3
Mar
2026

T-cell Engagers for Autoimmune Disease: Ken Song on The Long Run

Ken Song is today’s guest on The Long Run.

First things first, this episode was recorded before news broke that Candid Therapeutics went public via a reverse merger with RallyBio. But I must say, that deal was no surprise.

Ken Song, CEO, Candid Therapeutics

Ken was on The Long Run five years ago, in November 2021. At that time, he was CEO of San Diego-based RayzeBio. That company was developed targeted radiopharmaceuticals for cancer. It ended up going public and then was quickly acquired by Bristol Myers Squibb for $4.1 billion in December 2023.

Ken struck me then as someone with good entrepreneurial instincts. He’s back in the arena again with another startup with potential.

This time, he’s CEO of San Diego-based Candid Therapeutics. It’s a startup developing bispecific T-cell engaging antibodies to treat autoimmune diseases. It has raised $370 million in venture capital. The company’s two lead drug candidates are in clinical trials.

Candid is hoping to be part of a wave of innovation in the treatment of autoimmune disease. We’ve seen remarkable results with CAR-T cell therapies in patients with autoimmune disease, who achieve “an immune reset.” That’s a tantalizing result, but one that’s unlikely to scale to the millions of people with autoimmune diseases. Ken and his team are wagering that T-cell engaging antibodies will achieve a similar biological effect, but in a more practical, scalable, and cost-effective shot that comes in a vial.

Before we get started, a word from the sponsors of The Long Run.

 

 

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Please enjoy this conversation with Ken Song on The Long Run.

27
Feb
2026

Agency: The Motivational Currency of Health

David Shaywitz

Last night I offered some remarks at February’s Boston Health Innovation Night, a monthly gathering of innovators, entrepreneurs, and investors in Boston’s extraordinary biomedical ecosystem, organized by digital health advisor and investor Steven Wardell.

Several people asked whether I’d written the ideas up, which I took as encouragement to share them here (along with a few photos from the event). What follows is a lightly edited version of what I said, followed by a related personal career update/disclosure for readers (tl;dr my passion project is now also my day job).

•    •    •

Each phase of my career has been shaped by a powerful emerging technology — molecular biology and genetics, stem cells, digital health, and most recently AI. What’s kept me at it is less the technology itself than the intent: trying to figure out how to actually use these tools to help people, and staying preoccupied with whether we really are. And who those people are is changing. Taking care of the sick remains the core of medicine, but the aperture is widening: we’re beginning to ask how these same tools might help all of us live better, not just recover when things go wrong.

Author, with Nicole van Poppel (Cytoreason) and Dr. Jenifer Siegelman (strategic advisor)

A few learnings along the way:

First: technology is enormously enabling. Tools have extraordinary power. Think of the impact of the telescope, the microscope, the microchip, the calculus: all changed the questions we were able to ask of nature. But the key challenge with any powerful new technology — and gen AI is only the latest example — is making sure we leverage it without getting defined by it. The real danger is letting what the tools do well define what we think matters. In healthtech, that means we tend to focus on measuring, quantifying, and optimizing, rather than what might be most important to the people we’re trying to serve. As Kate Crawford astutely reminds us, we must not let the “affordances of the tools become the horizon of truth.”

Second: remarkable progress in the science of aging has highlighted the outsized value of basic lifestyle activities. There’s so much we can do to age better and live healthier.  Not zany fads like rejuvenation pods and the like, but basic, common-sense things that tend to reduce what researchers call “inflammaging,” chronic low-grade inflammation associated with problems from cancer to dementia.

Event organizer, digital health investor/advisor Steven Wardell (right).

Obvious examples involve physiology: move regularly — Eric Topol has pointed out that a drug that delivered all the health benefits of exercise would be considered a medical breakthrough. Eat thoughtfully — avoid what nutrition researcher Kevin Hall describes as hyperpalatable, calorie-dense food; there’s lots of good data around the Mediterranean Diet, but common sense applies, and as Zeke Emanuel advises, on special occasions go ahead and eat your ice cream. Also — prioritize sleep; as Matthew Walker and others have taught us, it’s incredibly important.

Unfortunately, the remarkable advances in our ability to measure have led some to turn health into a game of relentless optimization of performance metrics like VO2 and various evolving putative measures of biological aging that may have value at the population level but aren’t yet validated on the individual level. There’s even a rejuvenation Olympics where biohackers compete for best biological aging score. 

I’ve always favored a more capacious view of health — and the data seem to support this broader perspective. For example, while physiology is important, so are two other categories: connection/purpose and agency. The Harvard Study of Adult Development, now running over 85 years, has shown that warm relationships predict better cognitive and emotional health decades later. The Northwestern SuperAgers study — examining people in their 80s with memory as sharp as 50-year-olds — found that the single psychological factor distinguishing them from their peers was higher-quality positive relationships. And meta-analyses across more than 300,000 people show that stronger social connections are associated with a 50% increased likelihood of survival. And a higher sense of purpose has also been robustly associated with reduced mortality — there’s actually a great JAMA Network publication showing a dose-response relationship.

Finally, we get to the quality I’m especially captivated by: agency — essentially, your belief that you can impact the world around you. The data linking agency and optimism to better health are striking. Meta-analyses across more than 200,000 people show that higher optimism is associated with roughly a 35% lower risk of cardiovascular events and about 14% lower all-cause mortality — effect sizes in the same neighborhood as traditional risk factors like blood pressure or cholesterol. In the Nurses’ Health Study, women in the top quartile of optimism had nearly 40% lower risk of dying from heart disease or stroke over eight years. More optimistic people also appear to live about 10% longer, with 50-70% greater odds of making it to 85 or beyond. The American Heart Association’s 2021 Scientific Statement in Circulation formally recognized optimism and psychological well-being as cardiovascular health factors with quantified effect sizes, which I guess makes these ideas officially mainstream.

Author, with Alexander Webber (Virus Watcher) and Dr. Marc Herant (Recon Strategy).

Of course, these encouraging associations raise the real question: can we actually cultivate agency, or is it just a trait some people happen to possess? Because changing health behavior is incredibly hard. Angela Duckworth and Katy Milkman ran a massive study –- a “megastudy” — with over 60,000 participants testing dozens of behavioral interventions to boost gym attendance, and none of them worked particularly well — and experts had very little ability to predict which specific interventions would be effective. As Duckworth herself put it, “Behavior change is really *#$@ing hard” – and she’s a MacArthur Genius!

And yet — there are remarkable examples showing it absolutely can be done. Perhaps none more compelling than right here in Boston, just down the street from where we’re standing. The Diabetes Prevention Program, led by my diabetes clinical mentor David Nathan at MGH, demonstrated that a structured lifestyle intervention could reduce the incidence of type 2 diabetes by 58 percent — nearly twice the effect of medication. And the benefits have persisted over 15 years of follow-up. It’s one of the most important prevention studies ever conducted, and, as I see it, it’s all about cultivating agency.

And we’re seeing the same mechanism play out right now in a completely different context. David Kessler — former FDA Commissioner — has described the struggle to lose weight after a lifetime of trying as “a cycle of despair.” What the new GLP-1 medications have done for Kessler and many others, beyond the physiology, is restore the belief that they can actually succeed. That renewed sense of agency can create what I’ve called an “agentic dividend” that, if suitably cultivated, can be applied to other healthy pursuits, like exercising, getting health screenings, reconnecting with family, friends, and community. It has the potential to initiate a virtuous cycle.

Author, with Molly Robb (talent partner) and Steven Wardell (digital health investor/advisor).

One important thing to say about agency before I close. This is emphatically not about “putting on a happy face.” Bad things happen. Terrible things happen. The deeper view of positivity — what Martin Seligman calls flourishing — is a combination of positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning, and accomplishment. It’s substantive, not superficial, and as he derisively explains, it’s absolutely not about “merriment.” Optimism can improve your odds, but it’s not a panacea. I think of it more as a resilience tool, one that encourages us to respond constructively and persistently — while being clear that bad outcomes don’t mean you didn’t smile enough. There’s a lot of contingency and bad luck in the world. Sh-t happens.

