25 February 2026
ARVINAS, INC.
10-K / February 24, 2026
Arvinas, Inc.
Overview
- Clinical-stage biotechnology company developing PROTAC (proteolysis-targeting chimera)–based targeted protein degraders.
- Core strategy: use PROTACs to remove disease-causing intracellular proteins for oncology and neurology indications, including historically undruggable targets.
- Operates a PROTAC Discovery Engine of discovery tools and platforms to identify, optimize, and validate degraders and targets.
- Business model combines internal clinical programs with collaborations to fund and accelerate development.
PROTAC platform and capabilities
- Mechanism: PROTACs recruit an E3 ligase to tag target proteins for ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation.
- Capabilities:
- Target selection focused on genetically defined or under‑drugged targets, including transcription factors and scaffolding proteins.
- E3 KnowledgeBase with proprietary ligands for E3 ligases (VHL, CRBN, IAP, MDM2) and work toward E3s expressed in CNS and tumors.
- Advanced screening including high‑throughput assays and DNA‑encoded libraries (DEL) adapted for PROTAC design.
- ANGLE, LEAP, PROTACify: linker evolution, library-enabled PROTAC design, and ternary complex modeling tools.
- Proteomics for detailed profiling of degradation and selectivity.
- PIVOT for in vivo PK/PD and efficacy optimization of PROTACs.
- Intellectual property across multiple PROTAC components and targets, including licensed portfolios from Yale and collaborations with Genentech.
Pipeline and programs
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Clinical-stage programs
- ARV-102: oral LRRK2 degrader intended to cross the blood–brain barrier for Parkinson’s disease (PD) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP).
- ARV-806: PROTAC KRAS G12D degrader targeting KRAS G12D‑mutant cancers (PDAC, colorectal cancer, NSCLC).
- ARV-393: PROTAC BCL6 degrader for relapsed/refractory non‑Hodgkin lymphoma (including DLBCL).
- ARV-027: oral polyQ‑AR degrader for spinal bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), targeting skeletal muscle.
- Vepdegestrant (ARV-471): ER degrader for ER+/HER2−, ESR1‑mutated advanced/metastatic breast cancer; NDA accepted with PDUFA date June 5, 2026.
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Preclinical programs
- ARV-6723: HPK1 degrader with preclinical data showing strong single‑agent activity and synergy with anti‑PD‑1.
- Pan‑KRAS degrader programs targeting multiple KRAS variants while sparing other RAS isoforms.
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Other programs and corporate changes
- Luxdegalutamide (ARV-766) and bavdegalutamide (ARV-110): license transitioned to Novartis in 2024; bavdegalutamide programs completed in 2025.
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Notable clinical milestones
- VERITAC‑2: Phase 3 trial of vepdegestrant in ESR1‑mutant ER+/HER2− breast cancer achieved a positive primary endpoint in the ESR1‑mutant population (PFS improvement); NDA submitted and accepted; PDUFA date set for 2026.
- ARV‑102: Phase 1 data in healthy volunteers and PD patients demonstrated brain penetration; multiple‑dose cohort ongoing with data anticipated in 2026.
- ARV‑806: IND filed and dose escalation completed; initial clinical data expected in 2026.
- ARV‑393: Phase 1 NHL trial ongoing; preclinical data support combination strategies with standard‑of‑care therapies; expansion into combination arms planned in 2026.
- ARV‑027: Phase 1 in healthy volunteers started in 2026; preclinical target engagement shown in skeletal muscle.
Partnerships, collaborations, and licensing
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Pfizer (vepdegestrant/ARV‑471)
- Co‑development and co‑commercialization agreement for vepdegestrant worldwide.
- Upfront payment of $650 million; up to $1.4 billion in contingent milestones.
- Development costs shared 50/50; commercialization rights managed jointly, with a path to third‑party commercialization as of 2025.
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Genentech (R&D collaboration; Restated Genentech Agreement)
- Ongoing collaboration with milestone and royalty structures tied to Licensed PROTACs.
