Stock Markets January 30, 2026

Corcept Shares Plunge After FDA Corrected Letter Shows Prior Warnings Against Submission

Corrected complete response letter cites failed efficacy and serious liver safety signals; stock falls 16%

By Marcus Reed CORT
Corcept Shares Plunge After FDA Corrected Letter Shows Prior Warnings Against Submission
CORT

Shares of Corcept Therapeutics tumbled after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a corrected complete response letter stating the agency had warned the company on multiple occasions not to file its application for relacorilant. The letter highlighted lack of separation from placebo in the main trial and raised significant liver safety concerns, while giving Corcept one year to respond or risk withdrawal of the application.

Key Points

  • A corrected FDA complete response letter dated January 28 said the agency had warned Corcept on multiple occasions not to submit its application for relacorilant.
  • The FDA found the main clinical trial showed virtually no difference between relacorilant and placebo and flagged significant liver safety concerns, including four probable drug-induced liver injury cases and one patient with liver enzymes more than 50 times the upper limit of normal.
  • The company has one year to resubmit the application and take required actions, or the FDA may treat lack of response as a request to withdraw the application.

Shares of Corcept Therapeutics dropped sharply after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration released a corrected complete response letter (CRL) that said the regulator had cautioned the company "on several occasions" against submitting its application for relacorilant.

The corrected CRL, dated January 28, reiterated that the FDA had told Corcept to "expect significant review issues" if it continued with the submission. The regulator commonly issues CRLs when it decides not to approve a drug.

The filing under review concerned relacorilant, an oral therapy intended to address hypertension in patients with Cushing's syndrome, a rare disorder tied to prolonged elevated cortisol activity.

According to the corrected letter, the main clinical trial did not demonstrate that relacorilant performed better than placebo - the agency described there was virtually no difference between the treatment and placebo groups. In addition to the efficacy shortfall, the FDA cited serious liver safety issues: four patients were identified with probable drug-induced liver injury, and one patient had liver enzyme readings exceeding 50 times the upper limit of normal.

UBS analyst Ashwani Verma characterized the language in the CRL as unusually strong, saying it is "rare for FDA to use such language" in a rejection letter. Verma also reported that company management told him they had moved ahead with the submission following the guidance of their regulatory advisors, but that the FDA appeared to hold a firm position based on the CRL's wording.

The corrected CRL follows an earlier version dated December 30. The January 28 update was issued after additional communications from the company. The corrected letter was posted on the FDA's website on Thursday afternoon at about 4 p.m. ET, according to Verma.

Under the terms set out in the CRL, Corcept has one year to resubmit its application and complete certain other actions identified by the agency. The letter warned that the FDA would consider a lack of response to be a request to withdraw the application.

Corcept did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Context and market reaction

Following the corrected CRL, Corcept's stock fell by 16% on Friday. The market move reflects investor concern over both the absence of demonstrable efficacy in the pivotal study and the emergence of significant safety signals related to liver injury.

What remains in play

  • Corcept has up to one year to address the issues cited and resubmit its application.
  • The FDA's explicit statements that it had warned the company against submitting add weight to regulatory hurdles ahead.
  • Unresolved efficacy and safety findings create uncertainty about the likelihood of eventual approval.

Risks

  • Regulatory risk - The FDA explicitly warned the company against submitting and used unusually strong language in the CRL, indicating a challenging path to approval for relacorilant, which affects the biotech sector and investors in related equities.
  • Clinical trial risk - The main study failed to demonstrate efficacy versus placebo, creating uncertainty about the drug's therapeutic value and market potential, with implications for revenue forecasts and investor valuations.
  • Safety risk - Serious liver safety signals cited in the CRL, including probable drug-induced liver injury in four patients and an extreme liver enzyme elevation in one case, raise the prospect of further safety-driven regulatory setbacks and potential costs for the company and its stakeholders.

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