And that brings me to my final point. It’s precisely because of all that contingency that our ability to cultivate agency matters so much. Agency, as I’ve described it, is the motivational currency of health — the thing that allows us to push through despite the many obstacles and pervasive, ever-present uncertainty. As Seligman wrote in 2021:

“When do we try hard? When do we break out of our sloth and overcome barriers that seem insurmountable? When do we reach for goals that seem unobtainable? When do we persist against the odds? When do we make new, creative departures? These all require Agency — an individual’s belief that he or she can influence the world.”

There’s so much we can’t control — in every setting, everywhere. Our most underappreciated tool for improving our chances of getting the outcomes we want, and even more importantly – for living lives that feel full and capacious and ours — is building our sense of agency, our belief that we can impact the world around us, and coupling that belief with the pragmatic skills and mastery experiences that prove to us, in domains and across domains, that we actually can.

(Reading and resources related to agency and health can be found at KindWellHealth, here.)

•    •    •

Now to the career update/disclosure I mentioned upfront: I am joining Lore Health as Chief Medical Scientist. In this role, the passion project I’ve pursued (and maintain) at KindWellHealth will now also become my day job: leveraging emerging technology and behavioral science to cultivate agency and improve health at scale.

20
Feb
2026

Enjoy the Photos: Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Kilimanjaro 2026

One of my favorite Swahili words is “pamoja.” It means together.

The Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation concluded on Feb. 16. We had a memorable experience on Kilimanjaro. 

We did it together.

We shared many laughs, and a few tears during our 7-day experience on the highest peak in Africa.

This team had some disappointments. Illness and injury prevented a few members of the team from reaching the summit at 19,341 feet / 5,895 meters.

But there much more to this mountain experience than the summit. We marveled at the stars sparkling in the night skies. We paused to look over the Dendrosenecio kilimanjari, a prehistoric, tree-like plant that look like something from a Dr. Suess book. They are found only in Kilimanjaro’s moorland zone around 14,000 feet.

We gawked at monkeys jumping from branch to branch in the lush forest zone. We heard gentle taps of rain and snow on our tents, while snug in our sleeping bags. We held onto ancient volcanic rock, made smooth over the years by people who make careful hand and foot placements to continue up the mountain.

We exceeded our $1 million fundraising goal for high-risk / high-reward cancer research with $1,206,402. This is enough to fully fund three young scientists for the next four years through the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. Our hard work on fundraising will advance cancer research for future generations.

This team rose to the challenge of doing something larger than ourselves.

The physical and emotional challenge was no small thing. We covered a little more than 40 miles over rugged, uneven, uphill and downhill terrain. When individuals struggled with altitude symptoms, our group rallied in support — a sip of water, a tasty snack, or a hug.

The camaraderie was special. There’s something deeply human about getting outside, with a group, pushing ourselves hard mentally and physically toward a shared goal.

We relaxed after these efforts by telling stories and cracking jokes. We sang and danced with our Tanzanian crew as if no one was watching.

We shared simple pleasures. A cup of tea or coffee in the tent. Afternoon popcorn in the mess tent. A washcloth at the end of a long day. The nourishing slurp of warm carrot and ginger soup. 

We paid attention, and offered respect, to our gracious and hard-working Tanzanian hosts.

The bonds formed were strong. At the end of an immersive experience like this, these are the people who will show up at your wedding or your memorial service. Many positive things will undoubtedly spin out from these deep, meaningful relationships.

Please enjoy a few photos from this life-altering experience.

17
Feb
2026

Discovering Drugs for Cancer and Autoimmunity: Ansu Satpathy

Ansu Satpathy is today’s guest on The Long Run.

Ansu is a physician-scientist and an associate professor of pathology and immunology at Stanford University. He’s co-director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy Center at Stanford Medicine, and the co-founder of several startup companies. These include Cartography Biosciences (a cancer drug developer), Santa Ana Bio (a developer of precision autoimmune therapies) and Immunai, which maps the immune system to guide drug discovery. 

Ansu Satpathy, associate professor, Stanford University; co-director, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at Stanford Medicine

Ansu’s work focuses on using the new tools of biology – ones that gather genomic, proteomic, metabolomic and other comprehensive datasets – down to the level of single immune cells and cancer cells.

He is one of the people using the tools to probe in ever-greater levels of detail, what’s happening in healthy states, diseased states, and what happens at the molecular level before and after patients get experimental treatments.

Scientists in Ansu’s orbit are seeing things that scientists haven’t been able to see before. It’s throwing off all kinds of promising ideas and discoveries. It’s heady stuff.

Before we get started, a word from the sponsor of The Long Run.

 

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  • High-quality data across major assay types including ELISA/MSD, LC-MS, and PCR, supporting all modalities and therapeutic areas
  • Customer-first policies, like guaranteed outcomes and transparent pricing.

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Lastly, planning is underway for the next big Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. It will be Aug. 2-5 in the High Sierras of Northern California. Join me for a pair of back-to-back day hikes that will deliver spectacular views of peaks in the 13,000-14,000-foot range. If you are physically fit, enjoy the outdoors, and are able to raise significant money for cancer research – ask me for an invitation. luke@timmermanreport.com.

Now, please enjoy this conversation with Ansu Satpathy on The Long Run.

9
Feb
2026

Hike the High Sierras for Damon Runyon Cancer Research

Luke Timmerman, founder & editor, Timmerman Report

Please join me for a spectacular outdoor experience.

It’s the next Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. This year it will be in the Evolution Range of California’s High Sierras. 

We will do an extraordinary pair of back-to-back day hikes. We will test our endurance on high-altitude trails, reaching peaks above 13,000 feet. We’ll marvel at breathtaking views and landscapes.

The funds we raise on this trip will propel the careers of outstanding young scientists in the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation network.

The physical challenge, the mission for cancer research, the fellowship of your peers, and the awe-inspiring natural beauty combine to make this an unforgettable life experience.

This is a trip you will tell your grandkids about when you are 80 years old.

THE CHALLENGE: We will cover 25 miles, with 7,200 feet of elevation gain over back-to-back day hikes with some short and non-technical rock scrambles. We will savor some of the most beautiful scenery in North America. These routes are safe. We will not need ropes or technical rock-climbing equipment.

Bishop Pass, elevation 11,972 feet

Piute Pass, elevation 11,423 feet

When: Aug. 2-5, 2026. 

Who’s the Team Leader? Luke Timmerman is the founder and editor of Timmerman Report, a leading biotech industry newsletter. Since 2017, the Timmerman Traverse has mobilized the biotech community to give back more than $15 million for cancer research, anti-poverty initiatives, and screening for sickle cell disease.

Where are we staying? Not in a tent. We’ll sleep in comfortable beds each night at Wayfinder Bishop. It’s a boutique hotel in Bishop, CA. (LINK). We’ll take vans to the trailheads each day.

Fundraising: The fundraising minimum is $35,000. You will start your campaign by making a personal contribution of $1,000 to register.

Each hiker is *required* to raise the $35,000 for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. Many will go above and beyond. 

Funds can come from a variety of sources: corporate sponsors, friends and family, business colleagues. You are a talented executive or investor. You know how to prioritize and get things done.

What Will I Do?

  • Raise awareness for cancer research
  • Raise funds to propel the careers of young scientists
  • Form meaningful relationships with biotech leaders
  • Have fun

Why Damon Runyon? It supports brilliant cancer researchers doing high-risk/high-reward research across the US. Damon Runyon grants allow young scientists to generate data they can leverage into larger sums from others.

Damon Runyon has a keen eye for talent. In its more than 75-year history, its recipients have gone on to win:

  • 13 Nobel Prizes
  • 7 National Medals of Science
  • 104 elected memberships in the National Academy of Sciences

Damon Runyon grants have catalyzed many major advances in science, including

  • The first chemotherapies to cure a solid tumor.
  • The first targeted ALK inhibitor for lung cancer
  • The first demonstration of CRISPR gene editing in mammalian cells.
  • Cancer immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors and CAR-T cell therapy in the mid-2000s, long before these treatments became mainstream.

