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Gilead Hepcludex (Bulevirtide-gmod) FDA Accelerated Approval (May 22): First and Only US Treatment for Chronic Hepatitis Delta Virus, 47-Amino-Acid Lipopeptide NTCP Entry Inhibitor

The FDA granted accelerated approval on May 22, 2026 to Gilead Sciences' Hepcludex (bulevirtide-gmod) 8.5 mg, the first and only approved US treatment for adults living with chronic hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection. Bulevirtide — formerly known as Myrcludex B — is a 47-amino acid, N-terminally myristoylated lipopeptide derived from the pre-S1 domain of the HBV large envelope protein. The molecule binds to the sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) — the entry receptor that HDV and HBV both use to enter hepatocytes — and blocks viral entry as a first-in-class entry inhibitor. The Phase 3 MYR301 trial documented a statistically significant combined virologic and biochemical response at week 48 versus delayed-treatment control, supporting the accelerated-approval threshold. Continued approval depends on confirmatory trial verification of clinical benefit. Bulevirtide has been EU-approved under conditional marketing authorization since 2020. Gilead shares closed Friday at $134.36, up roughly 3%.