Drug Discovery Weekly — April 7, 2026
Biopharma M&A momentum accelerated dramatically in March, with seven deals worth a combined $29 billion in two weeks, signaling a blockbuster year ahead; Neurocrine Biosciences announced a $2.9 billion acquisition of Soleno Therapeutics as VYKAT XR sales soar; and Q2 2026 is set up as a pivotal regulatory season, headlined by upcoming FDA decisions on Dato-DXd in TNBC and Orca-T in blood cancers.
Drug Discovery Weekly — April 7, 2026
FDA & Regulatory Decisions

Q2 2026 FDA Decision Calendar Heats Up with High-Stakes Oncology Reviews
Targeted Oncology and HCPLive both published updated Q2 2026 FDA decision trackers within the past 24 hours, spotlighting seven critical regulatory milestones investors and clinicians should watch closely. Among the most anticipated decisions are datopotamab deruxtecan (Dato-DXd) for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) and Orca-T, a precision cellular therapy targeting blood cancers — both of which analysts say could meaningfully reshape survival outcomes and precision oncology care.
Beyond oncology, the FDA review docket for April includes treatments for Alzheimer's disease agitation, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), hematological malignancies, HIV-1, and obesity, underscoring the agency's broad therapeutic footprint in Q2.
Vertex CF Label Expansions Set Precedent for Incremental Regulatory Strategy
Fierce Pharma's regulatory tracker — updated within the past week — recorded that Vertex Pharmaceuticals secured broader FDA labels for its cystic fibrosis medicines Alyftrek and Trikafta, reflecting a continuing strategy of expanding existing approvals into adjacent patient populations rather than pursuing entirely new molecular entities. The label expansions deepen Vertex's dominance in the CF space.
Q1 2026 Oncology Approvals: Nine FDA Decisions in Three Months
The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) catalogued nine FDA oncology approvals in Q1 2026, spanning blood cancers, pancreatic cancer, and other tumor types — a pace consistent with recent years as the agency continues to prioritize serious and life-threatening diseases.
Clinical Trial Spotlight
Capricor's HOPE-3 Phase 3 Trial Meets Primary Endpoint in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Capricor Therapeutics announced positive topline results from its pivotal Phase 3 HOPE-3 study of deramiocel in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study (n=106) met both its primary endpoint (PUL v2.0, p=0.03) and the key secondary cardiac endpoint (left ventricular ejection fraction, LVEF, p=0.04). Both endpoints achieved statistical significance, a notable achievement given the dual cardiac and motor function burden of DMD. The results position deramiocel as a potential new standard of care in a disease where treatment options remain limited.
Novocure's PANOVA-3 Delivers Overall Survival Benefit in Pancreatic Cancer
Novocure announced that its Phase 3 PANOVA-3 trial of Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) therapy met its primary endpoint with a statistically significant improvement in overall survival for patients with unresectable, locally advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma treated in the first line with TTFields combined with gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel. Pancreatic cancer remains one of the deadliest malignancies with a five-year survival rate below 13%, making this result a potentially transformative advance. Novocure plans to file for regulatory approval based on these data.
Karyopharm's SENTRY Trial Achieves First Co-Primary Endpoint in Myelofibrosis
Karyopharm Therapeutics reported in late March that its Phase 3 SENTRY trial in myelofibrosis met its first co-primary endpoint, demonstrating a statistically significant improvement in spleen volume reduction. However, across other secondary and exploratory endpoints — including progression-free survival, hemoglobin stabilization, and bone marrow fibrosis improvement — no meaningful differences were observed between arms. The mixed profile will require careful label negotiations with the FDA.
Deals & Pipeline Moves

Seven Biopharma Deals in 12 Days: $29 Billion in Late-March Flurry
Fierce Pharma reported — published April 6 — that the final two weeks of March 2026 produced seven biopharma transactions worth a combined $29 billion, a pace of dealmaking that analysts say signals 2026 will be a prime year for M&A. The surge reflects industry players rushing to replenish pipelines and diversify therapeutic portfolios ahead of anticipated patent cliffs. Notably, both Biogen's $5.6 billion purchase of Apellis Pharmaceuticals and Lilly's $6.3 billion bid for Centessa used contingent value rights (CVRs), a voucher-like security seeing renewed interest as a deal-bridging mechanism.
Neurocrine Biosciences Acquires Soleno Therapeutics for $2.9 Billion
In a deal announced April 6, Neurocrine Biosciences agreed to acquire Soleno Therapeutics for $2.9 billion as sales of VYKAT XR soar. VYKAT XR (diazoxide choline extended-release) targets Prader-Willi Syndrome, a rare genetic disorder, and its commercial trajectory appears to be the strategic driver of this transaction. The acquisition extends Neurocrine's rare disease franchise beyond its established CNS platform.
