FDA
A year of significant policy change at the FDA brought momentum and scrutiny into the new year. As 2026 gets underway, biopharma companies are responding to sweeping vaccine changes while concerns surface about the politicization of the agency.
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The FDA has gained a reputation during the past year for being inconsistently flexible, particularly when it comes to rare diseases. Executives at Rezolute and CERo Therapeutics recently had positive interactions with the agency, in which they told BioSpace reviewers have been “collaborative” and “curious.
Since the FDA began publishing its rejections of drug approval filings in July last year, companies have become more forthcoming about the details of agency decisions in their own disclosures, according to biopharma and regulatory analysts.
The upcoming FDA decision for Replimune’s advanced melanoma drug could be a litmus test for the agency’s future regulatory decision-making, analysts say, with implications stretching well beyond one company.
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Brukinsa was approved for MSL patients who have received at least one anti-CD20-based regimen.
A recent study suggests that about one-third of cancer indications with Accelerated Approval pathways are still on product labels without follow-up studies confirming their benefits.
September is turning out to be a busy month for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Here’s a look at this week’s schedule for PDUFA dates.
The FDA stated that it could not determine if the use of lenzilumab in COVID patients outweighs the known and potential safety risks.
Sometimes the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) runs ahead of schedule. In the case of this week’s two PDUFA dates, that was completely true. Here’s a look.
There were a fair number of clinical trial announcements last week. Here’s a look.
The approval was built on data from the Phase III ASPEN trial that compared Brukinsa to ibrutinib in a total of 201 patients. Here’s more about the drug.
FDA greenlit Janssen’s Invega Hafyera, the first long-acting antipsychotic drug of its kind that provides six months’ control of symptoms with a single dose.
Mesoblast shares dropped on the last day of August 2021 after it was told that its candidate COVID-19 treatment needs to undergo another trial to be green-lit for emergency approval by the FDA.
FDA approved Ascendis Pharma’s Skytrofa for children one year and older who have growth failure from inadequate secretion of endogenous growth hormone.