Monday that it is acquiring , a developer of gene therapies with a particular focus on cancer treatment, in a deal valued at up to $7 billion in cash.
Per 附近上门 data, the high end of the purchase price represents the largest acquisition of a venture-backed biotech company in years. It鈥檚 a testament to the perceived potential of Kelonia鈥檚 pipeline of genetic medicines, including a treatment targeting multiple myeloma that has produced promising clinical trial results.
It鈥檚 also a quick progression by biotech standards. Boston-based Kelonia from stealth mode just four years ago, with $50 million in Series A funding led by , and . Two years later, it entered a research and licensing partnership with , a subsidiary of Japan鈥檚 , that included funding to develop immuno-oncology therapeutics using its in vivo gene placement system.
Per Lilly, Kelonia鈥檚 platform promises to not just improve outcomes for patients, but to do so in a rapid, simpler 鈥渙ff-the-shelf format鈥 compared to currently available CAR T-cell therapies. Its approach has been described as enabling the reprogramming of patients鈥 T-cells inside the body so those cells can attack cancer.
Kelonia鈥檚 vision is ambitious enough, and early results encouraging enough, to warrant what ranks as the largest acquisition of a venture-backed, private biotech company in the past 10 years, per 附近上门 data. To put that in context, below we ranked the next-largest deals valued at up to $2 billion or more.
The list does not include venture-backed biotechs that went public, which would broaden the ranks considerably. This includes companies that sold to acquirers shortly after IPO, such as , a developer of therapeutics for obesity and metabolic disease that went public in February 2025 and sold to later in the year in a deal valued at around $10 billion.
In vivo acquisitions on the rise
Acquirers of late have been paying particularly handsomely for startups developing in vivo therapeutics. Just two months ago, Lilly purchased another high-profile venture-backed company in the space, , dedicated to engineering immune cells in vivo, in a deal valued at up to $2.4 billion. Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Orna had previously raised over $320 million in venture funding, per 附近上门 data.
Last June, meanwhile, pharma giant snapped up , a biotech advancing in vivo engineering of cells through RNA delivery, for $2.1 billion. San Diego-based Capstan had previously secured $340 million in venture funding.
Another big deal, announced in October, was 鈥檚 acquisition of , a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based developer of RNA medicines that reprogram the immune system in vivo, for $1.5 billion.
Of course, Kelonia鈥檚 purchase price dwarfs all its predecessors, and by a hefty sum. Under the terms of the agreement, Lilly will acquire Kelonia for $3.25 billion up front, plus up to $3.75 billion in subsequent payments tied to meeting clinical, regulatory and commercial milestones.
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