Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Vancouver-based antibody discovery platform with 104+ partner programs; $75M FY2025 revenue. Expanding into wholly owned assets with ABCL635 in Phase 1 for vasomotor symptoms.
AbCellera Biologics was founded in 2012 in Vancouver, Canada by Carl Hansen, growing out of research at the University of British Columbia. The company built a high-throughput antibody discovery platform integrating microfluidics, genomics, single-cell sequencing, and AI/ML to rapidly identify therapeutic antibody candidates from natural immune responses. AbCellera played a prominent role in the COVID-19 pandemic by discovering bamlanivimab for Eli Lilly in under 90 days.\n\nAbCellera's partnership model operates on a discovery fee plus downstream milestone and royalty structure, having started over 104 partner-initiated programs with downstream participation as of December 2025. Partners include major pharmaceutical companies and biotechs; the company expanded its collaboration with AbbVie in 2025 to develop T-cell engagers for oncology. Total FY2025 revenue was $75 million ($47M from royalties/licensing, $27M from partnered program work), compared to $29 million in 2024—a dramatic increase driven by royalty flows from approved medicines.\n\nIn 2025 AbCellera began transitioning from pure partnership model toward wholly owned therapeutic assets, with ABCL635 (a GnRH receptor antibody for vasomotor symptoms) entering Phase 1. The company maintains approximately $700 million in liquidity, providing a long runway. AbCellera is considered a foundational infrastructure provider for the antibody-based drug discovery ecosystem.
Signed $2.1B Novo Nordisk collaboration (Feb 2026). Platform enables oral delivery of proteins and peptides (historically injection-only). MIT Langer lab spinout.
Vivtex is an MIT Langer Laboratory spinout that has developed a drug delivery platform enabling oral administration of biologics — proteins, peptides, and other large molecules — that have historically required injection because they are degraded by stomach acid and too large to absorb through the intestinal wall. In February 2026, Vivtex signed a $2.1 billion collaboration agreement with Novo Nordisk for the development of oral formulations of biologic drugs in obesity, diabetes, and metabolic disease.
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