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Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Moscow Threatens Retaliation After Ukraine Strikes Russia With 6 US-Made ATACMS Missiles

 Moscow has announced a very serious escalation out of Ukraine on Wednesday, with defense ministry officials saying that six US-made ATACMS ballistic missiles were launched against a Russian airfield inside the country's sovereign territory.

Taganrog is a Black Sea port city in southwestern Russia, and was targeted in the heavy attack. The military claimed that all six were able to be intercepted and downed before reaching their target, with two reported intercepts by a Pantsir air defense system, and the others destroyed after electronic warfare systems diverted them.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, via European Pressphoto Agency

"Missile fragments caused injuries among personnel. There was no destruction, but two buildings in the airfield's technical area and three military vehicles sustained minor shrapnel damage. Civilian vehicles in a nearby parking lot were also damaged," the Russian Defense Ministry statement said.

Apparently this damage occurred through "falling fragments of the missiles" according to the ministry, which also vowed that retaliation is coming for the strike.

"This attack by Western long-range weapons will not go unanswered, and appropriate measures will be taken," it added, but without specifying anything further.

It appears that at least other drones or missiles which were part of the broader assault made it through Russian aerial defenses:

In the early hours of Wednesday, Dec.11, multiple explosions shook the city of Taganrog in Russia’s Rostov region, regional governor Yuri Slyusar reported, describing the attack as a "missile strike."

The attack, reported around 4:20 a.m., triggered air defense systems and caused at least ten explosions, local residents told the Shot Telegram channel. Eyewitnesses suggested the target might have been a military airfield, according to CHEKA-OGPU Telegram channel.

Image source: Russian news Telegram channel АSTRA

It was only in September that President Vladimir Putin declared new 'red lines' for the conflict, asserting that any long-range attack on Russia with West-supplied missiles would be viewed as the as the "direct participation" of NATO countries in the war in Ukraine.

"It would substantially change the very essence, the nature of the conflict," he said at the time, shortly after Washington finally approved its change in policy to allow such attacks. "This will mean that Nato countries, the USA and European states, are fighting with Russia."

With the ATACMS and other Western systems, NATO personnel actually have to assist directly with satellite and targeting data, which includes being able to "input flight missions into these missile systems" - as Putin described earlier.

Putin could now order a major attack on Kiev, or command and control centers of Ukraine's armed forces. Russia has also been targeting locations where it's believed that Western munitions are held. 

All of this will no doubt make it harder for the incoming Trump administration to negotiate a potential peace deal between Ukraine and Russia, something he's vowed to begin from the moment he enters office again.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/ukraine-strikes-russia-six-us-made-atacms-missiles

Macy's gives update on employee who hid $151M

 Macy's provided an update on the former employee who was responsible for hiding approximately $151 million of cumulative delivery expenses over the past three years. 

"We’ve concluded our investigation and are strengthening our existing controls and implementing additional changes designed to prevent this from happening again and demonstrate our strong commitment to corporate governance," Macy's CEO Tony Spring said in a statement. 

TickerSecurityLastChangeChange %
MMACY'S INC.16.93+0.69+4.25%

One employee created erroneous entries between the end of fiscal year 2021 through Nov. 2, 2024.  

Macy's said this loss "had no impact on the company’s reported net cash flows, inventories or vendor payments." The $151 million is only a portion of the approximately $4.36 billion of delivery expenses Macy's said it earned during the same period. 

Spring told analysts on an earnings call that the "responsible individual is no longer with the company following the discovery of their actions," and that Macy's has already implemented "additional controls to be a stronger and more disciplined organization, so that an action like this could not happen again."

Still, the company was forced to delay its full financial results for the third quarter by a few weeks after discovering accounting errors late last month. The department store chain revealed that while preparing its financial statements, it found discrepancies in the delivery expenses of one account, which led to a drop in its stock price.

During the early stages of the investigation, Macy's initially estimated that the hidden erroneous accounting accrual entries totaled between approximately $132 million to $154 million. 

Macy’s


The incident was discovered all while Macy's was trying to turn around its operation as it struggled to compete with rivals. Activist investor Barington Capital Group said Macy’s valuation has suffered a massive blow with shares down about 70% over the past decade due to "long-term challenges in the department store sector and previous management missteps."

On Wednesday, Macy's reported that sales during the third quarter fell 2.4% to $4.7 billion from weakness in certain Macy’s locations as well as its digital channel and cold weather categories. 

