The U.S. Food and Drug Administration released its official list of novel drug approvals for 2025, marking a year of significant therapeutic breadth and scientific innovation. Novel drugs are defined as new molecular entities or biologics approved for use in the United States for the first time, offering patients new treatment options across a wide range of diseases and clinical needs.
In 2025, the FDA approved 46 novel drugs, spanning oncology, rare diseases, cardiology, immunology, infectious disease, hematology, metabolic conditions, and more. This diverse slate of approvals reflects continued investment and progress across therapeutic areas, with notable implications for 2026 drug development, regulatory priorities, and industry strategy.
A Broad Therapeutic Landscape
The 2025 approvals show that innovation is not confined to a handful of disease categories but distributed across many areas of unmet need.
Oncology remains a central focus. Drugs such as Komzifti (ziftomenib), a menin inhibitor for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia with specific mutations, highlight the continued role of precision medicine in cancer therapy. Other oncology approvals include targeted therapies for non small cell lung cancer and treatments for hormone receptor positive breast cancer.
Cardiometabolic and rare diseases also featured prominently. Myqorzo (aficamten) was approved for obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, while Lerochol (lerodalcibep liga) received approval for hypercholesterolemia. Therapies for rare genetic and metabolic disorders, including Kygevvi for thymidine kinase 2 deficiency and Redemplo (plozasiran) for familial chylomicronemia syndrome, expanded treatment options for patients with historically limited alternatives.
Immunology and inflammation continued to attract regulatory attention. Voyxact (sibeprenlimab szsi) was approved to reduce proteinuria in IgA nephropathy, while depemokimab ulaa expanded treatment options for asthma. Sebetralstat (Ekterly) added an oral therapy for hereditary angioedema attacks.
Infectious disease innovation also advanced. New oral treatments for gonorrhea and uncomplicated urinary tract infections were approved, addressing growing concerns around antimicrobial resistance and the need for convenient, effective therapies.
Neuromuscular and autoimmune conditions gained additional options as well, including the approval of Imaavy (nipocalimab) for generalised myasthenia gravis, reflecting continued momentum in immune mediated disorders.
Together, these approvals demonstrate that the FDA continues to support both traditional small molecule drugs and complex biologics, including monoclonal antibodies and emerging therapeutic modalities.
Trends Shaping the 2025 Approval Landscape
Several clear trends emerge from the 2025 novel drug approvals.
Precision and targeted approaches are increasingly prominent. Many oncology and rare disease therapies are designed for genetically or biologically defined patient subgroups, reflecting the maturation of precision medicine pipelines.
Convenience and route of administration are also shaping development. The approval of oral therapies for conditions traditionally managed with injections or infusions highlights a growing focus on patient adherence and quality of life.
Therapeutic diversity is another defining feature of 2025. Unlike years dominated by a single therapeutic theme, approvals this year were spread across cardiovascular disease, oncology, infectious disease, immunology, and rare disorders.
Finally, unmet medical need remains a central driver. Many of the approved drugs address conditions with limited prior treatment options, reinforcing the FDA’s continued emphasis on areas of high clinical and societal impact.
What This Means for 2026
The 2025 approval cohort offers important signals for the year ahead.
Target driven development strategies are likely to accelerate, with earlier use of biomarkers and patient stratification becoming standard practice. Successes in oncology and rare disease approvals will encourage sponsors to design trials around well defined molecular mechanisms.
Competition in cardiometabolic and immunology markets is expected to intensify. New entrants may drive further innovation, lifecycle management strategies, and combination approaches in these increasingly crowded therapeutic areas.
Infectious disease development may see renewed momentum. Regulatory support for novel antibiotics suggests continued openness to advancing therapies that address antimicrobial resistance, even in challenging commercial environments.
Rare disease programmes are also likely to remain attractive. The breadth of approvals in 2025 underscores the viability of orphan drug development from both a regulatory and commercial perspective.
Finally, regulatory flexibility is expected to continue influencing development strategies. Ongoing discussions around streamlined trial designs, optimal dosing frameworks, and adaptive approval pathways may shape how sponsors approach 2026 submissions.
