By Jacob Bell
Published July 9, 2026
In a significant blow to its strategic pivot toward neurodegenerative research, British pharmaceutical giant GSK has officially terminated its high-profile collaboration with California-based biotechnology firm Alector. The dissolution of the partnership marks the end of a once-promising $2.2 billion alliance that served as a cornerstone of GSK’s aggressive reentry into the complex and high-risk field of neuroscience.
The collapse, confirmed in a recent securities filing, follows a string of clinical trial failures that rendered the core assets of the deal—two experimental drugs intended to treat dementia and Alzheimer’s—commercially and therapeutically unviable.
The Rise and Fall: A Chronology of the Partnership
The relationship between the two companies began with considerable optimism in July 2021. At the time, GSK was looking to revitalize its pipeline, and Alector, known for its focus on immune-neurology, presented an attractive portfolio of candidates.
2021: The Strategic Bet
In a move that signaled a major shift in corporate priorities, GSK invested $700 million upfront to secure global development and commercialization rights for two Alector candidates:

- Latozinemab (AL001): An experimental medicine aimed at patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) caused by specific genetic mutations.
- Nivisnebart (AL101): A therapeutic candidate then in early-stage safety testing for broader neurodegenerative conditions.
The deal structure included an additional $1.5 billion in potential development, regulatory, and commercial milestone payments, positioning the agreement as one of the most significant biotech partnerships of that year.
2023: The First Signs of Turbulence
As clinical data began to emerge, the initial confidence of the partnership wavered. By May 2023, the companies formally amended their agreement. Alector assumed a larger portion of the development costs for nivisnebart, and the initial transaction price was adjusted downward from $700 million to approximately $572 million, with the variance recorded as a refund liability. This adjustment served as a clear indicator that both parties were hedging against the potential failure of the programs.
2025–2026: Clinical Disillusionment
The terminal phase of the partnership was marked by two decisive clinical disappointments:
- October 2025: Results from a large-scale study revealed that latozinemab failed to achieve its primary endpoint, showing no statistically significant ability to slow disease progression in patients with FTD.
- April 2026: An interim futility analysis for nivisnebart led Alector to discontinue a Phase 2 trial in patients with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease, effectively ending the program’s viability.
Following these results, GSK notified Alector on July 6, 2026, of its intent to terminate the collaboration. The transition is expected to be finalized by January 2, 2027.
A Pattern of Disappointment: Alector’s Broader Struggles
The dissolution of the GSK partnership is the latest in a series of setbacks for Alector. The company’s business model—centered on leveraging the immune system to treat neurodegeneration—has faced repeated challenges in the clinic.

Prior to the GSK deal, Alector entered a similar two-program partnership with AbbVie in 2017. That relationship followed a strikingly similar trajectory: clinical data failed to meet expectations, leading AbbVie to scale back the alliance in 2022 and eventually exit it entirely in 2025.
The cumulative effect of these failures has been devastating for the firm’s financial health. Over the past five years, Alector’s share price has plummeted by approximately 95%. Following the announcement of the GSK termination, the stock dipped an additional 7%, trading at $1.70 per share. Consequently, Alector has been forced to initiate significant cost-cutting measures, including multiple rounds of workforce layoffs, to preserve its dwindling cash reserves.
Implications for GSK’s Neuroscience Strategy
For GSK, the termination is more than just the cancellation of a contract; it is a recalibration of a multi-billion-pound research strategy. Having spent over a decade away from meaningful investment in neuroscience, the company’s return to the field was meant to be defined by high-impact, late-stage assets.
A New Approach to Brain Health
Despite the Alector setback, GSK has made it clear that it is not abandoning the neuroscience space. Following the initial 2021 investment, the company established a dedicated center in collaboration with the University of Oxford. This facility was specifically designed to bridge the gap between academic discovery and clinical development for conditions like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS).
The current strategy appears to be a shift toward more diversified, albeit risk-heavy, partnerships. By spreading its bets across several smaller biotech startups, GSK aims to mitigate the risk of a single "all-or-nothing" deal. Recent agreements with companies like Vesalius and others utilizing spatial transcriptomics highlight a move toward early-stage, platform-based collaborations rather than relying solely on late-stage clinical candidates that have yet to prove their efficacy in human trials.

Industry Context: The Difficulty of Neuro-Drug Discovery
The failure of the GSK-Alector partnership serves as a sobering reminder of the volatility inherent in neurodegenerative drug development. Unlike oncology or cardiovascular disease, where biomarkers and endpoints are relatively well-established, the complexity of the human brain makes drug development notoriously difficult.
Industry analysts suggest that the "immune-neurology" hypothesis—that modulating the brain’s immune cells could cure diseases like Alzheimer’s—remains scientifically valid in theory but elusive in practice. The industry has seen several high-profile failures in recent years, reinforcing the reality that even with hundreds of millions of dollars in capital and world-class research infrastructure, the "biology of the brain" remains one of the most formidable frontiers in modern medicine.
Future Outlook
As GSK moves forward, the market will be watching to see if its decentralized approach to neuroscience will yield better results than the consolidated, high-stakes partnerships of the past. For Alector, the path ahead is far more uncertain. With its two primary pharmaceutical partners having exited and its stock hovering near historic lows, the company faces a critical juncture. It must now decide whether to pivot to entirely new therapeutic areas or continue to refine its neuro-immunology platform in hopes of a future breakthrough.
Ultimately, the dissolution of this deal serves as a case study in the risks of "big pharma" partnering with smaller biotech entities. While such agreements are designed to bring innovation to market quickly, they are inextricably linked to the clinical data. When that data fails to materialize, the corporate architecture—regardless of the size of the initial investment—inevitably collapses.
For now, the $2.2 billion deal that once symbolized a renaissance for GSK’s neuroscience division will instead go down in industry history as a cautionary tale of the high costs—and high risks—of chasing the next generation of brain-health therapies.
