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On June 1-2, 2026, Fulcrum Therapeutics said it will discontinue development of pociredir, its experimental oral therapy for sickle-cell disease, after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration concluded there is no viable regulatory path forward because of cancer-risk concerns tied to drugs that target the PRC2 protein complex.
The move followed the global withdrawal in March of Ipsenâs Tazverik amid reports of secondary blood cancers.
Fulcrum said pociredir â which binds a different PRC2 subunit and showed robust fetal haemoglobin increases in early testing â raised no new safety signals in its trials, but the FDA viewed PRC2-targeting agents as carrying a class malignancy risk.
Shares fell about 50-52% on the news, several brokerages cut ratings and slashed price targets, and Goldman suspended coverage.
The company said it has begun cost cuts, will explore strategic alternatives including a potential sale or merger, and had roughly $333.3 million in cash and equivalents as of March 31.








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