Viatris made waves Thursday with a major regulatory haul spanning its entire pipeline—most notably securing FDA approval for its octreotide acetate injectable suspension, marking a significant milestone in the generic depot drug space. The approved formulation mirrors Sandostatin LAR Depot and provides long-acting symptom management for rare disorders like acromegaly, joining three other injectable approvals the agency has greenlighted so far this year.
The Generic Depot Drug Play: What It Means
The octreotide acetate approval represents the company’s fourth injectable win in 2025, clustering alongside iron sucrose, paclitaxel, and liposomal amphotericin B. For patients requiring depot drug therapy—long-acting formulations designed to minimize dosing frequency—this generic entry could reshape treatment accessibility and affordability in the rare disease segment.
Contraceptive Patch Clears FDA Desk; Decision Coming July 2026
In parallel, Viatris advanced its low-dose estrogen weekly transdermal contraceptive patch through FDA review gates. The patch combines 150 mcg norelgestromin and 17.5 mcg ethinyl estradiol and targets women with BMI below 30 kg/m² seeking non-invasive, reversible birth control options. The FDA assigned a July 30, 2026 action date, setting the clock for approval decision.
Gene Therapy Momentum: MR-146 IND Cleared for Corneal Disease Trial
The company also secured investigational new drug clearance for MR-146, an AAV gene therapy candidate designed to combat neurotrophic keratopathy (NK)—a rare but vision-threatening corneal degeneration affecting roughly 73,000 Americans. Viatris plans to launch the Phase 1/2 CORVITA trial in H1 2026, testing whether gene therapy can halt or reverse the progressive corneal damage NK causes.
Japan Market Expansion: Pitolisant Advances in Sleep Disorders
Rounding out the regulatory sprint, Japan’s PMDA accepted Viatris’s drug application for pitolisant in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). The submission leans on Phase 3 data showing that patients receiving pitolisant scored significantly lower on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale compared to placebo (p=0.007) after 12 weeks—even among those whose daytime sleepiness persisted despite CPAP therapy. A separate narcolepsy application for Japan is targeted by year-end.
The flurry of regulatory momentum positions Viatris as a serious player across multiple therapeutic frontiers, from generic depot drug formulations to cutting-edge gene therapies and novel sleep disorder treatments.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Viatris Wins FDA Green Light for Generic Depot Drug; Weekly Contraceptive Patch Enters FDA Review Phase
Viatris made waves Thursday with a major regulatory haul spanning its entire pipeline—most notably securing FDA approval for its octreotide acetate injectable suspension, marking a significant milestone in the generic depot drug space. The approved formulation mirrors Sandostatin LAR Depot and provides long-acting symptom management for rare disorders like acromegaly, joining three other injectable approvals the agency has greenlighted so far this year.
The Generic Depot Drug Play: What It Means
The octreotide acetate approval represents the company’s fourth injectable win in 2025, clustering alongside iron sucrose, paclitaxel, and liposomal amphotericin B. For patients requiring depot drug therapy—long-acting formulations designed to minimize dosing frequency—this generic entry could reshape treatment accessibility and affordability in the rare disease segment.
Contraceptive Patch Clears FDA Desk; Decision Coming July 2026
In parallel, Viatris advanced its low-dose estrogen weekly transdermal contraceptive patch through FDA review gates. The patch combines 150 mcg norelgestromin and 17.5 mcg ethinyl estradiol and targets women with BMI below 30 kg/m² seeking non-invasive, reversible birth control options. The FDA assigned a July 30, 2026 action date, setting the clock for approval decision.
Gene Therapy Momentum: MR-146 IND Cleared for Corneal Disease Trial
The company also secured investigational new drug clearance for MR-146, an AAV gene therapy candidate designed to combat neurotrophic keratopathy (NK)—a rare but vision-threatening corneal degeneration affecting roughly 73,000 Americans. Viatris plans to launch the Phase 1/2 CORVITA trial in H1 2026, testing whether gene therapy can halt or reverse the progressive corneal damage NK causes.
Japan Market Expansion: Pitolisant Advances in Sleep Disorders
Rounding out the regulatory sprint, Japan’s PMDA accepted Viatris’s drug application for pitolisant in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). The submission leans on Phase 3 data showing that patients receiving pitolisant scored significantly lower on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale compared to placebo (p=0.007) after 12 weeks—even among those whose daytime sleepiness persisted despite CPAP therapy. A separate narcolepsy application for Japan is targeted by year-end.
The flurry of regulatory momentum positions Viatris as a serious player across multiple therapeutic frontiers, from generic depot drug formulations to cutting-edge gene therapies and novel sleep disorder treatments.