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Thursday, September 11, 2025

Silexion Positive Preclinical Data on SIL204 Reach, Activity in Major Pancreatic Cancer Metastatic Sites



Silexion Therapeutics (NASDAQ:SLXN) announced positive preclinical data for its pancreatic cancer drug SIL204. The study demonstrated that subcutaneously administered SIL204 successfully reached major pancreatic cancer metastatic sites and showed anti-tumor activity.

Key findings include successful drug distribution to liver, peritoneum, and lung following a single subcutaneous injection at 5mg/mouse, with statistically significant reductions (p<0.01) in tumor burden observed in the peritoneum, lung, and intestine. The results validate the systemic component of Silexion's dual-route administration strategy.

The company remains on track to initiate Phase 2/3 clinical trials in H1 2026, with regulatory submissions planned for Q4 2025 and Q1 2026.

$150M Oversubscribed Funding: Biotech Maze Therapeutics Attracts Major Healthcare Investors



Maze Therapeutics (NASDAQ:MAZE) has secured an oversubscribed $150.0 million private placement through the sale of common stock and pre-funded warrants. The company is offering 4,000,002 shares at $16.25 per share and 5,231,090 pre-funded warrants at $16.249 each, with the price representing a premium to the last closing price.

The financing includes participation from notable investors such as Frazier Life Sciences, Deep Track Capital, and Janus Henderson Investors. The proceeds will fund the development of MZE829 for APOL1-mediated kidney disease, initiate Phase 2 trials of MZE782 in phenylketonuria and chronic kidney disease, and advance research programs and the Compass platform.

Intercept announces voluntary withdrawal of Ocaliva® for primary biliary cholangitis (PBC)

  Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned biopharmaceutical subsidiary of Alfasigma S.p.A., today announced its decision to voluntarily withdraw OCALIVA® (obeticholic acid) from the US market for the treatment of primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), a rare, progressive liver disease. This decision follows a request from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In addition, FDA has placed a clinical hold on all Intercept clinical trials conducted under a US IND involving obeticholic acid.

OCALIVA received FDA accelerated approval in 2016 for the treatment of PBC in adults with an inadequate response to or intolerance of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). Since then, OCALIVA has played a meaningful role in the treatment landscape for patients living with this rare disease.

Patients currently prescribed OCALIVA for PBC treatment should consult their healthcare professionals before making any changes. Intercept will provide additional information to support healthcare professionals and patients as it works with FDA on the transition process. 

Healthcare professionals who have questions about OCALIVA can contact Intercept Medical Information at medinfo@interceptpharma.com or call 1-844-782-4278. Patients should speak with their healthcare professionals and also may contact Intercept’s Patient Support Services (Interconnect) at 1-844-622-4278. 

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/09/11/3148535/23024/en/Intercept-Announces-Voluntary-Withdrawal-of-OCALIVA-for-Primary-Biliary-Cholangitis-PBC-from-the-US-Market-US-Clinical-Trials-Involving-Obeticholic-Acid-Placed-on-Clinical-Hold.html

FDA Official Vinay Prasad Regains Chief Medical Officer Title

 


Top Food and Drug Administration regulator Vinay Prasad has regained his role as the agency’s chief medical and scientific officer after he abruptly departed and then came back to the agency, according to an update on the agency’s website Thursday.

Prasad returned as the agency’s top regulator for vaccines and gene therapies as head of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research on Aug. 9. The additional chief medical officer role expands his influence and includes representing the agency’s perspective on medical and scientific matters. The position is also listed as having a leadership role in choosing which companies will benefit from a program to accelerate some drug reviews if they align with the agency’s priorities.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-09-11/fda-official-vinay-prasad-regains-chief-medical-officer-title

Thermo Fisher Scientific: Barclays upgrades from equal weight to overweight

 raises the price target from $490 to $550.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/THERMO-FISHER-SCIENTIFIC--14623/

Exact Sciences: Craig-Hallum raises the price target from $65 to $85.

 maintains its buy rating

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/EXACT-SCIENCES-CORPORATIO-9232/

FDA Looks to Streamline Development of Non-Opioid Painkillers

 

New draft guidelines suggest the FDA is open to exercising regulatory flexibility for non-opioid drugs being developed for chronic pain.

The FDA has signaled its openness to accelerating the development of new, non-opioid analgesic treatments for chronic pain in a new draft guidance.

“In certain circumstances, it may be possible to decrease the number of trials required” for a drug developer to seek approval for their pain medication, according to the document, published Wednesday. Broadly speaking, sponsors must typically run at least two well-controlled trials to provide sufficient evidence for their candidates.

But for non-opioid painkillers for chronic pain, the agency is considering allowing the use of just one “single adequate and well-controlled” study, plus confirmatory evidence, as the basis for an application.

Such a change, according to the FDA, will “increase the efficiency of an analgesic development program.”

The guidance is open to commentary until Nov. 10, according to the Federal Register.

“We sense a high degree of FDA interest in helping sponsors develop non-opioid approaches,” analysts at Jefferies said in a note to investors on Wednesday. The firm expects many early-stage biotechs in this space—including Xenon Pharmaceutials and Rapport Therapeutics—to explore these new streamlining strategies proposed by the FDA.

Of note, the FDA will require these proposed painkillers to have “strong scientific justification” for their indication. That is, the drug candidates should have a mechanism of action that is “both clearly understood and shown to directly target the major driver” of pain pathophysiology. Companies should also be able to demonstrate that their investigational drugs are safe, including a “thorough assessment of abuse and misuse potential.”

The FDA’s draft guidance also appears to open the door to the use of biomarkers to establish efficacy.

While the agency explicitly indicated that it would be “difficult” to rely on surrogate or intermediate endpoints—as is the case for drugs accepted into its accelerated pathway—companies are nevertheless encouraged to explore “potential biomarkers” that could allow their candidates to qualify for “an expedited program.” These include the FDA’s fast track, priority review or breakthrough designations.

These draft guidelines come after the landmark approval of Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ Journavx in January, opening up a new mechanism of acute pain treatment for the first time in decades. The drug works by acting on sodium ion channels and prevents the transduction of pain signals back to the central nervous system.

Notably, however, Journavx is indicated for use in acute pain, whereas the FDA’s document explicitly applies to therapies in development for chronic pain.

Journavx’s approval has energized the pain space, and many biotechs are looking to follow in its footsteps. One of these is Lexicon Pharmaceuticals, which is advancing pilavapadin, an oral small-molecule drug designed for neuropathic pain. Also in the space is Sangamo Therapeutics, which is addressing pain via its gene editor ST-503, which targets a gene that encodes for an ion channel protein.

https://www.biospace.com/policy/fda-looks-to-streamline-development-of-non-opioid-painkillers