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IntellaTurn's Weekly Scoop
By Erin at IntellaTurn ● Apr 09, 2026
Signals and trends: Anthropic pushes deeper into drug discovery | More big deals | Citeline annual R&D report | Biotech’s next possible gold rush
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Anthropic’s $400M acquisition of Coefficient Bio signals deeper push into drug discovery
iStock / phuttaphat tipsana
What’s new: Anthropic is now a biotech company. At least of sorts.
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The San Francisco–based frontier AI lab has acquired Coefficient Bio, a stealth New York-based biotech AI startup, in a stock deal valued at just over $400 million.
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The deal brings a team of fewer than 10 people, most of them former Genentech computational biology researchers, into Anthropic’s healthcare and life sciences division.
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Anthropic’s $380 billion post-money valuation was set in its February Series G.
Expanding life science ambitions: The acquisition marks an escalation in Anthropic’s life sciences strategy.
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Until now, the company’s approach has largely centered on adapting its general-purpose Claude models for scientific workflows through connectors, integrations and enterprise partnerships. The company announced Claude for Life Sciences last October.
With Coefficient Bio, Anthropic is absorbing a team that was building biology-specific AI models from the ground up, with ambitions the startup described as nothing less than “artificial superintelligence for science.”
Go deeper: R&D World
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More deals around the industry
Axios Media
➡️ Gilead continues M&A surge with deal for ADC specialist Tubulis
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Gilead Sciences will acquire German biotechnology startup Tubulis in a potentially $5 billion deal that expands the company’s growing pipeline of cancer drugs.
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Per the deal terms, Gilead will pay $3.15 billion upfront for Tubulis and could shell out another $1.85 billion if certain unspecified milestones are met.
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The deal hands Gilead a technology for making next-generation antibody-drug conjugates along with two products, TUB-040 and TUB-030, in clinical testing against different tumor types.
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The acquisition is the latest in a series of company buyouts Gilead, historically known for its HIV drugs, has struck to build up its cancer portfolio. (BioPharma Dive)
➡️ Neurocrine’s $2.9B Soleno buyout brings what could become its next blockbuster drug
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Neurocrine Biosciences is expanding its scope in rare endocrine disorders through the $2.9 billion acquisition of Soleno Therapeutics, a company that commercialized the first approved drug for a rare genetic condition that leads to ravenous hunger.
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The Soleno drug, Vykat XR, won its FDA approval in Prader-Willi syndrome a little more than a year ago.
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Since its launch, the once-daily pill has seen rapid market uptake, giving San Diego-based Neurocrine confidence that the product can complement its portfolio, contributing to growth of a revenue base includes one blockbuster drug and is now adding a product also projected to reach blockbuster status. (MedCity News)
➡️ Eli Lilly’s latest acquisition could preview another booming market
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Eli Lilly may not have discovered orexins, but the pharma’s latest acquisition marks increasing momentum for a drug class that’s maturing after years of fine-tuning.
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The big question on the minds of Wall Street is whether orexins’ potential is fully known.
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Lilly announced that it was buying Centessa Pharmaceuticals for $6.3 billion upfront, its largest acquisition since it bought Loxo Oncology in 2019, should the deal close.
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The move gives Lilly access to a pipeline of orexin receptor 2 agonists, primarily in development to treat sleep disorders like narcolepsy.
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But what if narcolepsy is just scratching the surface? Interviews with Wall Street analysts suggest that’s a possibility, and with Lilly in control, a lot more money could be poured into widening the drugs’ development scope — specifically, testing whether they broadly help with focus or fatigue. (Endpoints)
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Citeline issues annual R&D report
Source: Citeline; chart by Annalee Armstrong via BioSpace
By the numbers: The number of investigational biopharma R&D assets—an indicator of how well the industry’s innovation engine is working—has fallen for the first time since the mid-1990s.
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At the start of 2026, there were 22,940 drug candidates in development, a 3.92% decrease from that same reference point in 2025, when there were 23,875 investigational molecules in the pipeline, according to Citeline’s annual Pharma R&D report.
