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Biotech & Research

ALS Northwest Boosts 2025 Research Funding Through ALS United Collaboration to Accelerate ALS Breakthroughs

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ALS Northwest Wraps 2025 With a Bigger Bet on Research — and a Message of Urgency for Families

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 30, 2025 - ALS Northwest says it increased its financial investment in ALS research throughout 2025, expanding support for new approaches in treatment, prevention, and scientific understanding while joining a multi-organization funding initiative intended to strengthen the overall research pipeline.

Research investment strategy and portfolio focus

ALS Northwest framed its 2025 approach as a scaled-up commitment to research designed to accelerate innovation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The organization said its efforts span multiple stages of scientific discovery, with an emphasis on enabling new approaches that could move the field forward. For research stakeholders, the operational question is not only how much is invested, but how efficiently funding is converted into validated findings, new targets, and ultimately clinical progress.

BMS Signs $1B-Plus Multi-Specific Antibody Pact With China's Harbour BioMed

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BMS Signs $1B-Plus Multi-Specific Antibody Pact With China’s Harbour BioMed

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 19, 2025 - Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) has struck a potential $1B-plus partnership with Harbour BioMed to collaborate on next-generation multi-specific antibody programs, underscoring how China-based innovation is increasingly shaping global biologics dealmaking.

Deal scope and economics in brief
BMS will pay $90 million upfront to work with Harbour on developing and advancing multi-specific antibody therapies, with additional development and commercial milestones that could total up to $1.035 billion. The partners did not disclose how many programs are covered, nor did they specify initial targets, indications, or therapeutic areas.

For business development teams and portfolio planners, the structure reflects a familiar "platform-plus-programs" model: BMS buys early discovery leverage and optionality, while Harbour positions itself for milestone upside and downstream royalties if programs progress.

Voyager Cuts 30 Roles After Novartis Drops Two Early Gene Therapy Programs

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Voyager Cuts 30 Roles After Novartis Drops Two Early Gene Therapy Programs

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 19, 2025 - Voyager Therapeutics is laying off 30 employees after partner Novartis discontinued two undisclosed discovery-stage programs under the companies' gene therapy collaboration, underscoring how quickly platform-driven R&D bets can be reprioritized even inside marquee pharma partnerships.

Commercial partnerships can shift overnight
Voyager disclosed last month that Novartis had stepped away from two early programs tied to their ongoing relationship, without naming the assets or detailing the rationale. The biotech framed the change as manageable, stating that Novartis' decision will "not impact Voyager's cash runway guidance." Still, the workforce reduction signals that operational resets often follow partnership scope changes-especially when programs are preclinical and the near-term value is concentrated in a smaller set of advancing assets.

Terns' 'Unprecedented' CML Data Puts TERN-701 on Track to Challenge Novartis' Scemblix

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Terns’ ‘Unprecedented’ CML Data Puts TERN-701 on Track to Challenge Novartis’ Scemblix

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 11, 2025 - Terns Pharmaceuticals is rapidly emerging as a serious contender in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), after early clinical data for its allosteric BCR/ABL1 inhibitor TERN-701 more than doubled response rates seen with Novartis' approved STAMP inhibitor Scemblix in comparable settings and sent the biotech's share price sharply higher.

Best-in-Disease Early Efficacy Raises the Bar in CML

At the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting, Terns reported Phase I data from the CARDINAL trial in previously treated CML patients, with 38 participants evaluable for efficacy. TERN-701 achieved a major molecular response (MMR) rate of 75% at week 24, with 64% of patients reaching MMR overall in the dataset presented. The investigational agent also supported simple once-daily dosing without a food effect, improving convenience relative to many existing tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) regimens.

AGC Biologics to Scale AAVantgarde's Dual-Vector Gene Therapies for Inherited Retinal Blindness

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AGC Biologics to Scale AAVantgarde’s Dual-Vector Gene Therapies for Inherited Retinal Blindness

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 3, 2025 - AGC Biologics has signed a new manufacturing agreement with AAVantgarde Bio to produce dual-vector AAV gene therapies for Stargardt disease and retinitis pigmentosa, positioning its BravoAAV™ platform at the center of next-generation treatments for inherited retinal disorders with no approved therapies.

Dual-vector AAV platform targets previously "untreatable" retinal genes

Under the deal, AGC Biologics will provide GMP manufacturing for AAVantgarde's two clinical-stage candidates: AAVB-039 for Stargardt disease, the most common inherited form of macular degeneration in children and young adults, and AAVB-081 for retinitis pigmentosa caused by Usher syndrome type 1B. Both programs are in Phase 1/2 trials, with AAVB-039 being tested in the U.S., UK and Europe, and AAVB-081 representing the first-ever dual AAV gene therapy in an ocular indication.

