submit its first New Drug Application (NDA) to the FDA by year-end, following strong Phase II data for its investigational tyrosine kinase inhibitor, bezuclastinib. The move positions Cogent as a serious contender in the systemic mastocytosis treatment landscape, directly challenging Blueprint Medicines' market presence.

Strategic Differentiation in a Competitive Field

KalVista Secures FDA Approval for First Oral On-Demand Hereditary Angioedema Treatment

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – KalVista Pharmaceuticals has received U.S. FDA approval for its oral treatment Ekterly (sebetralstat), marking a major milestone as the first and only on-demand tablet therapy for hereditary angioedema (HAE) in patients aged 12 and older.

The company confirmed that the drug will be available in the U.S. “immediately” under the brand name Ekterly. According to KalVista’s press release, it is “the first and so far only oral and on-demand treatment for hereditary angioedema (HAE).”

Regulatory delays and internal agency tensions

Ekterly’s road to approval was not smooth. Last month, the FDA informed KalVista that it would not meet its original target action date of June 17, citing “heavy workload and limited resources,” according to the biotech’s announcement at the time.

HHS Workforce Turmoil Raises Strategic Concerns for U.S. Health Infrastructure

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) faces a period of unprecedented operational uncertainty following sweeping layoffs and partial reinstatements under Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., with federal court intervention highlighting the legal and logistical chaos surrounding the department’s restructuring.

A recent ruling by Judge Melissa DuBose temporarily halted Kennedy’s overhaul, reinforcing that neither he nor the department holds the constitutional authority to unilaterally restructure agencies established by Congress. The court sided with a coalition of 19 states and the District of Columbia, which accused HHS leadership—including Kennedy, FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, and CDC Acting Director Susan Monarez—of implementing an “unconstitutional and illegal dismantling” of the agency.

Widespread Disruption Across Critical Health Agencies

Biopharma’s Last Stand in TIGIT: Four Companies Betting on Differentiation and Data

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – The TIGIT immunotherapy landscape has thinned dramatically amid a string of late-stage failures and corporate exits, yet several biopharma players remain committed to unlocking its clinical promise—driven by differentiated approaches and early signals of efficacy. AstraZeneca, Gilead, Agenus, and Mereo BioPharma are now at the forefront of this once-promising immuno-oncology frontier, recalibrating strategies in a space shaped by volatility and unmet potential.

AstraZeneca Bets Big on Dual Checkpoint Innovation

AstraZeneca’s rilvegostomig is one of the most advanced TIGIT assets in development today. The bispecific antibody is currently undergoing evaluation in ten Phase III trials across non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), gastric cancer, biliary tract cancer, and other solid tumors.

AI-Driven Pharmacogenetics Poised to Reshape Drug Development and Rebuild Industry Trust

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SHERIDAN, WYOMING – July 8, 2025 – A confluence of artificial intelligence and genomics is creating a critical inflection point for the pharmaceutical industry—offering a long-awaited opportunity to reduce adverse drug reactions, improve clinical outcomes, and restore public trust in a sector burdened by scrutiny and skepticism.

As adverse drug reactions remain among the top five causes of death in the U.S.—with more than 150,000 fatalities annually and billions in associated healthcare costs—pharmacogenetics is emerging as a strategic imperative rather than a research niche. But until recently, scaling this precision approach to drug prescription had remained elusive due to technical limitations. Today, AI-enabled analysis of vast, real-world genomic datasets is transforming that landscape.