Where do the Funds Go? All of the funds we raise (100 percent) go to the young scientists in the Damon Runyon network. Since 2023, Timmerman Traverse campaigns have raised more than $3 million for the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation.

We are betting on brilliant young people with big ideas.

Here’s who the Timmerman Traverse Fellows are, and what they are doing:

  • Tata Kavlashvili PhD, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, mitochondrial damage as a driver of cancer.
  • Shaohua Zhang PhD, UCSF, improved CAR-T cell engineering to prevent tumor escape
  • Lachelle Weeks MD, PhD, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, computer models to predict risk of developing acute myeloid leukemia
  • Antonio Laporte PhD, Harvard Medical School, role of glycosylation patterns in driving growth and spread of cancer.
  • Natasha O’Brown PhD, Rutgers University, regulating the blood-brain barrier to pave the way for more effective brain cancer therapy.

The funds you raise will open doors for more outstanding young scientists. Your efforts will enable them to pursue their dreams and hopefully make breakthrough discoveries.

Schedule:

Sunday, Aug. 2. Arrive in Bishop, CA. United Airlines flights from SFO and Denver. 6 pm dinner & team briefing, Wayfinder Bishop.

Monday, Aug. 3. Hike to Piute Pass / Mt. Emerson (elev. 13,210 ft)

Tuesday, Aug. 4. Hike to Bishop Pass / Mt. Goode (elev. 13,085 ft)

Wednesday, Aug. 5. Depart.

What Alumni Are Saying

Ted Love, immediate past chair of the board, BIO

“Timmerman Traverse is special to me because it brings together adventure, physical challenge, philanthropy and camaraderie with some of the most outstanding people in the biopharma industry.” — Ted Love, immediate past chair of the board, Biotechnology Innovation Organization. 

“I made friends for a lifetime with colleagues who shared the goal of raising critical funds for truly innovative cancer research.” – Nagesh Mahanthappa, executive chair, Exo Therapeutics.

“What was completely unexpected was the level of camaraderie that immediately formed in the group – like-minded, interesting and interested, generous and unquitting.” – Nina Kjellson, general partner, Canaan Partners

Vineeta Agarwala, general partner, A16Z Bio & Health

“This is a vibrant community of life science leaders all over the country who love to recharge in the outdoors, meet one another as friends and colleagues, and most importantly, give back to the communities around us.” — Vineeta Agarwala, general partner, Andreesen Horowitz Bio & Health Fund

“Simply the best chance ever to get to know a high-quality group of biotech executives well. And so much more. Consider Luke’s future trips if you love the industry and hate cancer.” — Bob More, partner, Alta Partners

Expenses: You will be personally responsible for the following:

  • $1,000 Registration fee. Paid upfront to Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. This will count toward your $35,000 fundraising requirement.
  • Flights in and out of Bishop, CA.
  • Gear — warm layers, hat, gloves, hiking boots, lightweight backpack, snacks, water, etc. Detailed gear list to come.

Key Dates:

  1. 60 percent ($21,000) must be received by May 14, 2026.
  2. 90 percent ($31,500) must be received at Damon Runyon by July 15, 2026.
  3. The full amount ($35,000 minimum) must be received by Aug. 2, 2026.

Who’s on the TT Sierras Team?

I hope you can join us for this once-in-a-lifetime experience.

L to R: Henry Kilgore, Luke Timmerman, and Will Chen on Kilimanjaro, Feb. 2024. Henry and Will are Damon Runyon Fellows who participated in the inaugural Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon on Kilimanjaro, Feb. 2024.

9
Feb
2026

Gear Check: Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Heads to Kilimanjaro

Gear check is when it starts getting fun and getting real.

Our team of 21 hikers has arrived in Tanzania and gotten all our gear sorted. We’ll start the trek on Kilimanjaro Feb. 10. Then we spend the next seven days together on the trails to the top of the highest peak in Africa, elevation 19,341 feet / 5,895 meters.

We are getting to know each other over meals. We’re cracking jokes. We’re soaking up the warm and welcoming atmosphere of the Tanzanian people.

It’s time to slow down and savor these days. We’ve put in months of hard work getting physically and mentally ready, and tapping our networks to raise $1.2 million for high-risk / high-reward cancer research through the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation.

Thanks to all of you who contributed. If you haven’t yet contributed, there’s still time to do so here at Qgive. You can also follow our day-to-day progress on the mountain here.

Enjoy a few photos from Orientation Day in Arusha.

Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation 2026 Kilimanjaro team.

8
Feb
2026

Can We Ride the GenAI Wave Without Getting Subsumed by It?

David Shaywitz

“There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen,” said Lenin, probably never.  It’s also a remarkably apt characterization of the last year in generative AI (genAI) — the last week in particular — which has seen the AI landscape shift so dramatically that even skeptics are now updating their priors in a more bullish direction.

In September 2025, Anthropic, the AI company behind Claude, released what it described as its most capable model yet, and said it could stay on complex coding tasks for about 30 hours continuously. Reported examples including building a web app from scratch, with some runs described as generating roughly 11,000 lines of code. In January 2026, two Wall Street Journal reporters who said they had no programming background used Claude Code to build and publish a Journal project, and described the capability as “a breakout moment for Anthropic’s coding tool” and for “vibe coding” — the idea of creating software simply by describing it.

Around the same time, OpenClaw went viral as an open-source assistant that runs locally and works through everyday apps like WhatsApp, Telegram, and Slack to execute multi-step tasks. The deeper shift, though, is architectural: the ecosystem is converging on open standards for AI integration. One such standard called MCP — the “USB-C of AI” — is now being downloaded nearly 100 million times a month, suggesting that AI integration has moved from exploratory to operational.

Markets are watching the evolution of AI agents into potentially useful economic actors and reacting accordingly. When Anthropic announced plans to move into high-revenue verticals — including financial services, law, and life sciences — the Journal headline read: “Threat of New AI Tools Wipes $300B Off Software and Data Stocks.”

Economist Tyler Cowen observed that this moment will “go down as some kind of turning point.” Derek Thompson, long concerned about an AI bubble, said his worries “declined significantly” in recent weeks. Heeding Wharton’s Ethan Mollick — “remember, today’s AI is the worst AI you will ever use” — investors and entrepreneurs are busily searching for opportunities to ride this wave.

Some founders are taking their ambition to healthcare and life science, where they see a slew of problems for which (they anticipate) genAI might be the solution, or at least part of it. The approach one AI-driven startup is taking towards primary care offers a glimpse into what such a future might hold (or perhaps what fresh hell awaits us).

Two Visions of Primary Care

There is genuine crisis in primary care. Absurdly overburdened and comically underpaid, primary care physicians have fled the profession in droves — some to concierge practices where (they say) they can provide the quality of care that originally attracted them to medicine, many out of clinical practice entirely. Recruiting new trainees grows harder each year.

What’s being lost is captured with extraordinary power by Dr. Lisa Rosenbaum in her NEJM podcast series on the topic. In a companion essay, Rosenbaum documents the measurable consequences when patients lose a primary care physician: a rise in mortality, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations, all in proportion to the relationship’s duration — suggesting, as she writes, “that the relationship itself conferred health benefits.” Worse, more than three quarters of patients never form a new PCP relationship after losing one.

But Rosenbaum’s deepest concern isn’t statistical. It’s about what she calls the “good doctor” phenotype — not a skill set but a style. She describes a physician whose hallmark was assuming responsibility for the totality of his patients’ problems. When Rosenbaum was caring for one of his hospitalized patients, the patient insisted she update the doctor, explaining simply: “He will want to know.” For Rosenbaum, having your patients intuit that you would want to know — far more than any quality metric — constitutes the essence of being a good doctor. A “culture without a vision of the good doctor,” she warns, “is a profession without a soul.”

Her darkest worry: the system may morph into “some artificial-intelligence-enhanced triage system devoid of a relational core.”

Which is almost exactly what physician-entrepreneur Muthu Alagappan, co-founder of Counsel Health, aspires to deliver — for the sake of patients. His starting point: 100 million Americans don’t have a relationship with a doctor, good or otherwise. The relational ideal Rosenbaum celebrates is already inaccessible to vast swaths of the population.

