Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Truveta Says It Will Create Huge Archive Of Patients' Genetic Data
Health data company Truveta said Monday it鈥檚 partnering with health systems and drugmakers to launch the Truveta Genome Project, a database of genetic data that is expected to accelerate personalized medicine and help discover new drugs.聽Truveta plans to use leftover biospecimens from patients 鈥 after they consent 鈥 receiving routine health care at participating health systems to create the database. (Trang, 1/13)
In other pharmaceutical, biotech, and AI developments 鈥
Elon Musk said a third person has received an implant from his brain-computer interface company Neuralink, one of many groups working to connect the nervous system to machines. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got ... three humans with Neuralinks and all are working well,鈥 he said during a wide-ranging interview at a Las Vegas event streamed on his social media platform X. ... Musk also said Neuralink hopes to implant the experimental devices in 20 to 30 more people this year. (Ungar, 1/13)
Johnson & Johnson on Monday said that it's agreed to acquire CNS biotech Intra-Cellular Therapies for $14.6 billion in cash, or $132 per share. This would be the largest biotech merger since 2023, nearly tripling the size of last year's record-holder (Vertex/Alpine Immune). (Primack, 1/13)
Bayer AG plans to push pause on some of its pharmaceutical dealmaking, focusing instead on reducing the high debt load the company still faces after its $63 billion acquisition of Monsanto. The company won鈥檛 seek pharma and biotech deals toward the top end of a target range of 鈧1 billion to 鈧5 billion ($1 billion to $5 billion), head of pharmaceuticals Stefan Oelrich said in an interview on Monday on the sidelines of the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco. That marks a reversal of comments he made at the same meeting a year ago. Bayer now has built the drug pipeline it needs to grow in the next five to seven years, he said. (Kresge and Wind, 1/13)
Nvidia Corp. announced tie-ups with Illumina Inc., the Mayo Clinic and other health-care organizations as part of its push to encourage the adoption of artificial intelligence by that industry. Illumina, a gene sequencing company, will adopt Nvidia鈥檚 generative AI platform for chemistry and biology, the world鈥檚 largest chipmaker said Monday in a statement. The Mayo Clinic is deploying Nvidia鈥檚 latest hardware and some of its software to improve digital pathology, the company said. (King, 1/13)
Venture capital firm General Catalyst and Amazon Web Services, a subsidiary of the big tech company, are joining forces to develop artificial intelligence applications in healthcare.聽As part of the collaboration, General Catalyst said it has selected AWS as its cloud vendor of choice. The two companies will co-develop and deploy AI solutions with General Catalyst鈥檚 portfolio companies and its health system partners. (Perna, 1/13)
Qventus is receiving $105 million in a Series D funding round as the interest in healthcare artificial intelligence reaches a fever pitch.聽The round was led by global investment firm KKR and venture capital firm Bessemer Venture Partners. Health systems Northwestern Medicine, HonorHealth and Allina Health also participated. (Perna, 1/13)
Investments into digital health companies fell in 2024, according to new data from venture capital and research firm Rock Health. Digital health venture capital聽funding dropped from $10.8 billion聽in 2023 to聽$10.1 billion in 2024聽marking the third straight year with聽a decline, according to Rock Health's report, which published Monday.聽There were聽497 funding deals across digital health in 2024, which was a slight decline from the 503 deals signed in 2023.聽(Turner, 1/13)