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Innovent Biologics, Pfizer strike $10.5 billion cancer drug deal amid China biotech boom

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 6:19 PM

May 29 (Reuters) – China’s Innovent Biologics and U.S. pharma giant Pfizer have agreed to a global licensing and collaboration deal worth up to $10.5 billion to develop 12 early-stage ​cancer medicines, as global drugmakers race to tap China’s ‌booming biotech pipeline.

The deal also includes a $650 million upfront payment to Innovent and up to $9.85 billion in potential development, regulatory and commercial milestone payments.

The deal comes amid a broader boom in China biotech licensing, as global drugmakers ‌have ​been stepping up their search for experimental ⁠medicines developed in the ⁠country.

The value of such deals in the greater China region rose nearly tenfold from 2021 to an unprecedented $137.7 billion last year, according to data provider Pharmcube.

Analysts predicted that such licensing deals ​would surge to a fresh record this year.

The partnership spans a portfolio of antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) with novel differentiated payloads and ⁠multi-specific antibodies, comprising eight Innovent-originated early-stage ⁠assets and four Pfizer-proposed discovery programs.

Under the terms ​of the agreement, Innovent will lead development of the 12 programs ​through Phase 1 clinical trials before Pfizer takes on global ‌development.

The deal is structured across three tiers. Four programs will be co-developed and co-commercialised, with profits shared in the United States and Europe, while Innovent retains rights in Greater China.

For another four ⁠programs, Pfizer receives an exclusive license outside Greater China, while it holds an exclusive global license and bears all global development costs for ⁠the remaining four.

Innovent, ‌together with its wholly owned units Innovent Biologics (Suzhou) ⁠and Fortvita Biologics (USA), entered into the deal with ​Pfizer, ‌the firm said in an exchange filing.

The deal ​comes as ⁠Pfizer has been aggressively building out its oncology pipeline through partnerships with Chinese biotechs.

Earlier in May 2025, Pfizer announced a licensing deal with Shenyang-based 3SBio, wagering billions of dollars on a new kind of cancer immunotherapy.

(Reporting by Rajasik Mukherjee & Sherin Sunny in Bengaluru; editing ​by Alan Barona)