Clinical-stage biotechnology company Synnovation Therapeutics LLC announced on Friday that Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis AG (SIX:NOVN) (NYSE:NVS) has agreed to acquire Pikavation Therapeutics, a subsidiary of Synnovation, including its portfolio of PI3K-alpha inhibitor programs.
The transaction centres on SNV4818, a pan-mutant selective PI3K-alpha inhibitor currently in Phase 1/2 trials targeting metastatic breast cancer and other solid tumours.
Under the agreement, Synnovation will receive USD2b upfront and up to USD1bn in development, regulatory, and commercial milestone payments, bringing total potential consideration to USD3bn.
The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals, including antitrust review under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act.
Following completion, Novartis will assume full responsibility for the development and commercialisation of the acquired programs. Synnovation will retain its remaining research and development subsidiaries and continue operating independently while advancing its broader pipeline.
Aditxt acquires Ignite Proteomics to enhance cancer therapy selection
NASA awards Redwire USD4m to advance drug development in microgravity
Elicera Therapeutics receives Japanese patent allowance for ELC-401 CAR T-cell candidate
Curatis and Neupharma partner to develop corticorelin for peritumoral brain edema in Japan
Citius Oncology reports positive topline results from Phase 1 clinical trial of LYMPHIR combination
GenomOncology partners with WeTrials to support CNS cancer clinical trials
Agenus triggers USD20m milestone payment under Zydus manufacturing collaboration
Zelluna partners with Etcembly to advance AI-driven TCR engineering for solid tumours
IDEAYA Biosciences enrols first patient in Phase 1 trial of PRMT5 inhibitor IDE892
Servier signs definitive agreement with Day One Biopharmaceuticals
Foresee Pharmaceuticals receives positive CHMP opinion for CAMCEVI 21 mg
Great Novel Therapeutics' GNTbm-38 approved by US FDA for Phase I trial
Elicera Therapeutics reports complete metabolic responses in highest‑dose CARMA cohort