AGC Biologics and Repair Biotechnologies Join Forces on mRNA Therapy Targeting Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

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AGC Biologics and Repair Biotechnologies Join Forces on mRNA Therapy Targeting Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 3, 2025 - AGC Biologics has signed a strategic development and manufacturing agreement with Repair Biotechnologies to advance a novel mRNA therapeutic aimed at rapidly stabilizing and shrinking atherosclerotic plaques, addressing what both partners describe as the leading single cause of human mortality worldwide.

Targeting plaque biology in a high-burden cardiovascular market

The collaboration focuses on an mRNA-based therapy designed to stabilize and reduce atherosclerotic plaques in major blood vessels, directly tackling the root pathology behind heart attacks and strokes. Rupture of unstable plaque and subsequent thrombotic events account for an estimated 27% of all human deaths, underscoring the strategic importance of any technology capable of reversing or halting plaque progression.

AGC Biologics and Rarity PBC Join Forces to Industrialize Gene Therapy for "Bubble Baby" ADA-SCID

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AGC Biologics and Rarity PBC Join Forces to Industrialize Gene Therapy for “Bubble Baby” ADA-SCID

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 3, 2025 - AGC Biologics is partnering with public benefit company Rarity PBC to bring a potentially life-saving gene therapy for Adenosine Deaminase Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (ADA-SCID) through commercial manufacturing and toward FDA approval, underscoring how CDMO collaborations are becoming central to translating academic breakthroughs into scalable rare disease treatments.

From transformational trials to a U.S. commercial pathway

Under the new agreement, AGC Biologics will provide end-to-end development and GMP manufacturing for Rarity's ex vivo autologous gene therapy RDP-101. If approved, RDP-101 would become the first gene therapy commercially available in the United States to reverse ADA-SCID, a rare inherited immunodeficiency that leaves infants dangerously exposed to severe, recurrent infections.

Roche's Trontinemab Data Put the Swiss Pharma Back in the Alzheimer's Race

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Roche’s Trontinemab Data Put the Swiss Pharma Back in the Alzheimer’s Race

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 2, 2025 - Roche is re-entering the frontline of Alzheimer's disease drug development, after new Phase I/II data showed its next-generation antibody trontinemab cleared amyloid plaques below the threshold of positivity in the vast majority of treated patients while keeping key safety signals under tight control.

Early Brainshuttle data show deep amyloid clearance

In the ongoing Brainshuttle AD Phase I/II study, 92% of patients treated with trontinemab achieved amyloid levels below 24 centiloids, the PET scan threshold commonly used to define amyloid positivity. The data, presented at the 2025 Clinical Trials on Alzheimer's Disease (CTAD) meeting, mark one of the strongest plaque-clearing signals yet seen in a mid-stage program.

Imvax Seeks FDA Path for IGV-001 After 6-Month Survival Gain in Glioblastoma

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Imvax Seeks FDA Path for IGV-001 After 6-Month Survival Gain in Glioblastoma

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 2, 2025 - Imvax is moving its autologous glioblastoma immunotherapy IGV-001 toward the FDA, despite a missed primary endpoint in Phase IIb, betting that a six-month overall survival benefit and a novel "synergistic" treatment concept will resonate in a setting where outcomes have barely budged in two decades.

Phase IIb data highlight survival benefit despite PFS miss

In a mid-stage trial of 99 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma, Imvax evaluated IGV-001, a biologic-device combination, against placebo. While the study did not achieve its primary endpoint of improving progression-free survival, the company reported a median overall survival of 20.3 months in the treatment arm-around six months longer than in the control group.

Roche's Alzheimer's Comeback Signals a New Competitive Phase for Disease-Modifying Therapies

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Roche’s Alzheimer’s Comeback Signals a New Competitive Phase for Disease-Modifying Therapies

SHERIDAN, WYOMING - December 2, 2025 - After years of volatility in Alzheimer's R&D, Roche's re-emergence with positive early data for trontinemab is reshaping expectations for the next competitive cycle in disease-modifying therapies, signaling that big pharma is not done pushing for better outcomes in this high-risk, high-need market.

From Aduhelm's fallout to a more mature Alzheimer's market

The modern Alzheimer's era was defined-some would say scarred-by the 2021 approval of Biogen and Eisai's Aduhelm, a controversial and costly monoclonal antibody that ultimately failed to deliver convincing clinical benefit and was later withdrawn. The backlash damaged Biogen's reputation and, for a time, cast doubt on the entire amyloid-directed approach, raising questions about regulatory standards and payer willingness to back expensive, marginally effective therapies.