At Counsel Health — recently backed by a $25M Series A from GV and Andreessen Horowitz — AI handles the upfront information gathering and initial clinical reasoning, functioning, as Alagappan puts it, like “an extremely smart medical resident that is reasoning along with them, serving up the plan and allowing them to approve or deny in a single click.” Doctors see 15 to 20-plus patients per hour. The vision: primary care visits costing less than a dollar.

As Alagappan sees it “It’s hard to fathom a cognitive aspect of the practice of medicine in primary care that a technology system is just not better suited to do than the human brain.”

He acknowledges that humans may still be necessary for pesky, hands-on tasks like wrapping an ankle or administering a vaccine, but beyond these, he seems to believe, the future belongs to the machines. He anticipates “regulation will ease and improve so that the AI can do more and more.”

In Utah, the approach pursued by a startup called Doctronic suggests such regulatory change may be closer than we think. The company’s AI prescribes renewals without a physician in the loop for 190 routine medications, at $4 per script — with a malpractice insurance policy covering the AI system itself, and escalation and oversight safeguards.  Expansion is already contemplated to states like Texas, Arizona and Missouri, with a national roll-out under consideration as well.

Who’s in charge?

As AI capabilities compound rapidly, there is tremendous temptation to apply them wherever they fit most naturally.  Without intentionality, this approach risks quietly redefining disciplines by the tasks the technology performs well. Because AI can efficiently process symptoms, match protocols, and renew prescriptions, we might start to define medicine as these specific tasks — in much the same way that because we can measure steps, sleep scores, and VO2 max, we’re tempted to define health as the optimization of dashboard metrics. As Kate Crawford astutely warned, we must not let the “affordances of the tools become the horizon of truth.”

This tension extends to biopharma R&D as well. Here, efforts to leverage AI have succeeded in limited domains with dense data and established benchmarks, but have struggled where the critical data are scarce, highly conditional, or both — as Andreas Bender, in particular, has eloquently discussed.

We’re always tempted to look where the light is.  But difficult as it can be to maintain focus on what actually matters, rather than what technology most readily delivers, it can be done.

A Company Built on What Matters

For some time now, I’ve argued — in this space, at KindWellHealth, and elsewhere — that genuinely enhancing human flourishing requires attention to three broad dimensions: physiology (movement, nutrition, recovery, preventive screening), agency (your belief in your ability to shape a better future), and connection (the value of meaningful relationships and purposeful pursuits).

The news that caught my attention recently was that someone independently built a business around exactly this framework. Unbound, a UK-based preventive health company operating from a single just-opened location in London’s Shoreditch, describes itself as “built on the belief that physical, mental and social health are inseparable.”

Several design choices distinguish Unbound from the optimization-culture norm. They measure connectedness alongside biomarkers — literally assessing social connection as a clinical input. Their medical director, Dr. Elliott Roy-Highley, frames health as “not merely the result of internal cellular mechanics, but an emergent property of social integration, purpose, and communal regulation.” A coffee shop replaces the waiting room; community circles, run clubs, and art exhibitions aren’t wellness window-dressing but structural commitments – the social environment is treated as meaningful part of the intervention.

Perhaps most distinctive is a post-assessment “future self” exercise — an evidence-backed positive psychology intervention that asks participants to envision their optimal future self and identify personal barriers to achieving that vision.  By strengthening the psychological connection between present and future selves, the exercise enhances goal clarity, self-efficacy, and motivation for behavior change. This process works through narrative mechanisms — imagining, evaluating, and orienting toward personally meaningful goals –that translate assessment insights into actionable health strategies.

Crucially, Unbound doesn’t reject measurement and technology. They offer a companion app for extending connection and tracking recommendations beyond the clinic; their assessments integrate blood work and physical performance testing alongside the emotional and social components.  As Unbound puts it: “Yes, we use tools like clinical testing — but not as a way to measure your worth or push you to chase perfection. We use them to guide and support a much bigger goal: helping you live the life you want, with clarity and confidence.” The intent: leverage science and technology with intentionality, pointing them where they should be aimed, rather than where they are most inclined to go.

Of course, there’s a large gap between a compelling concept and improved health. It’s possible Unbound will prove to be savvy wellness marketing aimed at motivated, affluent urbanites. The people who walk into a trendy Shoreditch health studio are already relatively motivated and likely already drawn to purposeful engagement. The evidence that the program actually improves health, while theoretically grounded, remains to be seen.

But the interest Unbound has attracted reveals a substantial appetite for something beyond relentless metric optimization — and there’s little in their approach that seems especially proprietary. The same foundational principles — deepen connection, develop agency, attend (with compassion) to physiology — all could be applied at scale by incumbents and digital platforms. Peloton, for instance, has the community infrastructure and the user engagement; what it lacks is a framework that extends beyond leaderboards and performance dashboards toward something that might help users not just perform but flourish.

Bottom Line

GenAI is advancing at a pace that would have seemed fantastical even a year ago; the developments of the last few weeks have forced even seasoned skeptics to recalibrate. There is tremendous incentive — and good reason — to ride this technology wave toward compelling opportunities like the crisis in primary care. But as these capabilities compound, the central challenge will be ensuring the technology serves what patients and people actually need, rather than allowing those needs to be defined by what the technology most readily delivers. The risk of essentially reducing health to what can be optimized by technology is real, as so many tech-powered companies in healthcare, biotech, and fitness demonstrate. But it is also possible to leverage technology in service of a more complete and less reductive vision — attending to physiology, agency, and genuine human connection — as Unbound suggests, and hopefully, many others pursue. 

4
Feb
2026

The Problem with Platform Companies

Alex Harding, CEO, stealth biotech startup

I should start by saying that I am currently the CEO of a platform company. (We’re not talking publicly about what we’re doing yet.)

Yes, I recognize the contradiction between the headline of this piece and my own career choice. No, I don’t like calling it a platform company—even if that’s what it is.

There are a few different species of platform companies. The classic form (and the type I’m focused on here) is a drug technology platform, like the CRISPR gene editing companies or Alnylam, the leading siRNA company. These companies have a core technology incorporated into the drugs they aim to make.

There are also assay platform companies, which develop an assay to screen or characterize molecules. Vertex, for example, developed an assay platform to detect expression and localization of the CFTR chloride channel, which became a powerful engine to discover drugs for cystic fibrosis.

And there are companies where the platform is its expertise in a disease area. Disc Medicine, a company specialized in benign hematology, is able to use its hematology expertise to develop molecules in ways that other companies hadn’t thought of, because of its specialized knowledge in that disease area.

Platforms are great when they do what they’re supposed to, which is to create an efficient engine that generates multiple valuable programs using the same underlying technology or capability.

The problem is when that platform becomes the focal point of the company, instead of the programs it is supposed to generate. Many platform companies spend over $50 million and 3-4 years—sometimes much more—just to get to their first development candidate, the first molecule with the potential to go into a clinical trial.

These companies hire large scientific teams dedicated to the platform. Those teams do spectacular science. They publish papers in Science and Nature. Sometimes, they even make meaningful progress that the whole field benefits from.

But, too often, that progress comes at an enormous cost, without enough tangible output of the currency biotechnology companies deal in: molecules. That is, drug molecules on the path to demonstrating clinical proof of concept, on the path to becoming medicines. Instead, these platform companies exist for the sake of the platform.

The rationale for a platform company hinges on the notion that once the technical hurdles of the platform are cracked with a first program, a dam will break and there will be a flood of additional programs, justifying the upfront investment in the platform. Very often, however, the dam never breaks. After pouring $50 million or 100 million to get a first program into clinical trials, a platform company has a valuation of over $200 million and a crop of investors who are fatigued and reluctant to invest more behind preclinical programs. In some cases, the second or third programs intended to be churned out by a technology platform do not have such a compelling product profile as the lead program.

All too often, the promised flood of new programs never materializes. Instead, the company has poured money into a platform and only has a lead program to show for it. The lofty valuation, predicated on the broader pipeline potential, is hard to justify with a single asset, and the company will struggle to raise additional capital.

