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The latest: Notable drug approvals | Around the industry | The 20 most innovative biotech companies

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IntellaTurn's Weekly Scoop

By Erin at IntellaTurnMar 26, 2026

The latest: Notable drug approvals | Around the industry | The 20 most innovative biotech companies | Why we don’t have a Lyme disease vaccine

Notable FDA drug approvals

Magnifying glass and check marks
iStock / Nutthaseth Vanchaichana

Denali’s AVLAYAH: 1st new Hunter syndrome treatment in nearly 20 years

  • The FDA granted accelerated approval to Denali Therapeutics’ enzyme replacement therapy for Hunter syndrome, handing a much-needed win to the rare disease market. The drug will carry the brand name Avlayah.

  • Wednesday’s approval for Avlayah delivers several firsts for the industry. The therapy is the first new medicine for Hunter syndrome in nearly 20 years, Denali said in its press announcement, adding that Avlayah is the first FDA-approved biotherapeutic that uses the transferrin receptor to cross the blood-brain barrier.

  • Avlayah is also “the first product approved to address neurologic complications of Hunter Syndrome,” according to Tracy Beth Høeg, acting director of FDA’s CDER.

  • Full approval of Avlayah will hinge on the findings of a confirmatory trial designed to verify its clinical benefits. (Biospace)

Corcept’s LIFYORLI: New treatment option for ovarian cancer

  • The FDA approved Corcept Therapeutics’ Lifyorli in combination with nab-paclitaxel for the treatment of three different kinds of cancer in patients who have received up to three prior lines of treatments.

  • The March 25 approval came more than three months ahead of the company’s July 11 user fee goal date. In January, the agency rejected the same drug to treat a rare hormonal disorder called Cushing’s syndrome.

  • A multicenter, open-label trial of 381 patients tested Lifyorli, a selective glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, with nab-paclitaxel for adults with platinum-resistant epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer.

  • It was tested in patients who have received one to three prior lines of treatment, at least one of which included bevacizumab. The results were published in The Lancet last June. (Endpoints)

Rhythm’s IMCIVREE: Expanded approval for treatment of brain damage-related obesity

  • Rhythm Pharmaceuticals is switching up the tempo for its melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) agonist Imcivree.

  • After its initial approval more than five years ago to treat certain patients with genetic-driven obesity, the drug is moving into a different and broader realm with an FDA nod for acquired hypothalamic obesity (HO).

  • Acquired HO, for which Imcivree is the first approved treatment, represents an “expanded thinking” on the weight-regulating MC4R pathway that Rhythm’s product targets, CSO Alastair Garfield, Ph.D., said. (Fierce Pharma)

Around the industry

Stacked money
Axios Media

➡️ Merck to buy Terns in $6.7B bet on ‘differentiated’ leukemia drug

  • Merck & Co. is spending billions of dollars to bolster its cancer drug portfolio, announcing plans to acquire Terns Pharmaceuticals for a medicine that could disrupt treatment for a type of blood malignancy.

  • Per deal terms, Merck will pay $53 per share in cash for Terns, an offer that values the company at about $6.7 billion overall.

  • The deal hands Merck a treatment that has the chance to challenge multiple established medicines in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia, a slow-growing cancer of the blood and bone marrow.

  • The drug, a type of targeted, oral treatment called TERN-701, is currently being studied in an early-stage trial.

  • Results from that trial, presented at the American Society of Hematology meeting last year, have suggested TERN-701 could threaten the dominance of Novartis’ Scemblix, a medicine expected to generate more than $4 billion in peak yearly sales. (BioPharma Dive)

➡️ Why Novartis is paying $2B for a cancer drug that hits the same target as one of its own products

  • Breast cancers driven by a particular genetic signature can already be treated by a particular class of targeted therapies, but the race is on to develop next-generation medicines that improve the safety and efficacy of this approach.

  • Novartis sees an early clinical program of Synnovation Therapeutics as potentially best in this drug class, and it is paying $2 billion to add the clinical-stage asset to its pipeline.