Pharma and Biotech Giants Ramp Up M&A to Boost Pipelines
A broader analysis published April 6 by TradingView/Zacks confirms that M&A in the pharma and biotech sector has accelerated notably year-to-date, building on a rebound in 2025. Industry focus appears centered on portfolio expansion, continuous pipeline innovation, and a growing emphasis on AI-driven drug discovery. The trend suggests that larger pharmaceutical companies are increasingly willing to pay significant premiums to access validated late-stage assets.
Analysis: Development of the Week
Neurocrine's $2.9B Soleno Acquisition — Rare Disease Deal Signals Commercial Confidence in VYKAT XR
The April 6 announcement that Neurocrine Biosciences will acquire Soleno Therapeutics for $2.9 billion is this week's most strategically significant development, and it merits closer examination for what it reveals about the current dealmaking environment and the rare disease commercial landscape.
Why It Matters
Neurocrine's offer — and its implied premium — is anchored in the commercial performance of VYKAT XR, diazoxide choline extended-release, which targets the hyperphagia (pathological overeating) associated with Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS). PWS affects roughly 1 in 15,000 people and has historically been an underserved market with no approved pharmacological treatments for the core symptom of hyperphagia. The fact that VYKAT XR's sales trajectory is described as "soaring" suggests rapid uptake among a patient population with high unmet need and caregivers willing to advocate aggressively for reimbursement.
Competitive Landscape Implications
Rare disease M&A is increasingly competitive. Neurocrine's move follows BioMarin's $4.8 billion acquisition of Amicus Therapeutics and Biogen's $5.6 billion purchase of Apellis — both announced in recent days — suggesting that large-cap companies with strong commercial infrastructure view rare disease as a growth engine capable of offsetting losses from primary care and generics competition. Soleno's acquisition deepens Neurocrine's rare disease franchise at a moment when the company's existing portfolio (valbenazine/Ingrezza, crinecerfont) provides substantial commercial and regulatory credibility.
Patient Impact
For the estimated 400,000 to 500,000 PWS patients globally, Neurocrine's commercial infrastructure — including its experienced rare disease sales force and payer access teams — could meaningfully accelerate patient identification and treatment initiation compared to what Soleno, as a smaller biotech, could achieve independently. That said, the acquisition premium also raises questions about long-term pricing sustainability in a reimbursement environment under intensifying scrutiny.
CVR Innovation in Deal Structuring
It is worth noting that the week's dealmaking has also highlighted the renewed use of CVRs (contingent value rights) — as seen in both the Biogen-Apellis and Lilly-Centessa transactions — as a mechanism to bridge valuation gaps when buyers and sellers disagree on the risk-adjusted worth of late-stage assets. This deal structuring innovation may become increasingly common as asset prices remain elevated and acquirers seek downside protection.
What to Watch
1. Dato-DXd PDUFA Date (Q2 2026) — The FDA's decision on datopotamab deruxtecan (AstraZeneca/Daiichi Sankyo) for triple-negative breast cancer is among the most watched oncology approvals in Q2. A positive outcome would represent a significant expansion of the ADC (antibody-drug conjugate) therapeutic class into TNBC.
2. Orca-T FDA Decision — The cell therapy Orca-T, targeting blood cancers, faces its FDA review window in Q2 2026. If approved, it could redefine precision cellular therapy in hematological malignancies.
3. April FDA Decisions: Alzheimer's Agitation, FSGS, HIV-1, Obesity — Multiple PDUFA dates in April 2026 span several high-value therapeutic areas. Watch for outcomes on the FSGS treatment (high-priority given limited options) and the obesity candidate, which enters a crowded but rapidly expanding market.
4. Capricor NDA Filing Timeline for Deramiocel — Following the positive HOPE-3 Phase 3 results, attention will turn to Capricor Therapeutics' NDA submission timeline. The company must now prepare and file with the FDA, with a potential approval path that could bring the first cell-based therapy to the DMD market.
5. Novocure FDA Submission for TTFields in Pancreatic Cancer — With PANOVA-3 data in hand, Novocure's regulatory filing timeline will be closely watched. Pancreatic cancer remains one of the most lethal malignancies, and an FDA approval here would mark a rare advance in a field starved for effective therapies.
Drug Discovery Weekly is published for informational purposes. All deal values and clinical data are sourced from company press releases and industry reporting as of the publication date. Readers should conduct independent due diligence before making investment or clinical decisions.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.
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