This is a story that has been written and rewritten all too often in biotechnology.

The label ‘platform company’ grates on me when people use it to describe the company I’m helping to build. They are not wrong—we do have a technology platform. But I prefer to think of ourselves as a pipeline company. We have a technology platform oriented to producing new programs, new molecules that have the potential to become medicines.

The word choice matters to me. Our platform exists solely for the sake of the pipeline, and our resources are allocated accordingly. We invest in our platform in a targeted manner, always with a clear vision of what the therapeutic application will be.

This also means that there are certain platform investments we won’t make. If the science is too early, too distant from a program, we choose to spend our money on other efforts that can make a more immediate impact on our pipeline. For an early-stage startup like ours, we want an investment into our platform to yield a development candidate within a year or so.

A company is defined by how it chooses to allocate the capital it is given. Targeted capital allocation to a platform makes sense, so long as the focus remains fixed on generating new programs. But the moment the platform comes first, you have lost the tune.

So please, don’t call mine a platform company. We’re a pipeline company.

25
Jan
2026

Science and Industry Need to Push Back Hard

Colette Delawalla, founder and CEO, Stand Up for Science

The days of strongly worded letters, statements to the press, white papers, and op-eds are over. The people dismantling science are coming at all we care about with a pliers and a blowtorch.

If I have learned anything in the past year as founder of Stand Up for Science, it is that most of the people who value science and have made money in science-based industries are silent. The silence is harmful.

As Martin Luther King said:

“The greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people.”

A few are speaking out, like Peter Kolchinsky of RA Capital Management, and Noubar Afeyan most recently. Afeyan’s annual letter for 2026 from Flagship Pioneering was spot on; “man-made miracles” of science are all around us.

For the first time in human history about one-third of babies born aren’t dying before they reach adulthood. We have utterly extraordinary treatments and cures for wicked diseases such as HIV, depression, various cancers, and diabetes. We’ve put a man on the moon, reached the bottom of the ocean, and accurately predicted the weather to save thousands of lives a year.

These “man-made miracles” of science did not happen by accident. The ecosystem — everything across the research and development continuum — that has created these “miracles” is in deep danger.

These courageous statements from leaders of the biopharma community are rare and extremely important. It is one prong of the campaign to defend science, but not the only one.

I founded Stand Up for Science in February 2025 because existing organizations who advocate for science were not meeting the moment. My view is that science needs brass knuckles.

We are not your grandmother’s science advocacy nonprofit. In the final three months of 2025, we made over 4.5 billion impressions across all our communications channels. This was from completely earned media coverage, not a cent of paid advertising.

We have mobilized hundreds of thousands of citizens in over 200 peaceful protests across the globe, supported federal scientists at the NIH, NSF, EPA, NASA, and FEMA in whistleblowing, held double the number of Congressional meetings as legacy science organizations, launched viral messaging campaigns, and secured sponsorship of and helped draft the articles of impeachment against Secretary Kennedy filed in the House of Representatives on Dec. 10.

Stand Up for Science is just getting started. 

Why you are needed in the fight for science

The threats to science, and public health, are clear and present.

I could publish a list of the economic damages that will befall the biopharma and healthcare sectors by having a man who doesn’t believe in germ theory running Health and Human Services. Anti-vaccine policy at HHS isn’t just bad for the vaccine business – it’s bad for kids and families everywhere. The world needs people with wealth and power to provide a voice that extends to the voiceless because it is the right thing to do, not just because it is the fiscally responsible thing to do.

In the US, science and democracy are so thoughtfully linked that science has a place in our Constitution (Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8, which established the foundation in law for patents and copyrights). Indeed, a thriving scientific–and intellectual–ecosystem is critical to a healthy democracy. What is happening in the United States right now, is way bigger than whether the FDA is going to approve your new drug. A government banning the word “woman” from grant applications is not a sign of a society moving toward a freer and brighter future. 

Science itself can be twisted from a method of unbiased inquiry into a weapon.

Secretary Kennedy is pulling apart all protections against biotech and pharma companies to allow people with perceived “vaccine injuries” to sue vaccine makers. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) is run by fervent anti-vaxxers, making changes to vaccine recommendations without new evidence of harm. Members of the public are left confused.  

The CDC has proposed funding appallingly unethical experimentation on babies in the west African nation of Guinea Bissau. The CDC-backed study – currently suspended by local health authorities – would withhold the hepatitis B vaccine from thousands of newborns in a placebo group, making them vulnerable to infection with hepatitis B, a chronic liver damaging disease, in a nation where more than 20% of the population is positive for hepatitis B.

HHS is systematically dismantling the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Kennedy is railing against selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI’s) for depression.

The list goes on. The HHS leadership is tearing down our pandemic monitoring systems, cancelling Sudden Infant Death Prevention programs, defunding addiction treatment centers, threatening doctors who provide gender affirming care, and have disrupted clinical trials impacting over 75,000 people. 

But these wrongs are not occurring in a vacuum. Outside of science, America is not okay. In 2026, the same people who are allowing ICE to violate our constitutional rights, calling for the US to invade sovereign nations, and rubber-stamping consolidation of power to the Executive, are in control of American science. Having read a few history books, I can say with confidence, good things do not ever come from oppressive governments interfering in science on ideological grounds.

I’ve spent a lot of time with members of Congress in the last six months. I have two key takeaways: 1) the political tools of old will not work in this moment and 2) making any assumption of good will is a mistake comparable to bringing a white paper to a gun fight.

The civic duty of everyone privileged enough to live in a democracy is to stand up, where we can, if the democracy is in peril. This is what Benjamin Franklin meant when he said, “a republic, if you can keep it.” Right now, we can Stand Up for Science to prevent science from being used as a weapon against the public and to protect democracy in our corner of society.

How you can fight for science (and democracy) in a few steps

The first step in fixing a problem is admitting you have one…and then endeavoring to fix it.

It is an uncomfortable moment in history. It is difficult for scientifically minded people who rail against black and white thinking for a living. We have a moral obligation to push back against these damaging policies.

The second step is out of your comfort zone.

We can embrace a new identity: science activist. We can take off the gloves, put on the brass knuckles, and (nonviolently) fight! We look to our predecessors, such as Jacques Monod, Nikolai Vavilov, Albert Einstein, Paul Langevin–leading scientists who leveraged their positions to take a stand against authoritarianism, in many cases, at great cost. I would be remiss not to include Alex Pretti, nurse and researcher at the Minneapolis VA, among this esteemed list of principled science activists. He was murdered by ICE on Jan. 24 while assisting a woman who had fallen after being pepper sprayed.

The third step is putting your money where your mouth is.

The MAHA Action Fund has a war chest of tens of millions of dollars they are using right now, as you read this, to spread misinformation. 

I’m eager to enlist scientists to fight against that machine. I’ve talked to leaders in this sector–folks who have made their billions–and I’m tired of hearing “I agree with you, but…”

Talk is cheap. If you see what is happening in the US, right now and you are standing on the sidelines, you are a part of the problem. If you read this and Afeyan’s letter and are ready to really do something: put your money where your mouth is. Stand Up for Science cannot turn hot air into resistance, but we can turn money into people power and cutting-edge communications. We can break through to people and be heard in a flooded media environment. 

Here is how you can Stand Up for Science: 

  1. Contact your member of the House of Representatives and tell them to co-sponsor the articles of impeachment against RFK Jr. 
  2. Attend a March 7th Stand Up for Science protest.
  3. Speak out when you get the chance. We need people in powerful positions to normalize choosing a side. 
  4. Donate to Stand Up for Science. We are science insurance for the discovery pipeline. We are also on offense, mobilizing scientists and pro-science members of the public in direct action in support of science and democracy. 
  5. Share this op-ed with your networks and join a SUFS Local chapter! We need science fighters in every state.

Colette Delawalla is the founder and CEO of Stand Up for Science. colette@standupforscience.net

22
Jan
2026

Helping People Lose Weight and Live Healthy: Ron Renaud on The Long Run

Ron Renaud is today’s guest on The Long Run. He is the CEO of Waltham, Mass.-based Kailera Therapeutics.

