Depression drug development is brutally difficult, and Biohaven Ltd. (BHVN) just learned that lesson the hard way. The company announced Wednesday that its Phase 2 study of BHV-7000 for major depressive disorder came up empty, failing to separate from placebo on its primary endpoint.
The trial measured whether BHV-7000 could reduce depressive symptoms using the Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) over six weeks compared with placebo. It didn't. That's a problem when you're trying to prove your drug actually works.
A Silver Lining in Severe Cases?
There were some hints that the drug might work better in certain patients. Biohaven noted trends favoring BHV-7000 in clinically relevant subgroups, particularly participants with more severe depression at screening and baseline, on both primary and secondary outcome measures. The drug was safe and well-tolerated overall, with adverse events mostly mild to moderate and largely resolving on their own.
But here's the catch: the company is calling these subgroup analyses "hypothesis-generating" and won't be pursuing them. Biohaven has decided to pull back from psychiatric trials altogether, choosing instead to focus resources on what it considers higher priorities: immunology, obesity, and epilepsy programs in 2026. Additional analyses are still ongoing, but don't expect a dramatic pivot back to depression.
Why Analysts Saw This Coming
William Blair wasn't exactly shocked by the miss. The firm had approached the readout cautiously, pointing to the persistent challenges that plague MDD trials, including execution risk and the ever-rising placebo response that makes proving efficacy increasingly difficult.
Analyst Myles Minter noted that earlier MDD data for ezogabine and Xenon Pharmaceuticals Inc.'s (XENE) azetukalner (X-NOVA) showed modest effect sizes, leaving little room for error in pivotal trials of KV7.2/7.3 potentiators. In other words, the bar was already low, and BHV-7000 still couldn't clear it.
There's also an ongoing debate among investors about whether opakalim's extended-release formulation, which showed zero somnolence in Phase 1, achieves sufficient central nervous system exposure. Some worry the shift from immediate release may have actually reduced the drug's central activity. William Blair said the latest data do nothing to ease these concerns, especially since no efficacy signal emerged and adverse event rates were basically identical between BHV-7000 and placebo.
Don't Get Too Excited About Subgroups
While Biohaven did highlight signals favoring BHV-7000 treatment in a subgroup of severely depressed patients at baseline, Minter cautions against reading too much into these findings. The numbers are just too small to be reliable: only 14 participants received BHV-7000 and 15 received placebo in this analysis. That's not enough to build a development program around.
What's Next for Biohaven
William Blair is now looking ahead to pivotal data for opakalim in focal onset epilepsy, expected in the first half of 2026, as a critical test of whether the extended-release formulation is actually active. That data point could determine whether Biohaven has a viable product or another disappointment on its hands.
The firm maintains its Market Perform rating, waiting for either regulatory clarity on Vyglxia following the recent Complete Response Letter or convincing placebo-controlled data from the company's prioritized late-stage assets before getting more optimistic about the stock under its new R&D cost structure.
Price Action: Biohaven shares were down 15.45% at $9.14 during premarket trading on Friday, according to market data.




