Skip to main content

Pharma News

Get the latest news from world and India’s leading pharmaceutical companies Pharma Industry, pharmaceutical marketing, generic drugs, and Complete news for Pharmacy and Life Sciences professionals.

  • Baxalta Incorporated, a global biopharmaceutical leader dedicated to delivering transformative therapies to patients with orphan diseases and underserved conditions, announced today that its state-of-the-art recombinant biologic manufacturing facility in Singapore received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval to produce ADVATE [Antihemophilic Factor (Recombinant)] bulk drug substance (BDS). The site received regulatory approval from the European Medicines Agency in January 2014 for the production of ADVATE.

  • NeuroSigma, Inc. (NeuroSigma), a California-based life sciences company, announced that it has received CE Mark approval for its Monarch eTNS System as treatment for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults and children age 7 and older. This CE Mark approval is the first for any non-drug treatment of ADHD in the European Union (EU).

  • Coherus BioSciences and Baxalta has recently announced that CHS-0214, a proposed biosimilar of Enbrel (etanercept), met its primary endpoints in a confirmatory, double-blind, randomized, controlled, two-part phase 3 study. This on-going 52-week study is evaluating the efficacy and safety of CHS-0214 compared to Enbrel in patients with moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis. Coherus and Baxalta initiated a collaboration to develop and commercialise CHS-0214 in September of 2013.

  • Tata Consultancy Services, a leading IT services, consulting and business solutions firm, today announced the go-live of a comprehensive IT and business transformation program for Australian Pharmaceutical Industries (API), a leading Australian health and beauty company.

    [adsense:336x280:8701650588]

  • Researchers have developed a cost-effective one-step test that can screen, detect and confirm hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections from blood or urine samples. Current blood-based HCV testing requires two steps and can be expensive, inconvenient and is not widely available or affordable globally.

Subscribe to Pharma News