The company also cut its earnings forecast. It now projects the share price to fall between $2.25 to $2.50, which is down from the range of $2.55 to $2.90 it reported in August. 

https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/macys-employee-hides-151m-expenses-over-3-years

Reuters Fact-Checks Babylon Bee's 'Allahu Akbar' Replaced 'Cheerio Mate' As UK Top Greeting

 by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Reuters is at it again with their team of ‘fact checkers’. They’re targeting The Babylon Bee, a satirical website, over an article that states the most favoured farewell  in the UK, ‘cheerio mate’ has been replaced with ‘Allahu Akbar.’

The humorous satire piece states, “A recent poll conducted by the University of Oxford just revealed that ‘Allahu Akbar’ has officially replaced ‘Cheerio, mate!’ as the most popular greeting in the UK,” adding that experts called the results of the “survey” a “flippin’ landslide, old bean.”

Kyle Mann, the Editor-in-Chief of the Babylon Bee, shared the lunacy on X, noting that “Reuters fact-checkers reached out for comment on our Babylon Bee story about ‘Allahu Akbar’ replacing ‘Cheerio Mate’ in the UK. I tried to help them out.”Mann then shared screenshots of the ridiculous message he was sent by Reuters 

The message reads “I’m contacting you from the fact-checking desk at Reuters. We investigate false and misleading claims spreading on social media. Our fact checks can help curb the circulation of misinformation.”

By going after satire, OK.

The message continues, “We’re currently looking into a claim that, sharing a Babylon Bee article, says “Allahu Akbar” has officially replaced “Cheerio, mate!” as the most popular greeting in the UK. I have pasted it below for your convenience.”

“We plan to write a fact check to set the record straight. It’s clearly a satirical article but I am reaching out to you should you wish to challenge this or comment in the fact-check article. Please get in touch if you would like to,” it ridiculously adds.

If it’s “clearly a satirical article” why are they wasting time ‘fact checking’ it?

If it said that “Praise Jesus” had replaced “cheerio mate,” would they fact check that? Probably not.

Mann shared a screenshot of his hilarious response, as he told the self appointed arbiters of truth that “This story is true. We stand by its factual accuracy 100%” and then signed the email “Allahu Akbar.”

The whole point of the satirical story was as a comment on the fact that the most common name in England for boys is now Muhammad.

People who work for Reuters are not stupid. They understand what satire is, but they are still engaged on their obsessive quest to label everything that they dislike as “misinformation,” betraying the fact that they are censorious partisan activists.

If you want to go down a rabbit hole with the Reuters fact checking team start here and see how long it takes before you encounter the Southern Poverty Law Center and George Soros. It’s about three or four clicks.

*  *  *

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/reuters-fact-checks-babylon-bee-article-stating-allahu-akbar-has-replaced-cheerio-mate

Moderna’s RSV Vaccines Run Into Safety Roadblock

 

The FDA flagged at least five cases of severe or very severe RSV lower respiratory tract infections in infants immunized with Moderna’s investigational RNA vaccines.

The FDA on Tuesday revealed that it has detected severe side effects in two of Moderna’s experimental mRNA-based respiratory syncytial vaccine candidates, which the biotech is advancing for the immunization of infants.

In a briefing document released ahead of an advisory committee meeting later this week, the regulator’s staffers flagged “an imbalance in severe RSV [lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI)]” in infants given Moderna’s investigational mRNA-1345 and mRNA-1365 shots. Additionally, the report noted that the responses to prophylactic antibody Beyfortus (nirsevimab) were “blunted” after vaccination with the mRNA shots.

The FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) will convene on Thursday to discuss these safety findings for mRNA-1345 and mRNA-1365—though no vote will be held. The panelists will determine “the implications of these findings for ongoing and future pediatric development of other non-live attenuated RSV vaccines,” as well as the potential interactions between RSV prophylactic antibodies and vaccines.

Moderna’s mRNA-1345 won the FDA’s approval in May for use in adults aged 60 years and above, and is being marketed under the brand name mRESVIA. The company was also previously developing the shot for use in infants, but dropped this program in September, according to reporting by Endpoints News. According to the biotech’s website, mRNA-1345 continues to move forward in high-risk adults aged 18 to 59 years, and in a pediatric population.

Meanwhile, mRNA-1365 is being developed as a combination vaccine for RSV and the human metapneumovirus. The candidate is currently in a Phase I study in this indication.

