Biotech Hangout

Episode 180 - April 17, 2026

53 min · 17 apr 2026
aflevering Episode 180 - April 17, 2026 artwork

Beschrijving

On today’s episode, Chris Garabedian, Paul Matteis, Tess Cameron, and special guest Adam Feuerstein kick off with a discussion of the public markets, highlighting the XBI’s post‑pandemic highs, Kailera’s IPO pricing and more than $625 million raised, the opening of the IPO window with multiple filings, and increasing generalist interest in the biotech sector. The group also discusses Obsidian Therapeutics going public following a reverse merger with Galera, alongside a $350 million PIPE. The conversation shifts to the rise of clinical trial prediction markets and the growing role of AI tools in the life sciences industry. Next, the co‑hosts highlight another acquisition by Lilly, with their $300 million purchase of Crossbridge Bio. In Regulatory news, the group overview the FDA approval of Travere Therapeutics’ kidney disease drug for FSGS and the broader implications for the renal space. On the data front, the group mentions Allogene’s CAR‑T data and the mixed stock reaction, along with Revolution Medicines’ positive Phase 3 data in pancreatic cancer. Spyre’s positive Phase 2 data in ulcerative colitis is also covered. The episode concludes with a discussion on how clinical data continues to drive market dynamics. *This episode aired on April 17, 2026.

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Alle afleveringen

158 afleveringen

aflevering Episode 189 - July 17, 2026 artwork

Episode 189 - July 17, 2026

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Gisteren58 min
aflevering Episode 188 - July 10, 2026 artwork

Episode 188 - July 10, 2026

On this week's episode, Sam Fazeli, Josh Schimmer, Eric Schmidt, Paul Matteis, and special guest STAT's Matt Herper open on the market, noting that despite a wobbly day for biotech, the XBI holds strong gains year-to-date. The conversation turns to FDA transparency, where the co-hosts flag that CRLs haven't been released since April and that the agency may be walking back that practice. The co-hosts debate whether the FDA is swinging too far toward leniency after Agios' mitapivat won priority review in sickle cell disease despite missing its primary endpoint last year. On AI in drug discovery, Matt Herper recaps an interview with Anthropic's CEO about a new research tool, noting that it's plausible the tool helps industry pick better targets and lower the failure rate. In M&A, Vertex's largest-ever deal takes Crinetics for $10 billion net of cash, staking a claim in the specialty rare endocrine space, while Novartis expands its ADC portfolio with Myricx for $1.1 billion upfront plus $400 million in milestones — the second European ADC deal in recent months. On data, AstraZeneca and Ionis' eplontersen trial in ATTR-CM missed its endpoint, showing no benefit or biomarker signal on top of background tafamidis; the group then discusses the readthroughs for BridgeBio, Alnylam, and Pfizer's ATTR therapies. This episode aired on July 10, 2026.

10 jul 20261 h 0 min
aflevering Episode 187 - June 26, 2026 artwork

Episode 187 - June 26, 2026

On this week’s episode, Josh Schimmer, Eric Schmidt, Tess Cameron, and Sam Fazeli open by noting the XBI’s continued rise, debating whether biotech is getting ahead of itself. The co-hosts call this a “new era” in which biotech can be profitable rather than sold off to pharma. The conversation shifts to deals, with AbbVie’s $10.9 billion acquisition of Apogee, which raised questions about China-sourced drugs given their volume, pace of innovation, and cheaper price. The group also covers Boundless Bio and Serapha’s merger, alongside a $230M private raise. Ollin Bio -- whose pipeline is built entirely on Chinese assets -- raised $330M Series B to advance Phase 3 trials of a bispecific antibody for diabetic macular edema and wet AMD, which led to a debate on the COINS Act and the distinction between physical and innovation supply chains. The group then overviews potential FDA Commissioner candidates, with BIO CEO John Crowley and physician Heidi Overton as front-runners alongside acting leader Kyle Diamantas. In company news, CVS Caremark deferred adding $SPRY’s epinephrine nasal spray Neffy to its formulary, pushing the review to January 2027. The episode concludes with data updates from Moonlake in HS, Merck’s ulcerative colitis drug, Definium’s Phase 3 LSD data in MDD, and Absci’s Lilly-backed prolactin antibody raise. *This episode aired on June 26, 2026.

26 jun 20261 h 0 min
aflevering Episode 186 - June 12, 2026 artwork

Episode 186 - June 12, 2026

On this week’s episode, Graig Suvannavejh, Eric Schmidt, Paul Matteis and Financial Times’ Oliver Barnes kicked off with the biotech market, with the XBI in positive territory and 12 biotech IPOs completed so far this year. They expected the IPO window to remain open for high-quality private companies. The group also overviewed recent financings, including SonoThera’s $125 million Series B, City Therapeutics’ $100 million Series B, Ethyreal’s $101 million Series A, and Summit’s decision to cancel a $500 million secondary offering. In data news, the co-hosts covered Tango’s combination data with Revolution Medicines’ RAS inhibitor. They also discussed Incyte’s acquisition of Vega Therapeutics as a pipeline-building move ahead of Jakafi’s 2028 patent expiration and J&J’s acquisition of Firefly, with the RAS inhibitor space expected to remain hot. The group also discussed GSK’s acquisition of Nuvalent -- its largest deal to date -- for two late-stage lung cancer assets. Oliver added perspective on biotech deal leaks, following the Incyte/Vega deal and GSK/Nuvalent deals this week. In partnership updates, Novartis expanded its molecular glue work with Orionis, Lilly licensed an Alzheimer’s candidate from AlzeCure, and Corvus supported China partner Angel Pharmaceuticals. The episode concluded with the latest in rare disease and gene therapy, covering Novartis’ FSHD program, FDA flexibility, Rett syndrome programs, and Sensorion’s exit from hearing loss development. *This episode aired on June 12, 2026.

12 jun 20261 h 1 min
aflevering Episode 185 -June 5, 2026 artwork

Episode 185 -June 5, 2026

On this week’s episode, Yaron Werber, Tess Cameron, SamFazeli, and Brian Skorney kick off with a look at markets, noting that while AI remains hot, biotech may be cooling amid anticipated tech IPOs. The co-hosts note that biotech saw a significant recovery over the past year driven by M&A and improving sentiment, highlighting that the XBI has remained remarkably stable. The discussion then turns to policy, where momentum to expand the COINS Act into biotech raises concerns. The group highlights the need to distinguish between manufacturing supply chains, where national security risks are real, and innovation ecosystems, where restricting capital flows could slow drug development and shift advantage outside of the US. Recapping the highlights from ASCO 2026, Akeso/Summit’s ivonescimab showed meaningful survival benefits, while Revolution Medicines’ KRAS program in pancreatic cancer stood out as a breakthrough, receiving a standing ovation at the conference. In breast cancer, the focus was centered on emerging CDK4 selective inhibitors from Pfizer and others. Grail’s multi-cancer early detection readout was also discussed, along with in vivo CAR-T data from Kelonia that showed strong early responses but raised durability questions. *This episode aired on June 5, 2026.

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