Ron Renaud, president and CEO, Kailera Therapeutics

Kailera is pursuing what could be the biggest opportunity in pharmaceutical industry history.

It’s developing a portfolio of GLP-1-based drugs for obesity. Drugs in this category have been around a long time for treatment of Type 2 diabetes, but over the last few years demand has skyrocketed. That’s because evidence has been mounting that these drugs are effective at helping all kinds of people – not just diabetics — to lose significant weight and lower their risk for a bunch of chronic ailments that stem from obesity, like cardiovascular disease and chronic kidney disease.

More than 1 billion people worldwide are considered obese. Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk are the category leaders, and their success has inspired an estimated 80 different drugs and drug combinations sprinting ahead in clinical development. Dozens of public and private companies are striving to capture a piece of a market. Some analysts estimate it will be worth more than $150 billion a year in sales by the early 2030s.

Kailera is one of the well-funded and aggressive entrants in the category. It has raised $1 billion in a pair of venture capital rounds. The money is being used to advance a portfolio of injectable and oral drug candidates from China-based Jiagsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals. Kailera is now running a series of global Phase III clinical trials with a lead candidate that seeks to compete with Eli Lilly’s blockbuster tirzepatide, marketed as Zepbound for obesity.

Ron has a long and diversified track record of success in biotech. He was previously CEO of a hepatitis C drug developer acquired by Merck, a messenger RNA therapeutics developer acquired by Sanofi, and a neuroscience drug developer acquired by AbbVie.

Before we get started, a word from the newest sponsor of The Long Run.

 

 

As I was preparing for this conversation, with one of the leading entrepreneurs in the field, Ron Renaud, I ran a quick search in AlphaSense – It’s the AI platform a lot of biotech analysts and investors use to get insights fast – kind of like having an analyst that never sleeps. Kylera operates in one of the fastest-moving most competitive areas in pharma – GLP-1 based weight-loss drugs – and it’s hard to get your arms around all of it. I used AlphaSense to see where Kylera sits vis-a-vis everyone else, and within seconds it surfaced dozens of companies in this space with filing, expert calls, and sentiment data showing how some companies are leveraging China’s talent and speed to compete in one of the biggest categories in pharma history. It’s fascinating to see how fast things are moving forward. For anyone tracking in this space, AlphaSense turned this scattered data into a clear report in minutes.

Check it out: alpha-sense.com/TheLongRun

 

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From preclinical to late-stage studies, Dash helps you move from assay development and validation to sample analysis with unmatched speed. Founded by industry veterans who’ve felt the pain of traditional CROs, Dash is the partner researchers and clinical leaders actually need: reliable, fast, and easy to work with.

So if slow bioanalysis CROs are costing you money and missed deadlines—put Dash to the test.

Visit www.dash.bio and see how fast bioanalysis can be.

 

Please enjoy this conversation with Ron Renaud on The Long Run.

12
Jan
2026

Sovereign Risk: The Geopolitical Price of Outsourcing the Biotech Engine

John Cassidy, general partner, Kindred Capital

On the surface, delegates at this year’s JP Morgan Healthcare Conference have reason to be pleased. The Nasdaq Biotech Index was up 30% last year. After years of public market woes, it looks like there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Some structural issues still exist – 10 years to get a molecule to clinic, regulators that need a shot in the arm, and (I’d argue) a negative enterprise value on most new programs. But Big Pharma isn’t stupid. Patent cliffs are looming, pipelines are thinning, and the market is hungry for new assets.

So the industry did the rational thing: it looked East.

The new playbook is simple: license clinical-stage assets from China and run them globally.

Reuters pegged the trend: in just the first half of 2025, U.S. drugmakers signed 14 China-licensing deals worth $18.3 billion, compared with just two deals the year before. Morgan Stanley framed it cleanly: China has gone from “generics factory to innovation engine.” And Western pharma wants in.

Some of these assets will be great. Patients will benefit. There will be headlines about “win-win” globalization.

But this licensing wave is also, in many cases, window dressing. It tells a story about where molecules are sold, not where they’re made. It celebrates downstream commercial rights while ignoring upstream capacity loss.

One nuance matters here. The West still runs the clinical machine. Late-stage trial execution, global site networks, data management, regulatory choreography, pharmacovigilance — this is still a Western strength. This piece is not arguing we forgot how to run Phase III. It’s arguing we made a quieter bet: that preclinical biology is a commodity you can safely rent.

We funded the factory layer

Clinical dominance can hide preclinical dependency. The clinical layer is visible, audited, and legible to boards. The preclinical layer is where the learning curve compounds, and where “process innovation” quietly becomes the innovation.

Western companies, in the name of asset-light models and operational efficiency, spent years transferring preclinical execution into Chinese platforms. Not just isolated tasks, but entire modalities. The result?

We now have Western companies licensing from ecosystems that Western capital helped train.

This wasn’t one grand conspiracy. It was a thousand “reasonable” decisions:

“We’re asset-light.”

“We’ll rent capacity.”

“We don’t need in-house biology.”

“This CRO is faster.”

“This is just execution; the IP stays with us.”

Apple in China

If this feels familiar, that’s because it is. We’ve seen this movie before.

In the 2000s, Apple built the world’s most iconic consumer hardware. But it built it in someone else’s factory. That choice, logical at the time, drove speed, scale, and margins.

It also seeded something harder to unwind: dependency. Operational know-how leaked. Local capability compounded. Today, reversing that reliance takes decades, not quarters.

Tesla walked the same path. In 2019, it became the first Western automaker to build a wholly owned factory in China. In 2025, it lost global EV leadership to BYD, a company born in part from the ecosystem Tesla helped fund.

Now biotech stands at the same crossroads.

The product isn’t phones. It’s the infrastructure that discovers, tests, and manufactures medicine.

Take WuXi AppTec. In 2024, it synthesized over 460,000 new compounds. It booked RMB 25B ($3.6 billion USD) in revenue from U.S.-based customers, more than 60% of its total. It reinvests 23–25% of that revenue into expanding its own capacity. That’s self-funded CapEx at geopolitical scale.

Now layer in AI. Drug discovery is becoming a loop: design → make → test → learn → redesign. The tighter that loop, the stronger the model. The better the wet lab integration, the better the output. Eli Lily has embraced this and become the first $1 trillion market cap pharma (granted this may be partly because of Novo’s missteps…).

When you outsource that loop, two things happen:

  • First: your model breaks. Latency, batch effects, messy formats. AI runs on clean data. CRO execution introduces heterogeneity and misaligned incentives that breaks closed-loop learning. They poison the loop.
  • Second: your IP leaks. A CRO that sees your inputs and your outputs has everything it needs. You’re not just outsourcing. You’re training your future competitor.

This is how virtual pharma becomes vulnerable pharma. And it’s how TechBio turns from a buzzword into a national priority.

Defensibility is not just what you can patent — it’s what you can repeatedly build, reliably execute, and directly distribute.

In AI x Bio, patents are just one layer. What matters now is what you can build, execute, and ship, over and over again.

Software already ran this experiment. Bill Gurley’s version is blunt: patents rarely decide outcomes. Elon’s move is even blunter: open source what others hoard, then win anyway. In practice, distribution plus iteration plus execution eats legal exclusivity for breakfast.

Pharma feels like the exception, because here IP is oxygen. Without patents, there’s no pricing power, no exclusivity window, and capital stops showing up. True. Also incomplete. Because “IP” is no longer a single thing. It’s a stack.

At the bottom is legal IP: the molecule, the claims, the regulatory scaffolding that turns a chemical into a business.

Above that is system IP (or proprietary know-how): the data, the loop, the meta learning. The machinery that lets you generate, select, and improve candidates faster than anyone else.

Above that is capability IP: the tacit knowledge of how biology breaks in the real world. Assay design. Troubleshooting. Batch drift. The instinct that tells you “this dataset is lying” before the slide deck does. This doesn’t live in a patent. It lives in teams and workflows.

To be fair, pharma has always been a know-how business. What’s changing is that AI and robotics can scale that know-how: faster data creation becomes faster insight generation, which becomes faster iteration, which becomes enduring advantage.

