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ASSEMBLY BIOSCIENCES, INC.

CIK: 14268003 Annual ReportsLatest: 2026-03-19

10-K / March 19, 2026

Revenue:$72,303,000
Income:-$6,122,000

10-K / March 20, 2025

Revenue:$28,520,000
Income:-$40,177,000

10-K / March 28, 2024

Revenue:$7,163,000
Income:-$61,228,000

10-K / March 19, 2026

Assembly Biosciences

Company overview

  • Industry: Biotechnology focused on antiviral therapeutics.
  • Focus: Discover and develop next-generation antivirals for serious viral diseases with unmet medical needs.
  • Status: All product candidates are in clinical or nonclinical development; no approved products as of December 31, 2025.
  • Location: Principal office in South San Francisco, California.

Pipeline and programs

  • Recurrent genital herpes (HSV-1 and HSV-2)
    • Long-acting helicase-primase inhibitors (HPIs): ABI-5366 (5366) and ABI-1179 (1179).
    • 5366 and 1179 advanced to clinical development; these HPI programs were licensed to Gilead.
  • HDV and HBV
    • 6250: Oral HDV entry inhibitor (NTCP-targeted).
    • 4334: Next-generation capsid assembly modulator (CAM) targeting HBV.
    • 6250 and 4334 are in early clinical/regulatory-readiness stages; 6250 completed Phase 1a and Phase 2 initiation is anticipated in 2026.
  • Transplant-associated herpesviruses
    • 7272: Oral broad-spectrum non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor (NNPI) targeting transplant-associated herpesviruses.
    • 7423: Prodrug precursor to 7272; transition to 7272 completed in October 2025 and regulatory filing-enabling studies for 7423 were completed.
  • Research and discovery
    • Ongoing identification and nomination of new viral targets and compounds.

Gilead collaboration and equity financing

  • Agreement: In October 2023 Assembly entered an Option, License and Collaboration agreement with Gilead Sciences, Inc.
    • Gilead obtained exclusive licensing for the HSV HPI program and the NNPI program and retains opt-in rights to other programs.
    • Gilead holds option rights to exclusive licenses on a program-by-program basis during the collaboration term.
  • Financial terms and payments
    • Upfront payment: $84.8 million from Gilead.
    • December 2024 amendment: restructured timing and fees; $10 million accelerated funding credited toward future payments.
    • December 2025 option exercise: Gilead paid $35 million to license the HPI program (5366 and 1179).
    • Milestones and royalties: For exercised options, Assembly may receive up to $330 million in regulatory and commercial milestones per program, plus royalties in the high single-digits to high-teens on net sales.
    • Profit-share option: After development plans are provided, Assembly may opt to share 40% of U.S. costs and profits for an optioned program in lieu of milestones/royalties in the United States.
    • Gilead ownership and governance: Gilead acquired approximately 28% of Assembly’s outstanding common stock, has the right to designate two directors (or observers) under the Investor Rights Agreement, and may acquire up to 35% total ownership through subsequent purchases.
  • Equity financing and related actions
    • June 2024: Gilead purchased 1,089,472 shares at $13.92 per share.
    • December 2024: Gilead exercised additional equity rights and acquired more shares.
    • August 2025: Gilead participated in a private placement (2,295,920 shares at $19.60 per share) and received corresponding warrants.
    • 2025: Form S-3 registration statement filed and declared effective to register shares and warrants issued to Gilead.

Clinical progress highlights

  • 5366 (HPI)
    • Phase 1a interim results (February 2025) and Phase 1b topline results (June 2025) with weekly dosing showed strong antiviral activity and favorable safety.
    • December 2025: Phase 1b interim results from a monthly oral dosing cohort supported ongoing development.
    • Phase 1b data demonstrated reductions in HSV-2 shedding and lesion rates; pharmacokinetic data supported weekly and potential monthly dosing.
    • Completion of 5366 and 1179 Phase 1b cohorts triggered an option under the Gilead collaboration.
  • 1179 (HPI)
    • Phase 1a results reported in February 2025; Phase 1b progression announced in July 2025 with cohorts showing strong antiviral activity and favorable safety.
    • Phase 1b data supported progression to Phase 2-enabling studies, subject to chronic toxicology results.
    • Gilead exercised its option in December 2025 to exclusively license the HPI program (5366 and 1179).
  • 6250 (HDV entry inhibitor)
    • Phase 1a completed enrollment; interim PK and biomarker data (August 2025) showed dose-proportional exposure and NTCP target engagement via bile acid biomarkers.
    • Phase 2 initiation is expected in Q4 2026 after completion of chronic toxicology studies.
  • 4334 (HBV CAM)
    • Phase 1a/1b results reported (initial cohort Dec 2024; topline Jun 2025); final Phase 1b data presented at the Liver Meeting 2025.
    • Gilead declined its option for 4334 in March 2026; Assembly retained full control and is evaluating partnering opportunities.
  • 7272/7423 (NNPI)
    • 7423 transitioned to parent 7272; regulatory filing-enabling nonclinical studies completed and 7272 is in filing-enabling studies.
  • Near-term expectations
    • Gilead is expected to initiate Phase 2 for the HPI program in 2026.
    • Continued nonclinical/toxicology work and potential Phase 2-enabling studies for other programs, subject to partnerships or funding.

Intellectual property

  • Patent portfolio includes published and nationalized PCT applications covering:
    • 5366 and derivatives/analogs (HSV-related) with expected patent life through 2043–2045.
    • 6250 (HDV/HBV) with anticipated protection into the mid-2040s.
    • 4334 (HBV) with expected protection into the early 2040s.
    • Broad-spectrum NNPI technologies for transplant-related herpesviruses.
  • Protection strategy: composition-of-matter, use, and formulation patents, supplemented by trade secrets and confidential disclosures.

Regulatory and legal environment

  • The company operates under extensive U.S. and international regulatory requirements, including FDA processes (INDs, NDAs, cGMP, GCP, post-approval commitments), privacy and data security obligations (HIPAA, GDPR/UK GDPR, CCPA/CPRA), and pricing, reimbursement, and anti-kickback laws.
  • Intellectual property enforcement varies by jurisdiction.
  • The company identifies risks from regulatory delays, approval timing, and changes in law that could affect development timelines or commercialization.

People, facilities, and operations

  • Employees: 73 total as of December 31, 2025 (plus contractors, CROs, and CMOs).
  • Facilities: Leased office, administrative, and laboratory space in South San Francisco under a sublease ending September 2029.
  • Manufacturing: Relies on third-party contract manufacturers and CROs for nonclinical and clinical work; no internal production facilities planned.

Financials and funding

  • Key collaboration and equity funding from Gilead:
    • Upfront: $84.8 million.
    • December 2024 amendment: $10 million credited toward future payments.
    • December 2025: $35 million payment on Gilead’s exercise of the HPI option.
    • June 2024 equity purchase: 1,089,472 shares at $13.92 per share.
    • August 2025 private placement: 2,295,920 shares at $19.60 per share plus warrants.
    • 2025: Registration statement filed and declared effective to register shares and warrants issued to Gilead.
  • The company states it is not profitable and expects to require additional financing. Assembly plans to rely on collaboration funding, milestone payments, royalties, the profit-share option, and other financing sources.

Forward-looking statements and risks

  • The company makes forward-looking statements concerning regulatory approvals, clinical study timing (including Gilead-related timelines), and potential collaboration outcomes. These plans and timelines are subject to clinical, regulatory, and commercial risks.