In its briefing document, the FDA revealed that in one study, inoculation with mRNA-1365 led to a case of severe or very severe RSV LRTI in the subgroup of participants aged 8 months to less than 24 months. In a younger subpopulation—aged 5 months to less than 8 months—five such side effects were reported after mRNA-1635 administration.

Moderna was made aware that there were at least two positive RSV LRTI tests in the study by July 17, triggering one of the study’s pause criterion. A few days later, Moderna enacted a “study-wide pause,” according to the briefing document, amid its ongoing safety investigation.

These new safety data come as a blow to Moderna, which was already struggling to find its footing in the RSV vaccine space, where it is in third place. GSK became the frontrunner in this field when it won the FDA’s first approval in May 2023 for Arexvy, which has since gone on to corner around two-thirds of all retail RSV vaccinations in the U.S.

Pfizer has fallen to second place with its Abrysvo, though recent approvals in a broader adult population and in immunocompromised adults could help the pharma shore up sales for its shot.

https://www.biospace.com/drug-development/modernas-rsv-vaccines-run-into-safety-roadblock

BioNTech Builds Case for PD-L1/VEGF Bispecific With Promising Breast Cancer Data

 

BNT327, now in early-phase trials, is part of a class of drugs that could one day challenge Keytruda’s dominance. BioNTech obtained the candidate when it bought Biotheus last month in an acquisition deal that could reach up to $950 million.

BioNTech on Tuesday revealed Phase Ib/II data for its investigational PD-L1/VEGF bispecific antibody BNT327, touting encouraging response and survival outcomes in patients with locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.

The results, presented at the ongoing 2024 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, showed a confirmed overall response of 73.8% at a median follow-up of 18.1 months, with a 95.2% disease control rate. Patients took a median of 1.9 months to respond to BNT327, and the response then persisted for a median of 11.7 months.

Matured median progression-free survival was 13.5 months in the study’s intention-to-treat population. Median overall survival (OS) had not yet been reached at readout, though the 12-month OS rate was found to be 80.8%. OS analysis had nearly matured at 18 months, yielding a 72.2% rate at this time point.

As for safety, BioNTech documented treatment-related toxicities in all treatment patients, nearly 60% of which were grade 3 and 4 in severity. The most common side effects included neutropenia, leukocytopenia, anemia and proteinuria. Almost a third of patients developed immune-related adverse events, including rashes and hyperthyroidism. None of the patients died due to side effects.

Tuesday’s data come from a Phase Ib/II study, conducted entirely in China, which combined BNT327 with nab-paclitaxel. At the time of analysis, 42 patients had evaluable data, and all had been previously untreated. BNT327 was given at a 20-mg/kg dose every two weeks until unacceptable toxicity or disease progression.

BNT327 belongs to an emerging—and closely watched—class of cancer therapies that target both the PD-1 and VEGF pathways, a treatment approach that some companies are betting could eventually dethrone Keytruda as the cornerstone treatment in cancer.

The buzz around this dual-targeting mechanism started in September, when Akeso and Summit Therapeutics unveiled Phase III data for their PD-1/VEGF bispecific ivonescimab. The companies claimed victory over Keytruda after ivonescimab cut the risk of disease progression or death by 50% in patients with non-small cell lung cancer, as compared with Merck’s blockbuster.

Analysts at the time recommended caution. “Merck has a very large amount of data for pembrolizumab [Keytruda] in multiple tumors that are unlikely to be penetrated anytime soon, even if ivonescimab begins to run trials challenging in these indications,” BMO Capital Markets wrote in a note.

Still, BioNTech is betting on the PD-1/VEGF niche. Last month, it went all-in on BNT327 when it acquired Biotheus—the original developer of the bispecific—for up to $950 million. BMO said in a note at the time that the acquisition was a “good deal” for BioNTech. The analyst firm expects $2 billion in sales for BNT327 by 2032 “based on indications we believe BNTX could develop.”

https://www.biospace.com/drug-development/biontech-builds-case-for-pd-l1-vegf-bispecific-with-promising-breast-cancer-data

Pushback Against IRA’s Controversial ‘Pill Penalty’ Faces Stiff Budgetary Headwinds

 

The EPIC Act has been proposed with bipartisan and industry support to give small molecule drugs the same protection against price negotiation as biologics, but concerns over how to balance the federal budget could prevent a short-term fix to the IRA.