This is where biotech starts to rhyme with software. As distribution shifts, defensibility shifts with it. Molecules don’t live in a vacuum anymore. They live inside an experience: symptoms, testing, triage, prescription, and a box on your doorstep. In that world, molecule IP is necessary but not sufficient. The moat starts to include the channel and the interface.

Add AI and the boundary blurs again. In AI x Bio, value is shared between the asset and the engine that produced it. If your model, data, lab automation, and experimental loop compound faster, you don’t just make one drug. You build a machine that makes many drugs.

The uncomfortable implication is that control may drift away from the molecule holder and toward whoever owns the interface. If a platform can interpret diagnostics, recommend next steps, and steer treatment decisions, it can become the choke point without inventing the drug. None of this is new. Formularies, guidelines, and default pathways have always shaped outcomes. What’s new is that software and AI-mediated triage can encode those defaults and scale them, turning interface control into a tighter choke point.

The uncomfortable truth is that the Western system can select winners without selecting for upstream process excellence. You can win by licensing the molecule, then outcompeting others on reimbursement strategy, access, marketing, and distribution. That is profitable in the short term, but it quietly degrades the one thing that compounds: the industrial capability to discover, test, and make the next generation of drugs.

But systems still run on messy human capability. Biology is not a clean API. The loop only compounds if you own the ugly middle: how experiments actually get done, how failures get debugged, how quality is enforced, how intuition forms.

That’s why outsourcing is more than a margin decision. When you outsource enough of the wet work, you export capability IP. And it’s almost invisible because it shows up as OpEx, not CapEx. It doesn’t trigger alarms. It just compounds, until the industrial base you rented becomes the one that out-iterates you.

Over the last two decades we built a miracle: rapid hypothesis generation, global testing pipelines, molecules into patients faster than ever. But under the miracle was a trade. We outsourced the compounding parts of biology, the work that makes IP real. The result is we didn’t just globalize execution. We underwrote rival bio industrial capacity. Now the bill is coming due.

So the argument isn’t “IP doesn’t matter.” It’s that IP expanded. Patents still anchor value, but defensible advantage increasingly lives in the loop (system IP), in the craft (capability IP), and in the interface (distribution). If you don’t own those layers, you end up with strong claims and weak control. And in an era of AI-mediated care, control is the thing that cashes the check.

You Can’t Reshore Biology Overnight

The BIOSECURE Act was an early signal that the policy world is waking up. The U.S. is moving to limit federal work with firms like WuXi, BGI, and MGI. The subtext is the real story. Biology is not just a supply chain anymore. It is infrastructure. And infrastructure has borders.

  • The transition is going to sting, in very predictable ways.
    • Cost shock. Western CROs cost more. Related but more important – they take more time.
    • Capacity crunch. We do not have the throughput.
    • Supply fragility. Even if we reshore labs, we still depend on imported precursors, reagents, and animal models.

We saw this in semiconductors. When the supply chain became a strategic liability, the response was not a better procurement spreadsheet, it was to rebuild domestic fabs.

In biology, we are walking into the same trap: fabless biology, assuming the factory can live offshore while the innovation stays at home. Workforces take longer to train. If you have not been paying for your own factory floor, you do not have one sitting idle just in case.

To be clear, late-stage clinical execution and regulatory work is still largely run by Western global CROs, as semiconductor design sits in the West and is only manufactured in the East. The vulnerability sits upstream, and it rhymes on the CDMO side too: China has scale in standardized, high-volume work, but the differentiated edge is fragmented and hard to rebuild once you stop paying for it.

There is a reason Chinese providers dominate large parts of preclinical and early manufacturing throughput today. It is people. Highly skilled, deeply trained labor, scaled to industrial levels, at cost structures the West has not matched in decades. It is not primarily about cutting corners. It is about throughput.

But the ground may be shifting again. Robotics, automation and agentic AI workflows are advancing faster than most biotech boards are planning for. Work that used to be manual, linear, and low margin is becoming programmable, parallel, and scalable.

Lab automation is no longer a few pipetting arms. We are heading toward closed loop systems that can design experiments, optimize conditions, execute assays, interpret results, and propose the next hypothesis, over and over, without losing momentum.

If that trajectory holds, we will get a new kind of cloud lab. Not just shared infrastructure, but intelligent infrastructure. Agentic, increasingly autonomous, and easier to localize. The cost of spinning up a Western CRO could fall sharply. The value of doing AI augmented experimentation under your own roof could rise. And the moat moves again, toward the ability to iterate fast, reliably, and sovereignly, because in biology, the loop is the factory.

Own the Loop, Not Just the Molecule

Here’s what I hope the JPM talking points become. Not another round of macro agreement where everyone nods about sovereignty and geopolitics and then goes back to optimizing cost.

The real question for founders and investors is much sharper.

Where is your actual IP?

Is it in the molecule, or in the factory that can reliably make and improve it?

Is it in the deck, or in the loop that designed the hypothesis, tested it, debugged reality, and iterated until it worked?

Startups love the phrase asset light. Too often it is code for capability light. If you outsource the work that teaches you, you are not building a company. You are running a spreadsheet with a lab receipt attached.

For investors, this forces a reset in what counts as defensible. The molecule is only part of the story. The loop, the lab, the process intuition, those are strategic assets. If they live in China, you do not own them. If they live inside a system you control, you do.

The best companies in this cycle will not just own patents. They will own the learning curve. As we approach an AI-centric world, the “10 years to clinic” metric collapses. The cycle of Design → Make → Test → Learn shrinks from months to days.

The “process IP” we talked about is no longer human know-how; it is model weights.

So what do we do about it?

First, treat CRO strategy like cloud strategy. Design for portability. Dual source where it matters. Own your truth set. Keep local capacity for anything that teaches you. Outsource the repeatable work. Keep the compounding work close.

Second, invest in the bio industrial commons. No startup should build a full stack lab from scratch. But we can build shared platforms that many startups can plug into. Biofoundries. Medchem cores. Assay centers. It is the physical infrastructure equivalent of what cloud did for software.

Third, reward resilience in fundraising. Asset light does not have to mean sovereignty light. Investors should ask a simple question.

If China cut you off tomorrow, could you still run the company?

Fourth, be explicit about the trade. Speed matters. Price matters. But so do concentration risk, leakage, and geopolitical friction. Good strategy names the cost and pays it intentionally, instead of discovering it later as a crisis.

Because this was never just about cost.

Outsourcing helped finance a Chinese bio industrial base with the scale, capability, and learning velocity to become a competitor. WuXi alone targeting 100,000 litres of solid phase peptide reactor volume in 2025 was not just contract research. That’s sovereign capability.

The Apple and Tesla lesson was not ‘never build abroad’. It was simpler. If you build your business on top of someone else’s factory, do not be surprised when the factory becomes the business.

Biotech is there now.

It is time to own enough of the factory again.

Not everywhere. Not always. But enough to keep the loop tight, the learning local, and the innovation portable. Outsourcing should be a choice, not a dependency.

And then there is the final conclusion, which is not linear. It is orthogonal.

This is not only about plugging holes in the current system or rebuilding lost capacity. It is about asking the bigger question. What if the right answer is not ‘fix pharma’? What if the right answer is ‘build the first $3 trillion dollar biology company’?

The analogy is real. Google did not just crawl websites. It built infrastructure that made the internet usable. It sat between the user and the data. It turned distributed information into a loop. It monetized not the asset, but the search.

So what is the biological equivalent?

A system that closes the loop between data, models, wet lab execution, and patient outcomes. A sovereign engine. A full stack, AI native platform that does not just license molecules, but learns the entire process of making them better.

Not a CRO. Not a pharma company. Something new. Something foundational.

That is the orthogonal bet. Do not just fix the outsourcing mistake. Leapfrog it.

And that’s what I hope is talked about at the parties and dinners of JPM.

 

Editor’s Note: John Cassidy is a general partner with Kindred Capital in London. He is a member of the Timmerman Traverse for Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation team preparing to climb Kilimanjaro in February. A version of this article was first published on John’s SubStack.