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Novartis (luxdegalutamide ARV‑766 and AR‑V7 asset)
- May 2024 license closing with upfront cash of $150 million; up to $1.01 billion in potential milestones and royalties on net sales.
- Novartis holds exclusivity for luxdegalutamide.
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Yale University (Amended Yale License)
- Broad exclusive worldwide license to PROTAC field with upfront payments and ongoing milestones, collaboration payments, and royalties; term extends through relevant patent expirations.
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Strategy: select collaborations to accelerate development while retaining rights to advance certain products independently or with other partners.
Intellectual property
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Patent portfolio (as of December 31, 2025)
- ARV‑102 (LRRK2): three patent families covering ARV‑102 and related degraders; issued patents expiring 2041–2044; additional applications expiring 2044–2045.
- ARV‑806 and KRAS G12D: composition‑of‑matter and method filings with expiries 2044–2045.
- ARV‑393 (BCL6): composition‑of‑matter patents and additional families for combinations/formulations; expiries 2042–2045.
- ARV‑027 (polyQ‑AR): U.S. and foreign patents with expiries 2037–2044.
- Vepdegestrant (ARV‑471): composition‑of‑matter, methods, and formulations with expiries 2037–2046.
- ARV‑6723 (HPK1): composition‑of‑matter patents with expiries 2044–2045.
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PROTAC platform IP
- VHL (Yale‑licensed), CRBN (Cereblon), IAP, and MDM2 E3 portfolios with patents expiring in the 2030s.
- Co‑owned families with Yale covering PROTAC composition‑of‑matter with expiries through the early‑to‑mid 2040s.
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Genentech collaboration IP
- Restated agreement includes rights to Licensed PROTACs with milestone and royalty terms; expiries aligned with last‑to‑expire patent claims through the 2040s.
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Trade secrets and know‑how protected by confidentiality agreements supplement the patent estate.
Manufacturing and operations
- No internal manufacturing facilities; relies on contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs) and contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs) for active drug substance and finished drug product.
- Some partnerships designate external suppliers for commercial supply, including Pfizer for vepdegestrant.
- Active supply arrangements exist with external manufacturers across several programs (ARV‑102, ARV‑393, ARV‑806, vepdegestrant, ARV‑027).
Regulatory and development path
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Development pathway includes IND‑enabling work, cGMP manufacturing, IRB approvals, Phase 1–3 trials, NDA submissions, and potential expedited designations (Fast Track, Breakthrough, Priority Review, Accelerated Approval).
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Program highlights:
- Vepdegestrant NDA accepted; PDUFA date June 5, 2026; VERITAC‑2 showed PFS improvement versus fulvestrant in the ESR1‑mutant population.
- KRAS G12D and other oncology programs progressing through Phase 1/2.
- ARV‑102 supports CNS‑targeted indications with biomarker and pharmacology data.
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International considerations include EMA pathways and country‑specific regulatory, pricing, and reimbursement dynamics.
Financial highlights and milestones
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Collaboration payments and milestones
- Pfizer: $650 million upfront for vepdegestrant with up to $1.4 billion in additional milestones; 50/50 development cost sharing.
- Novartis: $150 million upfront for luxdegalutamide and related assets with up to $1.01 billion in potential milestones and royalties.
- Yale Amended License: upfront and related payments of $14.95 million at signing plus a $5.0 million payment in June 2025 and additional collaboration‑based milestones and royalties.
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Patent and portfolio scale (as of Dec 31, 2025)
- 71 issued U.S. patents
- 318 granted foreign patents
- 620 pending patent applications (118 U.S., 502 foreign)
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Key regulatory milestone: VERITAC‑2 Phase 3 results in the ESR1‑mutant population with an NDA submission and an FDA PDUFA date in June 2026.
Summary
Arvinas develops PROTAC‑based targeted protein degraders for oncology and neurology using a proprietary Discovery Engine and a broad patent estate. The company advances multiple clinical and preclinical programs while partnering with industry leaders to fund development and commercialize lead assets, with a major regulatory milestone (PDUFA date) for vepdegestrant scheduled for June 5, 2026.