  • The cancer drug comes from Pikavation Therapeutics, a subsidiary of precision medicine startup Synnovation. By acquiring Pikavation, Novartis gets that subsidiary’s entire portfolio of PI3Kα inhibitors, according to deal terms announced on March 20.

    • That includes SNV4818, which is currently in Phase 1/2 testing for patients with HR-positive/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer and other solid tumors driven by PI3Kα. (MedCity News)

➡️ Ionis slashes TRYNGOLZA’s price by 93% ahead of anticipated label expansion

  • Ionis Pharmaceuticals is dramatically lowering the price of its blockbuster hopeful Tryngolza (olezarsen) as it prepares to grow the medicine’s reach with a planned label expansion.

  • Initially approved as a treatment for familial chylomicronemia syndrome (FCS) in 2024, the drug first launched with an annual list price of $595,000, the company said.

  • Now, as Ionis gears up to potentially launch in severe hypertriglyceridemia (sHTG), the company is rolling out an updated wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) of $40,000 annually, it announced.

  • Tryngolza’s new price will take effect April 1 and will apply to both the anticipated sHTG indication and its current use in FCS.

  • Not only does the sharp WAC decrease support broader access and speak to the higher cost of drugs in the rare disease realm, but it could also give Ionis a better shot against its market rival, Arrowhead’s Redemplo. (Fierce Pharma)

The most innovative biotech companies of 2026

Researcher
iStock / gorodenkoff

Setting the stage: Fast Company’s list of the most innovative companies in biotech reflects a year in which companies took big swings—delivering breakthrough treatments to the clinic, bringing groundbreaking tests to the public, and building out the tools to support future breakthroughs.

Summary of the top 20 companies:

1. eGenesis—for revolutionizing life-saving organ transplants

2. Exact Sciences—for bringing comprehensive cancer testing to the masses

3. Insilico Medicine—for bringing AI precision to small-molecule drug design

4. Juvena Therapeutics—for helping patients keep muscle while losing weight

5. Enveda—for mining plant chemistry to build better medicines

6. Replicate Bioscience—for showing the potential of self-replicating RNA in metabolic disease and beyond

7. Strand Therapeutics—for programming mRNA therapeutics that help the immune system fight cancer

8. Cellino Biotech—for bringing cell and tissue manufacturing into the future

9. Faeth Therapeutics—for fighting endometrial cancer with a three-pronged approach

10. Orca Bio—for making high-precision cancer immunotherapies more scalable

11. Epicrispr Biotechnologies—for pioneering treatments that control gene expression to help people with neuromuscular disease

12. Vivodyne—for enabling researchers to get “human data” on new drugs—before clinical trials

13. Opus Genetics—for focusing on a therapy to restore vision in congenitally blind children

14. Gilgamesh Pharma—for making psychedelic medicine more manageable

15. Element Biosciences—for simplifying the sequencing of DNA, RNA, protein, and cell morphology all at once

16. Argo Biopharma—for putting Chinese biotech innovation on the map

17. Absci—for bringing AI-designed antibodies to the clinic

18. Thermo Fisher Scientific—for empowering scientists with next-generation sequencing

19. Basecamp Research—for massively expanding the library of known protein sequences

20. Manifold Bio—for inventing a novel way to track drug distribution in living systems

Continue reading: Fast Company

Interesting read: Why we don’t have a Lyme disease vaccine

Clock and leaves
iStock / Olga Yastremska

What’s new: On March 23, Pfizer announced its Lyme disease vaccine (developed in conjunction with Valneva) was only 73.2 percent effective in preventing the illness.

  • While the company plans to move forward with the FDA approval process, the vaccine fell short of their goal to demonstrate 20 percent effectiveness in worst-case scenarios.

  • If it manages to succeed, it would be the only Lyme disease vaccine approved for humans.

But why? After all, we have Lyme disease vaccines for dogs. In fact, we had a Lyme disease vaccine for humans over 25 years ago that was 76 percent effective, so what happened to it?

  • GSK cited insufficient demand when withdrawing it from the market in 2002, but what really happened has been called a “cautionary tale” for vaccine developers.

Continue reading: Nautilus

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