As President-elect Donald Trump’s administration takes shape, the future of the Inflation Reduction Act’s drug price negotiation program has come into question. The Biden administration announced prices for the first 10 drugs subject to negotiations in August, on the second anniversary of President Joe Biden’s signing the IRA into law, but since its inception, the biopharma industry has pushed back against the law.

One aspect of the IRA that has proven particularly controversial is the so-called “pill penalty.” This refers to a provision in the law allowing small molecule medicines to be eligible for selection nine years after FDA approval, four years before large molecule medicines can be subject to negotiations. Critics argue that this disparity could harm investment in small molecule drug development.

“What the shorter price negotiation period will affect in the short term is post-market development, with companies less likely to develop a second or a third indication for a small molecule, particularly relative to a large molecule, because that might not be a profitable investment,” Kirsten Axelsen, senior advisor at Charles Rivers Associates, told BioSpace. “In the longer term, I think we’re going to see more of a shift towards large molecule drug development.”

The Ensuring Pathways to Innovative Cures (EPIC) Act has been proposed to provide parity for the two drug classes, extending small molecules’ negotiation protection periods to the 13 years currently enjoyed by biologics. In addition, The Orphan Cures Act aims to expand orphan drug exemption and The MINI Act seeks an extension to 13 years specifically for genetically targeted medicines such as siRNA therapies that are currently grouped with small molecule medicines. All three bills have received bipartisan support.

“I do feel that Congress wants to provide relief with regard to orphan drugs, and with regards to small molecule drugs and the timeframe that they qualify to be reviewed,” policy analyst Ethan Siegal, founder of The Washington Exchange, said on a Guggenheim call last month about the incoming Trump administration. “So I do think those two items could hitch a ride on the tax budget reconciliation bill.”

Ian Spatz, national advisor at Manatt Health, was not as confident. While the IRA’s drug price negotiation program will undoubtedly be a key part of Biden’s legacy—and this has led to expectations that it will become a major target for the incoming administration, given that President-elect Donald Trump spent his first year in office last go round repealing the actions of his predecessor, President Barack Obama—Spatz suggested that eliminating the “pill penalty” might be beyond the reach of the Trump administration.

This is due to the savings in federal spending made possible through the IRA. Any significant changes to the law could result in the Congressional Budget Office highlighting the budgetary cost, with Congress required to find sufficient savings to offset the revisions, Spatz concluded.

Capitol Street, a healthcare consulting firm, also noted these same budgetary restrictions may rule out the EPIC Act in the short term but could make the orphan drug change more “palatable,” with this also having bipartisan support and being significantly less costly.

Beyond these budget concerns are arguments against an extension of small molecules’ period of exclusivity. Sean Tu, professor of law at West Virginia University, told BioSpace he agrees with the push for parity between small molecules and biologics but argued that the law should give all new medicines nine years, not 13, before a negotiated price comes into effect.

“We want to incentivize innovation,” Tu said, “but after that innovation ends or after the market exclusivity period ends, we want cheaper alternatives.”

The Future of Small Molecule R&D

At the heart of the debate over the price negotiation period are the incentives that have been provided to biologics, under the assumption that development times are longer and more costly. Tu is an author of recent research suggesting that biologics do not need this extra protection. Compared to small molecules, biologics were found to achieve greater success in clinical trials and possess a higher median time to biosimilar competition (20.3 years to 12.6 years). Biologics also brought in higher median revenues each year following FDA approval.

Axelsen agreed that “there is no good reason” for the extension to provide an advantage to biologics, with this measure being carried over from the assumption that the development periods for these drugs would take longer and be more costly than small molecule medicines. But she pushed back against Tu’s argument that both small molecules and biologics should have only nine years of protection against price negotiations. She suggested that while such a change could save money for the federal government in the short term, it would also reduce incentives for drug development.

Both PhRMA and BIO, industry lobbies for the pharma and biotech industries, have been vocal in their opposition to the “pill penalty.” PhRMA has been critical of the shorter timelines for small molecules, echoing Axelsen’s assessment that it could lead to reduced post-marketing studies, and calling on Congress to “prioritize reforms to fix the ‘pill penalty.’” BIO also put its support behind the EPIC Act and raising the small molecule exemption to 13 years, referring to this as a “top priority” for the organization.