Looking Ahead
As 2026 progresses, attention will turn to how these newly approved therapies perform in real world clinical use and how upcoming pipeline candidates differentiate themselves. Areas to watch include next generation immunotherapies, continued innovation in infectious disease, expansion of cardiometabolic indications, and further evolution of regulatory science.
Overall, the FDA’s novel drug approvals in 2025 reflect a mature and diversified innovation ecosystem. The range of mechanisms, modalities, and indications approved this year suggests that the pace of meaningful therapeutic advancement is likely to continue, setting the stage for another active year in drug development.
FDA Novel Drug Therapy Approvals for 2025
No. |
Drug Name |
Active Ingredient |
Approval Date |
FDA-approved use on approval date* |
| 46. | Nereus | tradipitant | 12/30/2025 | To treat vomiting associated with motion |
| 45. | Yartemlea | narsoplimab-wuug | 12/23/2025 | To treat hematopoietic stem cell transplant-associated thrombotic microangiopathy |
| 44. | Myqorzo | aficamten | 12/19/2025 | To treat symptomatic obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy |
| 43. | Exdensur | depemokimab-ulaa | 12/16/2025 | To treat severe asthma characterized by an eosinophilic phenotype as an add-on maintenance therapy |
| 42. | Cardamyst | etripamil | 12/12/2025 | To treat episodes of paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia |
| 41. | Nuzolvence | zoliflodacin | 12/12/2025 | To treat uncomplicated urogenital gonorrhea due to Neisseria gonorrhoeae |
| 40. | Lerochol | lerodalcibep-liga | 12/12/2025 | To reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in adults with hypercholesterolemia, including heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, as an adjunct to diet and exercise |
| 39. | Voyxact | sibeprenlimab-szsi | 11/25/2025 | To reduce proteinuria in primary immunoglobulin A nephropathy in adults at risk for disease progression |
| 38. | Hyrnuo | sevabertinib | 11/19/2025 | To treat locally advanced or metastatic non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer with tumors that have activating HER2 tyrosine kinase domain activating mutations in patients who received a systemic therapy |
| 37. | Redemplo | plozasiran | 11/18/2025 | To reduce triglycerides in adults with familial chylomicronemia syndrome |
| 36. | Komzifti | ziftomenib | 11/13/2025 | To treat adults with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia with a susceptible nucleophosmin 1 mutation who have no satisfactory alternative treatment options |
| 35. | Kygevvi | doxecitine and doxribtimine | 11/3/2025 | To treat thymidine kinase 2 deficiency in patients who start to show symptoms when they are 12 years old or younger |
| 34. | Lynkuet | elinzanetant | 10/24/2025 | To treat moderate-to-severe vasomotor symptoms due to menopauseDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 33. | Jascayd | nerandomilast | 10/7/2025 | To treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis |
| 32. | Rhapsido | remibrutinib | 9/30/2025 | To treat chronic spontaneous urticaria in adults who remain symptomatic despite H1 antihistamine treatmentDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 31. | Palsonify | paltusotine | 9/25/2025 | To treat acromegaly in adults who had an inadequate response to surgery and/or for whom surgery is not an option |
| 30. | Inluriyo | imlunestrant | 9/25/2025 | To treat estrogen receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, estrogen receptor-1-mutated advanced or metastatic breast cancer with disease progression following at least one line of endocrine therapy |
| 29. | Forzinity | elamipretide | 9/19/2025 | To improve muscle strength in patients with Barth syndrome weighing at least 30 kg |
| 28. | Keytruda Qlex | pembrolizumab and berahyaluronidase alfa-pmph | 9/19/2025 | To treat adult and pediatric (12 years and older) solid tumor indications approved for the intravenous formulation of pembrolizumab |
| 27. | Wayrilz | rilzabrutinib | 8/29/2025 | To treat persistent or chronic immune thrombocytopenia that has not sufficiently responded to immunoglobulins, anti-D therapy, or corticosteroids |
