Gilead Sciences, Inc.
NEWS
Gilead Sciences scored a legal victory regarding fraudulent HIV reimbursements, securing a court order against a number of clinics, labs and prescribers in Florida that were engaging in the alleged fraud.
It was a very busy week for clinical trial news, with much of it coming out of the American Association of Cancer Research Annual Meeting. Read on for details.
The FDA’s decision to lift the hold directive on April 11 involving the investigational drug magrolimab follows a comprehensive review of each trial’s safety data.
Veru posted positive interim Phase III data from its late-stage study assessing oral antiviral sabizabulin in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Here’s more about it.
Stephane Bancel, the chief executive of Moderna, has likened the need for booster vaccine doses to the way Apple releases new smartphones every year.
Kite Pharma, a subsidiary of Gilead, announced that its Yescarta® has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Across a range of indications, COVID-19-related and non-COVID-19-related, there was plenty of clinical trial news last week.
Gilead Sciences is letting go of 114 employees following an underwhelming response to the results reaped so far from its $21 billion acquisition of Immunomedics in 2020.
Gilead Sciences posted some good news: a late-stage study of its antibody-drug conjugate Trodelvy shows promise in slowing the progression of the most common forms of breast cancer.
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