If left unchanged, the IRA could reduce the expected revenue of selected small molecule drugs in the U.S. market by 8%, with an implied drop in R&D investment of $232.1 billion over 20 years and 177 fewer small molecule medicines developed, according to an analysis by University of Chicago policy researchers. Axelsen also stated that the dominant form of drugs selected under the IRA will be small molecules, as Medicare Part D involves drugs that tend to be dispensed from pharmacies.

“There is a valid concern that the price negotiation period is not enough time for small molecule manufacturers to recoup R&D costs,” Joel White, president of the Council for Affordable Health Coverage, wrote in an email to BioSpace. “We are already seeing biotech companies shifting investment away from small-molecule drugs.”.

One example of a larger company taking such action is Pfizer, which announced plans to favor biologics within its oncology pipeline due to the influence of the IRA. This shift could accelerate an existing trend across the industry in the steady movement towards a greater proportion of the global R&D pipeline being composed of biologics.

In the short term, the IRA’s impact will not be seen on the drugs selected for price negotiation until 2026. For Axelsen, this means policymakers could take a wait-and-see approach, but she noted that with the issue being a top priority for investors, drug developers and certain politicians, the pressure to address the “pill penalty” will remain at a high level.

https://www.biospace.com/policy/pushback-against-iras-controversial-pill-penalty-faces-stiff-budgetary-headwinds

J&J, Legend Shrug Off Carvykti’s Challengers With New Phase III Data

 

With nearly 90% of patients showing no detectable cancer cells after treatment, J&J and Legend’s Carvykti could stave off competition from emerging CAR T therapies such as Gilead and Arcellx’s anito-cel.

Johnson & Johnson and Legend Biotech on Tuesday unveiled new data from the Phase III CARTITUDE-4 trial demonstrating that their CAR T therapy Carvykti (ciltacabtagene autoleucel) achieves a high rate of disease clearance in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.

After almost three years of median follow-up, 89% of evaluable patients achieved minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity, meaning that they had no detectable cancer cells after Carvykti treatment.

At this time point, Carvykti’s MRD negativity rate is “more than double” than that in patients treated with standard therapies, a treatment effect that was highly statistically significant with a p-value less than 0.0001, according to Tuesday’s announcement.

Results were even better at an earlier follow-up—at a median of 30 months—at which point 52% of Carvykti-treated patients had achieved MRD negativity, as compared with 10% of those on standard regimens.

As for safety, CARTITUDE-4 showed that 97% of patients in both study arms experienced grade 3 or 4 treatment-emergent adverse events. In the Carvykti group, seven developed hematologic second primary malignancies, while 50 died. Progressive disease accounted for 21 of the deaths.

Tuesday’s readout follows an earlier data drop in September, which showed that Carvykti led to a significant increase in overall survival and cut the risk of death by 45% versus standard therapies. At the time, J&J and Legend claimed that Carvykti was the “first cell therapy to significantly extend overall survival versus standard therapies” in this indication.

Taken together, MRD negativity and survival data point to the potential of Carvykti to “redefine the treatment landscape for patients diagnosed with this complex disease,” Edmon Chan, EMEA Therapeutic Area Lead for Hematology at J&J Innovative Medicines, said in a statement.

William Blair analysts were likewise optimistic about Carvykti, though to a more measured degree. In a Tuesday note, the analysts called J&J and Legend’s data “robust” and said it will “further support the use of Carvykti in the second-line setting.”

Still, William Blair thinks that Tuesday’s data on MRD will ultimately only be “incrementally positive” for the partners—specifically for Legend—especially as investors become increasingly focused on “the impact that emerging BCMA CAR-Ts could have on Carvkyti’s peak market share and revenue.”

One of these upcoming CAR T challengers is Gilead’s and Arcellx’s anitocabtagene autoleucel, which on Sunday showed efficacy results that were competitive to Carvykti, coupled with a superior safety profile that could help the investigational therapy carve its own niche in the market.

In particular, Gilead and Arcellx highlighted that anito-cel had no delayed neurotoxicities, such as cranial nerve palsies or Parkinsonism. In a Monday note, BMO Capital Markets analysts said that safety “is a key focus for commercialization” for anito-cel, which could allow it to “overcome Carvkyti’s lead” in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. Gilead and Arcellx hope to launch anito-cel by 2026.

https://www.biospace.com/drug-development/j-j-legend-shrug-off-carvyktis-challengers-with-new-phase-iii-data