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FDA Approves Klisyri (tirbanibulin) for the Treatment of Actinic Keratosis on the Face or Scalp

The Pharma Data

FDA Approves Klisyri (tirbanibulin) for the Treatment of Actinic Keratosis on the Face or Scalp. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Klisyri (tirbanibulin) for the topical treatment of actinic keratosis (AK) on the face or scalp. The FDA approval of Klisyri is a significant milestone for Athenex.

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Kickstarting the use of AI for biotechs: part one

Drug Target Review

3 The value required is more than just a greater number of FDA approvals, it is also about completing milestones with limited capital – ie, biotech survival. The latter group (ie, most of us) are waiting for wet lab validation, market demonstration (FDA approvals), and a few other things (which we often cannot define).

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New Drug Miplyffa Approved for Rare Niemann-Pick Disease Type 3

PLOS: DNA Science

FDA approved a treatment for type 3 of the ultra-rare genetic disease September 20. The new drug is taken with miglustat , which FDA approved for use in NPD3 in 2009. The original approved was in 2003 to treat a type of Gaucher disease. Until today, there were no approved therapies in the US.

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Xolair (omalizumab) Prefilled Syringe for Self-Injection Across All Indications

The Pharma Data

Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the company’s supplemental Biologics License Application for Xolair® (omalizumab) prefilled syringe for self-injection across all approved U.S. with Xolair since its initial approval in 2003. indications. Approximately 460,000 patients have been treated in the U.S.

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Surely You Must be Kidding, PTO?!? “No, and Don’t Call Me Shirley!” – The Seemingly Slapstick (But Yet Unfunny) World of Recent Patent Term Extension Decisions (PART 1)

FDA Law Blog: Biosimilars

156, a patent may be extended only once (even if it would be eligible for extension on more than one occasion because it applies to several FDA-approved products), and only one patent may be extended for each regulatory review period. 2003) , and Biogen lnt’l v. Another case of same-day (and same-time) FDA approvals!

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To List or Not to List; That is the Question – The FTC Signals the Potential for Greater Scrutiny of Patent Information Submissions to FDA

FDA Law Blog: Biosimilars

The closest FDA has come is in a 2003 preamble noting that patents that claim finished dosage forms—which can include “metered aerosols, capsules, metered sprays, gels, and pre-filled drug delivery systems”—should be listed in the Orange Book, suggesting that a patent that claims both the drug substance and the delivery device should be listed.

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Drugs Companies Clap Back at Congress…Then Get Sued

FDA Law Blog: Biosimilars

Both Congress and FTC seem to have spun this tale that the named drug companies have been intentionally abusing the Orange Book patent listing requirements by including device patents in the Orange Book, but it’s really important to note that until FTC took the unusual step of requesting delisting in Fall 2023, FDA not only had provided no guidance (..)

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