Yes, but: Citeline in its report cautioned that an internal adjustment in how it tallied pipeline projects could have contributed to this dip.
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Taking these changes into account, the firm said that “in reality, the overall pipeline size has probably been fairly flat over the past few years.”
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And even if the total number of drugs in development did drop, Citeline doesn’t appear overly concerned about what that could mean for the industry’s future.
“As long as the industry is still producing the goods, there’s nothing to worry about here,” the firm wrote. “A smaller overall pipeline doesn’t necessarily mean pharma is barking up the wrong tree.”
Hinting at pipeline contraction: Still, Citeline’s drug count hints at a contraction of the pipeline. Across almost all therapeutic areas, there were fewer investigational assets in 2026.
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This includes oncology and rare diseases, which typically account for the vast majority of drug candidates.
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Cancer programs dropped from 9,476 in 2025 to 9,036 in 2026, while the rare disease pipeline shrunk from 7,721 to 7,618.
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The dip in the overall pipeline size, according to Citeline’s data, was driven by a sharp drop in the number of preclinical assets.
And some spikes: Immunology, for instance, saw a notable spike in the number of drugs in development, as did the respective pipelines of cardiovascular diseases and blood and clotting disorders.
Encouraging signals: Citeline noted that while the overall number of drugs in development decreased, the number of companies with active programs grew from 6,823 in 2025 to 7,057 in 2026.
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Similarly, the size of Phase 1, Phase 2 and Phase 3 pipelines, as well as the total amount of drugs launched, had increased by the start of the year.
Companies responsible for most of the drugs in development: Roche came out on top with 262 active assets, while last year’s top-placer, Pfizer, dropped to third with 257 programs. AstraZeneca, meanwhile, shot up to second with 261.
Also of note, Asia: Citeline pointed to the three Chinese companies—Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals, Sino Biopharmaceutical and CSPC Pharmaceutical—and four Japanese firms—Takeda, Otsuka Holdings, Astellas Pharma and Daiichi Sankyo—landing in its top 25. (BioSpace)
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Interesting read: The ‘diabolical’ molecule poised to become biotech’s next gold rush
iStock / rustamank
An accidental discovery: In the early 1960s, Norwegian physician Kåre Berg, M.D., was trying to identify new blood types when he accidentally discovered a lipoprotein with perplexing properties.
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Similar to cholesterol, but not quite the same, and also the lookalike of a clot-busting protein, the molecule still vexes researchers many decades later.
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It also might just revolutionize cardiovascular medicine as we know it.
Great possibilities: The potential impact of medicines that lower lipoprotein(a)—abbreviated as Lp(a) and often read as “L-P-little A”—is obvious.
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Elevated Lp(a) is a known risk factor for a range of bad cardiac outcomes, from heart attacks and strokes to heart valve malfunctions. And the scale of the problem is almost too large to fathom: an estimated 20% of the global population has Lp(a) levels that put them at risk.
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Guidelines from a suite of expert groups, led by the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association, now recommend that everyone have their Lp(a) levels tested at least once in their life.
Genetic control: Unlike cholesterol, Lp(a) is almost entirely genetically controlled, meaning it can’t be lowered with a new diet or an exercise regimen.
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But Lp(a)’s genetic control, as well as its manufacturing site in the liver, make it a prime candidate for targeting by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs).
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Should the Lp(a)-lowering candidates now in the clinic reach their full potential, they could surpass statins—the most prescribed medications in the world—in their use, multiple experts said.
The first pivotal trial set to read out is for Novartis and Ionis’ ASO pelacarsen, with data expected in the next few months; candidates from Amgen and Eli Lilly will follow over the coming years.
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Should pelacarsen’s phase 3 Horizon trial succeed, it would trigger a tidal wave of interest in the Lp(a) field, experts agreed.
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But while pelacarsen could be approved as early as next year, there would still be a long way to go before the Lp(a) drug class as a whole ascends to the mega-blockbuster level of statins.
Continue reading: Fierce Biotech
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✨ Thanks for reading! ✨
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