Deals
Jacobio discovered JAB-23E73, which is designed to treat several KRAS mutation subtypes, and is testing the therapy in multiple Phase I trials.
FEATURED STORIES
2026 is set to be a banner year for M&A in biopharma, as buyers facing major patent cliffs fight for a small pool of late-stage assets.
Metsera showed the biopharma world that M&A is back. Who could be next?
These deals radically reshaped the biopharma world, either by one vaccine rival absorbing another, a Big Pharma doubling down after another failed acquisition or, in the case of Pfizer and Novo, two heavyweights duking it out over a hot obesity biotech.
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Around 40% of Pfizer’s portfolio was realized through partnerships, and Monday, the pharma giant announced three more collaborative deals.
The planned acquisition will give Takeda full access to Adaptate’s antibody-based γδ T cell engager platform, which includes both pre-clinical and discovery assets.
Bayer and Mammoth Biosciences forged a strategic collaboration potentially valued at more than $1 billion. The partnership grants Bayer access to Mammoth’s CRISPR technology to develop in vivo gene-editing therapies.
BioSpace sat down with 12 executives who shared their thoughts on the coming year and decade.
Absci Corporation inked a deal with Merck. Absci will leverage its Bionic Protein non-standard amino acid technology and AI-integrated Drug Creation Platform to create enzymes for Merck.
Eli Lilly acquired rights to a technology from Entos Pharmaceuticals that boosts the development of nucleic acid therapeutics for the central and peripheral nervous system.
The acquisition is expected to bolster Odyssey’s drug development capabilities in immunology and oncology.
Three IPO aspirants have stepped up at the start of the new year: CinCor Pharma, Amylyx and Applied UV
Korea Economic Daily, published a story saying that Samsung Group was in talks to acquire Biogen. However, Samsung BioLogics stated in a regulatory filing yesterday that the rumor is not true.
Novartis believes Gyroscope’s investigational Phase II gene therapy for geographic atrophy has the potential to become the first therapy that demonstrates sustained efficacy for GA patients.