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21 January, 2026
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top stories
1. Is Europe raising its drug prices? Depends who you ask
2. J&J praises new FDA guidance to speed development of multiple myeloma drugs
3. Fosun Pharma-funded biotech licenses Insilico’s NLRP3 inhibitor
4. IntraBio says rare disease drug passes Phase 3 test, will seek FDA approval
5. J&J brushes off MFN impact, predicts strong growth for 2026
6. First-movers respond to biopharma herding into hot targets
more stories
 
Alexis Kramer
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We’re still waiting for Regeneron to announce a “most favored nation” deal with the White House. Meanwhile, drugmakers that avoided a direct demand from President Donald Trump last year are bracing for one this year. If you haven’t already, check out Max Bayer’s piece on how pharma executives are feeling about Trump’s ongoing push.

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Alexis Kramer
Editor, Endpoints News
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla in the Oval Office with President Donald Trump (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
1
by Max Bayer

One of the main ques­tions for drug­mak­ers en­ter­ing 2026, and one they hope tilts in their fa­vor, is whether the US will suc­cess­ful­ly pres­sure Eu­rope to raise the price it pays for drugs.

Three weeks in­to the year, the an­swer de­pends on who you ask.

At the World Eco­nom­ic Fo­rum in Davos this week, Pfiz­er CEO Al­bert Bourla said in a CN­BC in­ter­view that the com­pa­ny was still ne­go­ti­at­ing its Eu­ro­pean prices.

“The US price go­ing down is hap­pen­ing now, the US price go­ing up in Eu­rope, we will see,” he said Tues­day. Bourla added that the rea­son Eu­ro­pean talks are in flux is be­cause the com­pa­ny doesn’t have an agree­ment with the bloc, de­scrib­ing it as a “cum­ber­some process.”

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2
by Zachary Brennan

John­son & John­son, which has sev­er­al drugs ap­proved for mul­ti­ple myelo­ma, praised the FDA's just-re­leased draft guid­ance on how the agency will al­low the use of min­i­mal resid­ual dis­ease as a pri­ma­ry end­point for ac­cel­er­at­ed ap­provals of treat­ments for the blood can­cer.

The nine-page draft pub­lished Tues­day spells out how drug de­vel­op­ers can use MRD as an end­point in sev­er­al ways, in­clud­ing via a sin­gle-arm tri­al, with the on­go­ing tri­al con­tin­u­ing to eval­u­ate pro­gres­sion-free-sur­vival or over­all sur­vival to sup­port a full ap­proval. An FDA ad­vi­so­ry com­mit­tee in 2024 vot­ed unan­i­mous­ly to al­low the use of MRD as an end­point.

J&J pi­o­neered much of the ev­i­dence be­hind the use of MRD, EVP John Reed said on Wednes­day's earn­ings call, "so we’re ex­cit­ed that that is an op­tion."

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3
by Ayisha Sharma

A biotech fund­ed by Shang­hai Fo­s­un Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal is li­cens­ing a pre­clin­i­cal as­set de­vel­oped by In­sil­i­co Med­i­cine in the NL­RP3 space, which has gar­nered in­dus­try in­ter­est in re­cent months.

Hyg­tia Ther­a­peu­tics will get half the glob­al rights for In­sil­i­co’s oral can­di­date, called ISM8969, in a deal that could to­tal up to $66 mil­lion. Hong Kong-list­ed In­sil­i­co is set to re­ceive $10 mil­lion with­in 30 days of the deal clos­ing. It will be re­spon­si­ble for fil­ing an IND and run­ning a Phase 1 study in Parkin­son’s dis­ease. Hyg­tia will then take over fur­ther de­vel­op­ment and com­mer­cial­iza­tion.

NL­RP3 is a pro­tein that plays a key role in the in­nate im­mune sys­tem. Its ab­nor­mal ac­ti­va­tion is thought to dri­ve neu­roin­flam­ma­tion in dis­eases like Alzheimer’s and Parkin­son’s.

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4
by Lei Lei Wu

In­tra­Bio said Wednes­day that its treat­ment im­proved mo­tor func­tion for a rare ge­net­ic dis­or­der called atax­ia-telang­iec­ta­sia as part of a piv­otal study.

The Austin, TX-based biotech told End­points News it plans to sub­mit an ap­pli­ca­tion to the FDA in April that would seek ap­proval for its drug, Aqneur­sa. Known gener­i­cal­ly as N-acetyl-L-leucine, Aqneur­sa was first ap­proved in 2024 to treat neu­ro­log­i­cal symp­toms re­lat­ed to an­oth­er rare dis­ease called Nie­mann-Pick dis­ease type C.

There are cur­rent­ly no ap­proved treat­ments specif­i­cal­ly for atax­ia-telang­iec­ta­sia.

Sev­en­ty-three pa­tients with the dis­or­der were en­rolled as part of the Phase 3 tri­al, and they re­ceived ei­ther Aqneur­sa or place­bo every day. Af­ter 12 weeks of treat­ment, pa­tients who re­ceived Aqneur­sa saw a -1.92-point im­prove­ment on a mea­sure of mo­tor func­tion called the Scale for the As­sess­ment and Rat­ing of Atax­ia, ac­cord­ing to the re­sults re­port­ed Wednes­day. Mean­while, pa­tients who re­ceived place­bo saw a -0.14-point score change. That dif­fer­ence was sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant with a p-val­ue of p<0.001, meet­ing its pri­ma­ry end­point.

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5
by Max Gelman

As the cal­en­dar turns from JPM to quar­ter­ly re­ports, earn­ings bell­wether John­son & John­son makes its re­turn for 2026. The fo­cus this time? How bio­phar­ma will re­act to a slate of most fa­vored na­tion deals with the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion.

J&J ex­ec­u­tives es­sen­tial­ly shrugged off any fi­nan­cial im­pact from its MFN deal that was signed ear­li­er this month, say­ing it will be “even­ly dis­trib­uted through­out the year.” When com­bined with fourth-quar­ter sales that near­ly reached $25 bil­lion — up 9.1% from the same pe­ri­od a year ear­li­er — it sets up a strong 2026 for the com­pa­ny, CFO Joseph Wolk said on Wednes­day’s in­vestor call.

“We an­tic­i­pate fair­ly con­sis­tent op­er­a­tional sales growth through­out the year,” Wolk said.

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6
by Andrew Dunn

There are count­less dis­eases lack­ing a sin­gle good treat­ment, but drug­mak­ers are still herd­ing in­to the same tar­gets, par­tic­u­lar­ly in chas­ing af­ter megablock­busters.

George Yan­copou­los, the out­spo­ken co-founder and chief sci­en­tif­ic of­fi­cer of Re­gen­eron, is one of the loud­est crit­ics of this trend. “Even if they make some­thing you take twice as less fre­quent­ly, is that what they should be do­ing?” he said in an in­ter­view. “Give me a new drug that treats a new dis­ease.”

Herd­ing is­n't new, but it has got­ten worse. On­ly 16% of top drug­mak­er­s' port­fo­lios were in crowd­ed tar­gets in 2000, a per­cent­age that quadru­pled by 2020, a McK­in­sey analy­sis found. The last few years have on­ly brought more at­ten­tion to a hand­ful of pro­grams that have pipeline-in-a-prod­