an anthropomorphized red and blue pill illustrated in the style of the famous american gothic painting
Alex Hogan/STAT

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to another working week. We hope the weekend respite was relaxing and invigorating, because that oh-so familiar routine of deadlines, online meetings and phone calls has predictably returned. But what can you do? The world, such as it is, continues to spin. So to give it a nudge in a better direction, we are brewing cups of stimulation. Our choice today is salted caramel, a touch of the Jersey Shore as we say around the Pharmalot campus. Meanwhile, here are a few items of interest to start you on your journey, which we hope is meaningful and productive. Best of luck and do keep in touch…

The largest U.S. pharmaceutical industry trade group and several drug companies lost a bid to block a Maryland law requiring the companies to offer discounts on medicines dispensed by third-party pharmacies that contract with hospitals and clinics serving low-income populations, Reuters notes. U.S. District Judge Matthew Maddox refused to issue a preliminary order blocking the law while he hears a challenge to it by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, Novartis, AbbVie and AstraZeneca. The case is among numerous similar challenges to state laws around the country dealing with obligations under the 340B program, a federal program under which hospitals and clinics serving low-income populations can receive discounts on prescription drugs. Drugmakers must participate in the 340B program in order to receive funds from government health insurance programs like Medicare and Medicaid.

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On Sunday, a small biotech company called Summit Therapeutics won a remarkable victory, saying its experimental drug outperformed Merck’s Keytruda, the world’s best-selling drug, in non-small cell lung cancer, the disease that represents the biggest market for the Merck drug, STAT tells us. By itself, Summit’s victory would be a dramatic story, although not an unheard of one in the unpredictable world of biotechnology. But it’s just the start. Because at the center of it is one of the industry’s most iconoclastic figures: Robert “Bob” Duggan, who became a billionaire after he bought up shares of another biotech company, Pharmacyclics, that was a on the brink of failure, developed a breakthrough cancer drug, and sold the company to AbbVie for $21 billion.

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