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Just caught wind of something pretty significant in the biotech space. Vir Biotechnology just announced a major global collaboration with Astellas Pharma around VIR-5500, their PSMA-targeting T-cell engager for metastatic prostate cancer, and the market clearly liked it - stock jumped over 54% in overnight trading.
Here's what caught my attention. The partnership structure is solid. Astellas is putting real money behind this - $335 million upfront including $240 million cash, a $75 million equity stake at a 50% premium, plus $20 million near-term. Vir's also eligible for up to $1.37 billion in additional milestones and double-digit royalties on international sales. They're splitting development costs 60-40 with Astellas taking the lead on U.S. commercialization while Vir keeps a co-promotion option.
But the real driver here is the clinical data. The Phase 1 results for VIR-5500 in heavily pre-treated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer are genuinely encouraging. We're talking 82% PSA50 and 53% PSA90 declines in higher-dose cohorts, with a 45% objective response rate. No dose-limiting toxicities observed. Most side effects stayed at Grade 1, which is basically just fever. For patients dealing with castration anxiety around treatment options in advanced prostate cancer, this kind of tolerability profile matters.
What's interesting is the timeline. They've wrapped up monotherapy dose-escalation and defined their go-forward dose. Expansion cohorts in late-line mCRPC should kick off Q2 2026, combination studies with enzalutamide in earlier settings are also coming, and pivotal Phase 3 trials are planned for 2027. That's a pretty aggressive but realistic timeline.
Beyond this, Vir's got some other interesting stuff cooking. Their Hepatitis Delta program with Tobevibart and Elebsiran showed 88% HDV RNA undetectable rates at Week 96 in Phase 2, and multiple Phase 3 trials are already running with data expected Q4 2026 into Q1 2027. They've also got other PRO-XTEN masked TCEs in the pipeline - VIR-5818 targeting HER2 and VIR-5525 targeting EGFR.
From a cash perspective, Vir ended 2025 with $781.6 million in liquidity and expects their current position, including this Astellas deal, to fund operations into Q2 2028. That's pretty healthy for a biotech company executing on multiple programs.
The stock had been trading between $4.16 and $9.84 over the past year, closed Monday at $7.43, and jumped to $11.45 overnight. Whether this holds obviously depends on how Phase 3 plays out, but the collaboration validates the science and de-risks the commercialization piece significantly. Worth keeping on the radar if you're tracking oncology plays.