| 26. | Dawnzera | donidalorsen | 8/21/2025 | To prevent attacks of hereditary angioedemaDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 25. | Brinsupri | brensocatib | 8/12/2025 | To treat non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasisDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 24. | Hernexeos | zongertinib | 8/8/2025 | To treat adults with unresectable or metastatic non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer whose tumors have HER2 tyrosine kinase domain activating mutations, as detected by an FDA-approved test, and who have received prior systemic therapyDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 23. | Modeyso | dordaviprone | 8/6/2025 | To treat diffuse midline glioma harboring an H3 K27M mutation with progressive disease following prior therapyDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 22. | Vizz | aceclidine | 7/31/2025 | To treat presbyopiaDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 21. | Sephience | sepiapterin | 7/28/2025 | To treat hyperphenylalaninemia in patients with sepiapterin-responsive phenylketonuria, in conjunction with a phenylalanine-restricted dietDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 20. | Anzupgo | delgocitinib | 7/23/2025 | To treat moderate-to-severe chronic hand eczema when topical corticosteroids are not advisable or produce an inadequate responseDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 19. | Ekterly | sebetralstat | 7/3/2025 | To treat acute attacks of hereditary angioedemaDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 18. | Zegfrovy | sunvozertinib | 7/2/2025 | To treat locally advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer with epidermal growth factor receptor exon 20 insertion mutations, as detected by an FDA-approved test, with disease progression on or after platinum-based chemotherapyDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 17. | Lynozyfic | linvoseltamab-gcpt | 7/2/2025 | To treat relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma after at least four prior lines of therapy, including a proteasome inhibitor, an immunomodulatory agent, and an anti CD38 monoclonal antibody |
| 16. | Andembry | garadacimab-gxii | 6/16/2025 | To prevent attacks of hereditary angioedemaDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 15. | Ibtrozi | taletrectinib | 6/11/2025 | To treat locally advanced or metastatic ROS1-positive non-small cell lung cancerDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 14. | Enflonsia | clesrovimab-cfor | 6/9/2025 | To prevent respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory tract disease in neonates and infants who are born during or entering their first RSV season Drug Trials Snapshot |
| 13. | Tryptyr | acoltremon | 5/28/2025 | To treat the signs and symptoms of dry eye diseaseDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 12. | Emrelis | telisotuzumab vedotin-tllv | 5/14/2025 | To treat locally advanced or metastatic, non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with high c-Met protein overexpression after prior systemic therapy Drug Trials Snapshot |
| 11. | Avmapki Fakzynja Co-Pack | avutometinib and defactinib | 5/8/2025 | To treat KRAS-mutated recurrent low-grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC) after prior systemic therapyDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 10. | Imaavy | nipocalimab-aahu | 4/29/2025 | To treat generalized myasthenia gravisDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 9. | penpulimab-kcqx | penpulimab-kcqx | 4/23/2025 | In combination with either cisplatin or carboplatin and gemcitabine, to treat adults with recurrent or metastatic non-keratinizing nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), or as a single agent while on or after platinum-based chemotherapy and at least one other prior line of therapyDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 8. | Vanrafia | atrasentan | 4/02/2025 | To reduce proteinuria in adults with primary immunoglobulin A nephropathy at risk of rapid disease progressionDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 7. | Qfitlia | fitusiran | 3/28/2025 | To prevent or reduce the frequency of bleeding episodes in hemophilia A or BPress ReleaseDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 6. | Blujepa | gepotidacin | 3/25/2025 | To treat uncomplicated urinary tract infectionsDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 5. | Romvimza | vimseltinib | 2/14/2025 | To treat symptomatic tenosynovial giant cell tumor for which surgical resection will potentially cause worsening functional limitation or severe morbidityDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 4. | Gomekli | mirdametinib | 2/11/2025 | To treat neurofibromatosis type 1 who have symptomatic plexiform neurofibromas not amenable to complete resection Drug Trials Snapshot |
| 3. | Journavx | suzetrigine | 1/30/2025 | To treat moderate to severe acute painPress Release Drug Trials Snapshot |
| 2. | Grafapex | treosulfan | 1/21/2025 | For use in combination with fludarabine as a preparative regimen for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromeDrug Trials Snapshot |
| 1. | Datroway | datopotamab deruxtecan-dlnk | 1/17/2025 | To treat unresectable or metastatic, HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer who have received prior endocrine-based therapy and chemotherapy for unresectable or metastatic diseaseDrug Trials Snapshot |