8
Jan
2026

Following the Science to Immunology: Kate Haviland on The Long Run

Kate Haviland is today’s guest on The Long Run.

Kate is the former CEO of Cambridge, Mass.-based Blueprint Medicines.

Kate Haviland, fomer CEO, Blueprint Medicines

Blueprint was one of the big biotech success stories of 2025. The company was acquired by Sanofi for $9.1 billion in cash at closing, and potentially $9.5 billion if certain milestones are met.

The company started out with a vision for treating rare genetic forms of cancer. It found some success there, but that wasn’t the main reason Sanofi bought the company. Blueprint learned along the way that its drug for a rare type of gastrointestinal stromal tumors could also be used for a couple of related immune disorders – advanced systemic mastocytosis and indolent systemic mastocytosis.

The drug made a big difference for these patients. Once Blueprint realized it had the category to itself, it was off to the races.

You could say this is a story of following the science where it leads, strong execution in both R&D and sales and marketing functions, and a culture of teamwork that glued it all together for more than a decade.

Before we get started, a word from the sponsor of The Long Run.

 

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So if slow bioanalysis CROs are costing you money and missed deadlines—put Dash to the test.

Visit www.dash.bio and see how fast bioanalysis can be.

Please enjoy this conversation with Kate Haviland on The Long Run.

7
Jan
2026

Biotech Needs Its Own David Sacks

Patrick Malone, partner, KdT Ventures

One question from 2025 has consistently frustrated me:

Why did AI and crypto become top strategic priorities in the first year of the Trump Administration while biotech was largely ignored?

Trump’s core issues over the last decade have been immigration, trade, energy dominance, border security, China, and re-shoring of US manufacturing. It was not obvious that “Artificial Intelligence” and “digital assets” would rise to the top of his domestic policy agenda. Crypto, in particular, is surprising: Trump publicly dismissed Bitcoin and crypto as volatile and “not money” in 2019.

And yet, by 2024–2025, AI and crypto had moved beyond being interesting technologies to become explicit strategic national priorities. During the post-election transition period in December 2024, Trump announced David Sacks as the White House “AI & Crypto Czar.”

This served to elevate the importance of AI and crypto inside the administration, and delegated significant responsibility to a capable and experienced Silicon Valley entrepreneur.

Within weeks, the administration issued executive orders that created real initiatives and deadlines: a new AI executive order directing an AI Action Plan, and a crypto executive order establishing the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets to coordinate agencies and deliver a formal policy blueprint.

The White House signaled its commitment through senior-level meetings, including a crypto summit, and followed through with landmark legislation. For example, Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law, creating a federal framework for payment stablecoins.  

Whatever you think of the substance of these policies, the lesson for biotech is that it needs to do a better job of competing for attention at the highest levels of the federal government, and it needs a strategy to better stand up for its interests. AI and crypto earned that attention because they built a political interface.

The AI and crypto business communities had people who could navigate the administration and speak its language, as well generate real political capital. In 2024, Trump was courted directly by tech and crypto operators who raised serious money and built political alliances and infrastructure.

David Sacks and Chamath Palihapitiya hosted a San Francisco fundraiser that raised millions of dollars in one night, with senior figures from crypto and tech in the room. Trump used the setting to pitch himself as the “crypto president.” 

At the same time, facing a hostile regulatory posture from the previous administration, the crypto industry moved aggressively into electoral politics. The Fairshake network of super PACs and its affiliates raised and deployed substantial resources in 2024 to support crypto-aligned candidates, making crypto policy consequential at the ballot box.

By 2025, AI began following the same model, with Silicon Valley backing a $100+ million pro-AI political spending effort designed to influence who gets elected—and, in turn, what policy gets made.

The AI and crypto industries didn’t just advocate from the outside. They embedded themselves in the electoral and policy-making process. They invested in operators, institutions, and political machinery capable of translating industry priorities into executive orders, interagency coordination, and legislation.

David Sacks is the clearest example. By naming him AI & Crypto Czar, Trump gave the AI and crypto agenda a single point of execution inside the administration, someone who could turn ideas into policy.

This is the part biotech misses. Policy is not persuasion alone. It isn’t memos, panels, or moral arguments. Policy is execution. Biotech has nobody in a position of influence in the Trump Administration with the know-how, the networks, and the capability to wield power.

What’s missing is the ability to turn ideas into influence and power: securing executive mandate, motivating agencies to act with urgency, and converting that work into law and funding. AI and crypto had operators who could run that playbook, and the legislative results speak for themselves. That’s why Sacks matters.

After his appointment, the administration stood up an internal machine by executive order, produced a formal policy blueprint, and translated it into concrete outcomes, including stablecoin legislation and an AI action plan.

Which brings us to the real gap in biotech. The industry doesn’t just need better arguments or louder advocates. It needs someone who can operate inside the government and actually execute—someone who can translate scientific progress into policy, align a fragmented ecosystem, and make the case for biotech as a strategic national priority rather than a niche technical field.

What has made the lack of progress in biotech policy in the new administration especially frustrating is that the rationale driving urgency in AI policy applies almost word-for-word to biotech: Competition with China. National security. Domestic manufacturing capacity. Strategic dependence on foreign supply chains. 

You could literally replace “AI” or “rare earths” with “biotech” in many of the recent EOs, and the logic would still hold. These should be obvious, bipartisan reasons to invest in and accelerate the biotech ecosystem. The opportunity is there. 

Biotech hasn’t built a capable political interface for two structural reasons. First, Washington still often conflates “biotech” with “big pharma,” which renders biotech politically invisible. It’s hard to make progress on innovation-driven policy when startups are treated as incumbents, and therefore dragged into debates on pricing, reimbursement, and market power rather than scientific advancement. 

Another issue is fragmentation. AI and crypto accelerated because the community acted like a movement. There was a center of gravity pulling together founders, operators, investors, and policymakers.

Biotech, by contrast, is spread across academic labs, NIH, the FDA, startups, pharma, state governments, and a long tail of investors. Large pharma and small biotech sometimes have conflicting priorities and incentives. There is no unifying node that turns these pieces into a coherent whole.

Biotech needs more coordination, not innovation. We need someone who can align founders, investors, scientists, and patient communities around a coherent agenda, translate it into policy and legislative language, and make biotech a clear strategic priority in Washington.

So who could fill the role?

Maybe it’s one person. More likely, it’s a pairing: scientific legitimacy paired with political execution. Biotech has credibility in abundance. What it lacks is a unifying operator who can sit with regulators, legislators, and founders in the same week, and align them around a single agenda.

Here are some suggested candidates to get the conversation started:

  • Peter Kolchinsky: Rare credibility across science, capital, and policy, and one of the most gifted communicators in our industry.
  • Jim O’Neill: Already embedded in the administration, aligned with pro-innovation and regulatory reform, and capable of moving policy at a pace more typical of startups than government.
  • Vineeta Agarwala: Full-stack expertise across the healthcare continuum (from early-stage discovery through care delivery), and is a general partner at a16z which already has an established pathway into government. 
  • Daphne Zohar: Strong proponent of the need to engage more directly in DC to strengthen the US biotech ecosystem. 
  • Zach Weinberg: Serial entrepreneur, builder mindset with political instincts.
  • Vivek Ramaswamy: Love him or hate him, he’s proof that biotech can produce political operatives, not just scientists and CEOs.
  • Jason Kelly and Chris Gibson: nobody articulates the future of AI in drug discovery more effectively.
  • Bruce Booth: The industry’s most consistent communicator, and understands every dimension of biotech including science, financing, policy, and culture.
  • David Sacks: he’s doing it with AI and crypto, why not biotech too?  

Biotech will keep producing world-class science. The question is whether it will also build the political and institutional capacity to match its strategic importance, or whether it will continue to let other sectors define the national agenda.

Priorities in Washington are rarely set by abstractions or white papers. They are set by people, often one or two individuals inside the government who have the credibility and mandate to mobilize institutions.

AI and crypto found those people, but biotech has not. Until it does, biotech will remain insular, failing to make its importance known beyond its own ecosystem.

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