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This week: Super Bowl drug ads | FDA priority voucher program under scrutiny | China’s drug era | AI

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IntellaTurn's Weekly Scoop

By Erin at IntellaTurnFeb 05, 2026

This week: Super Bowl drug ads | FDA priority voucher program under scrutiny | China’s drug era | AI “hackathons” tackle rare diseases

Around the industry

Super Bowl LX Drug Ads
Source: Camille MacMillin/STAT

🏈 Super Bowl ads highlight tension between FDA and drug companies

  • If there’s any event that draws a lot of attention to TV ads, it’s the Super Bowl.

  • Drug companies usually sit on the sidelines for the annual advertising bonanza, and one might expect this Sunday’s game to be no different, considering the FDA’s recent crackdown on pharma ads. But that’s not the case.

  • Novartis and Boehringer Ingelheim have already released their Super Bowl LX ads online, and Novo Nordisk is teasing its big ad on Instagram.

  • Telehealth companies Hims & Hers and Ro also bought airtime during the championship game to promote GLP-1 products, among other things.

  • Watch the video analysis: STAT

📈 Lilly beats sales forecasts, plots major growth in stark contrast to Novo

  • Eli Lilly surpassed analysts’ expectations for 2025 and fourth-quarter revenues on February 4, and anticipates a large increase in revenue this year. It marks a sharp juxtaposition to its main rival Novo Nordisk, which expects to shrink in 2026.

  • Lilly said it pulled in $19.29 billion in the last quarter of 2025, thanks to $11.66 billion from its tirzepatide franchise. Analysts had expected $17.8 billion for the quarter. Full-year 2025 revenues came in at $65.17 billion, well above the $63.9 billion that analysts projected and the $63.5 billion that Lilly predicted in October.

  • Novo Nordisk had disappointed the market a day earlier with the news that it expects sales to shrink by 5% to 13% at constant exchange rates in 2026. (Endpoints)

💊 Sanofi drug, inherited from Genzyme, goes 1-for-2 in rare disease trials

  • An experimental rare disease drug from Sanofi succeeded against one lysosomal storage disorder but failed against another, the French pharmaceutical company said.

  • According to Sanofi, the drug, dubbed venglustat, missed its primary objective in a phase 3 study testing it against Fabry disease.

  • However, in another study in a form of Gaucher disease, the drug met its main goal and three out of four key secondary endpoints.

  • Sanofi didn’t provide details—they’ll be shared at medical meeting this week—but said it intends to submit the Gaucher results to global regulatory authorities. (BioPharma Dive)

Lawmaker raises new concerns over FDA’s ultra-fast drug review program

Arrows and question marks
iStock / Andrii Yalanskyi

What’s new: A Democratic lawmaker is raising new concerns about an FDA program designed to drastically shorten the review of certain drugs, including whether senior officials involved in the effort are complying with federal ethics rules.

  • In a February 3 letter, Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-Mass.) took issue with the lack of transparency in the agency's handling of the program and questioned its legal underpinnings, noting that Congress did not sign off on the plan.

About the program: Under the voucher program, launched by FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, drugmakers are promised expedited reviews of 1 to 2 months for new medicines that support “national interests.” It’s at the center of Makary’s stated goal of “cutting red tape” and “challenging assumptions” at the agency.

The lawmaker’s take: But Auchincloss says details about the Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher program have been “shrouded in secrecy,” in part because the FDA has not responded to multiple congressional inquiries.

“The public must have transparency about the ‘voucher’ program, under which drug approvals have been made almost wholly and in an unprecedented manner by the FDA’s political leadership,” states Auchincloss, who is a member of a House subcommittee on health.

The letter’s claims: Auchincloss asserts that the FDA has failed to publish or disclose financial disclosure forms for eight senior FDA officials who vote on which drugs should receive priority vouchers.

  • The forms, which are collected annually by the Office of Government Ethics, list investments, outside income, and other financial details for senior government officials and their spouses.

  • Such disclosures are considered critical to avoiding potential conflicts of interest at the FDA, where staffers are often involved in regulating multibillion-dollar, publicly traded companies.

  • Auchincloss questions whether the FDA had the legal authority to establish the voucher program without action from Congress, which typically legislates such programs into law.

    • Several senior FDA staffers have declined to sign off on drug approvals going through the program due to legal concerns, as previously reported by the AP. (MedPage Today)

China’s drug era is already here

China map with magnifying glass
iStock / Bubbers13

What to know: China has gotten very good at making cutting-edge pharmaceuticals—good enough to seriously threaten America’s long-standing dominance in drug-making.

Why it matters: This is all happening in plain sight. But it’s playing out against a profound remaking of the US federal health bureaucracy that the industry has said threatens future cures.

China is “really very close to us. If they continue like that with that strength, they will become better than us. I think it’s a wake-up call for us,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CNBC earlier this month at Davos.

  • He added that, in order to compete, the U.S. needs to adequately fund Ph.D. programs, the NIH, and other research.

Driving the news: AstraZeneca announced a multi-billion dollar deal with China’s CSPC Pharmaceuticals in which it obtained global rights outside of China for several early-stage experimental obesity and diabetes drugs.

  • The company also announced it was investing $15 billion in manufacturing and R&D in China.

  • So far in 2026, it appears the four-year biotech slump is coming to an end, and investors seem optimistic about the near-term future.

  • A key question is whether a year’s worth of upheaval at the FDA will blunt biotech's momentum in the US. If it does, one of the major concerns is that America will be left playing catch-up.

Zoom in: It’s now faster and cheaper to do early-stage clinical trials in China than in the U.S. Plus, Big Pharma companies are hungry for new assets as they face the end of market exclusivity for some of their older blockbuster drugs.

By the numbers: Chinese deals made up 17% percent of global pharma deals in the first three quarters of 2025, up from only 6% in 2020, according to Bain.

  • Drug companies aren’t just buying up Chinese drug candidates; they’re also expanding their footprints in the country.

  • Global life sciences companies have clustered in hubs like Shanghai's “Pharma Valley,” which is home to more than 1,700 companies.

Go deeper: Axios

Interesting read: DeepMind’s genome AI could help solve rare disease mysteries

AI
iStock / Kalawin

Setting the stage: When more than 100 researchers voluntarily locked themselves in a room last year to tackle some of the hardest conditions in medicine, they turned to artificial intelligence.

  • As part of an effort, called the Undiagnosed Hackathon, to crack 29 undiagnosed conditions, researchers deployed AlphaGenome — an AI model developed by Google DeepMind.

  • AlphaGenome was made available to scientists last year and can predict the diverse effects of mutations in non-coding DNA sequences, including how they might affect the activity of nearby genes.

Context: Deciphering the 98% of the human genome that does not code for proteins is one of biology’s grand challenges.

  • Mutations in these sequences are especially vexing to researchers seeking to uncover the genetic basis for rare, often fatal diseases.

“These are variants that, to be quite honest, often get triaged,” says Eric Klee, a bioinformatician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who co-led the Undiagnosed Hackathon in September last year.

How it works: Efforts to diagnose rare diseases tend to focus on mutations in protein-coding regions of the genome, known as the exome.

  • To see whether AlphaGenome could help to interpret the effects non-coding variants, Klee tested its prediction for a variant that he and his colleagues had linked to an individual’s diagnosis before the September 2025 hackathon.

  • Experimental work showed that the mutation altered gene expression in cardiac cells, but not in neural cells, which was in line with the symptoms the individual experienced.

  • AlphaGenome’s predictions of the variant’s effects supported this conclusion, Klee says. (Nature)

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