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24 April, 2026 |
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Eli Lilly’s new weight loss pill Foundayo seems to be falling behind Novo Nordisk’s rival Wegovy pill in terms of weekly prescriptions. Leerink analysts said doctors wrote about 3,700 prescriptions for Foundayo in its second week on the market, compared to 18,000 prescriptions for the Wegovy pill in its second week on the market. While it's still early and the data may have some gaps, the numbers were enough to rattle investors. Lilly's stock was down 4% on Friday. |
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Nicole DeFeudis |
Editor, Endpoints News
@Nicole_DeFeudis
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by Ayisha Sharma
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The FDA said Friday it has issued new fast-track vouchers to three psychedelic companies, and its selections have come as a “surprise” to Wall Street. In an unusual move, the agency didn’t name the sponsors or their programs in its announcement, but said the Commissioner’s National Priority Vouchers are going toward companies
that are advancing psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression, methylone for post-traumatic stress disorder and psilocybin for major depressive disorder. Compass Pathways confirmed it was one of the recipients in a press release issued hours later. A source familiar with the announcement told Endpoints News that the other two recipients are Transcend
Therapeutics and the Usona Institute. Transcend declined to comment, and Usona did not immediately respond to a request for comment. | |
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by Anna Brown
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Novartis has withdrawn its EU application for Pluvicto's expansion into earlier prostate cancer treatment, despite US and UK approval for the same indication. The Swiss drugmaker failed to gain favor with the European regulators for the radioligand therapy’s label expansion, despite winning over the FDA last month, tripling the number of patients who can receive the therapy. The UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency approved Pluvicto’s label expansion in that earlier setting in February. Novartis had applied for Pluvicto to be extended as a treatment for adults with prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-positive, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) who have no, or mild symptoms, after the disease progressed despite using a hormone-blocking drug and when chemotherapy is not an option. | |
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by Drew Armstrong
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MAHA’s sway over HHS could face a fresh test now that President Trump has a new pick for CDC director: Erica Schwartz, a former deputy surgeon general. The
position has been empty since August, when Susan Monarez was ousted after clashes with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Like Monarez, Schwartz is a more traditional public health choice, with a track record of supporting vaccination. But a crucial question will be just how much independence she has from Kennedy's influence and agenda on immunization. Today on Post-Hoc Live at 11 a.m. ET, we’ve got a crossover episode! We'll be joined by Why Should I Trust You? host Brinda Adhikari, whose show takes a look at the MAHA movement and changing trust in
public health. Adhikari will be chatting with me and Endpoints’ MAHA expert Max Bayer to talk about how Schwartz could stabilize a turbulent CDC and what the pick says about MAHA's standing in Trumpworld. | |
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by Ayisha Sharma
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Sanofi’s tolebrutinib is on track to get an approval in Europe for a type of multiple sclerosis even after receiving a complete response letter from the FDA in December. On Friday, the European Medicines Agency’s human medicines committee recommended approval of the BTK inhibitor for secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) without relapses in the past two years. The decision was based in part on data from the Phase 3 HERCULES trial, which showed tolebrutinib delayed time to onset of six-month confirmed disability progression by 31% versus placebo. The FDA rejected tolebrutinib for non-relapsing SPMS in December 2025. In January, the agency published a CRL, which detailed four reasons for the decision, including a serious risk of severe drug-induced liver injury (DILI) and uncertainties about benefits in specific patient subgroups. At that time, Sanofi described the rejection as “unexpected” and said the FDA had raised concerns too late for the
company to make changes. | |
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by Elizabeth Cairns
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Daiichi Sankyo has pushed back the reporting of its annual results, saying it needs more time to finalize the n |
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