Insights
Press Release
Current position:News > Insights
PD-1/VEGF: Summit, AstraZeneca in talks over $15 billion cancer drug licensing deal, Bloomberg News reports
吉满生物
2025-07-10

July 3 (Reuters) - AstraZeneca is in talks with Summit Therapeutics to license an experimental lung-cancer drug under a deal worth as much as $15 billion, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. Learn more about our PD-1 catalog

Shares of Summit Therapeutics surged 9.7% to $25.81 in morning trade.

The Menlo Park, California-based drug developer did not immediately respond to Reuters' request seeking comment, while an AstraZeneca spokesperson declined to comment.

A deal could include an upfront payment of several billion dollars to Summit, besides milestone payments later on, Bloomberg News said. The talks could still fall apart or Summit could opt for a different partner for licensing, according to the report.

The negotiations involve ivonescimab, a drug Summit secured rights for through a separate deal worth up to $5 billion with China-based Akeso in December 2022.

Summit is testing ivonescimab to treat patients with a type of lung cancer who have received prior treatment. The drug has already been approved in China in May last year, and Summit plans to file for marketing approval in the United States.

In a late-stage study, ivonescimab, in combination with chemotherapy, showed a positive trend in overall survival, but "without achieving a statistically significant benefit," the company said in May.

An earlier data last year had shown some lung cancer patients having better survival rates on the drug than those on Merck's  blockbuster Keytruda.

Summit and Akeso were testing ivonescimab-chemotherapy regime in a study conducted in China, against BeiGene's approved drug Tevimbra in combination with chemotherapy.

Latest news
Insights
2026-04-23
LGR5: A Potential Target for Next-Generation Cancer Therapies
Is LGR5 the next key target in cancer therapy?
A new Trends in Cancer review highlights LGR5’s role in tumor plasticity, therapeutic resistance, and its growing potential as a drug target.
From Wnt/β-catenin signaling to emerging strategies like bispecific antibodies and ADCs, LGR5 is moving to the forefront of oncology research—despite ongoing challenges in mechanism and resistance.
Insights
2026-04-15
GLP-1 Landscape Shift: The Rise of Oral Weight-Loss Therapies
Metabolic disease treatment is entering a new era.

While GLP-1 therapies continue to lead, emerging targets like GIPR, GCGR, FGF21, Amylin, and ActRII are driving the shift toward multi-target strategies. At the same time, oral GLP-1 drugs are intensifying competition between Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.

Where is the field heading next? Read the full article for key insights.
Insights
2026-04-09
TSLP: A Promising Next-Generation Target in Autoimmune Diseases
TSLP is rapidly emerging as one of the most strategically important targets in immunology, driven by its unique role as an upstream regulator of inflammatory pathways. With recent clinical progress, strong commercial validation and a rapidly expanding pipeline are accelerating interest from both global pharma and biotech companies. From monoclonal antibodies to multi-specific formats and long-acting solutions, the diversity of approaches highlights the scale of opportunity ahead.
Current position:News > Insights
classify
PD-1/VEGF: Summit, AstraZeneca in talks over $15 billion cancer drug licensing deal, Bloomberg News reports
吉满生物
2025-07-10

July 3 (Reuters) - AstraZeneca is in talks with Summit Therapeutics to license an experimental lung-cancer drug under a deal worth as much as $15 billion, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. Learn more about our PD-1 catalog

Shares of Summit Therapeutics surged 9.7% to $25.81 in morning trade.

The Menlo Park, California-based drug developer did not immediately respond to Reuters' request seeking comment, while an AstraZeneca spokesperson declined to comment.

A deal could include an upfront payment of several billion dollars to Summit, besides milestone payments later on, Bloomberg News said. The talks could still fall apart or Summit could opt for a different partner for licensing, according to the report.

The negotiations involve ivonescimab, a drug Summit secured rights for through a separate deal worth up to $5 billion with China-based Akeso in December 2022.

Summit is testing ivonescimab to treat patients with a type of lung cancer who have received prior treatment. The drug has already been approved in China in May last year, and Summit plans to file for marketing approval in the United States.

In a late-stage study, ivonescimab, in combination with chemotherapy, showed a positive trend in overall survival, but "without achieving a statistically significant benefit," the company said in May.

An earlier data last year had shown some lung cancer patients having better survival rates on the drug than those on Merck's  blockbuster Keytruda.

Summit and Akeso were testing ivonescimab-chemotherapy regime in a study conducted in China, against BeiGene's approved drug Tevimbra in combination with chemotherapy.

Message consultation
reset
submit
Message
Message consultation
reset
submit