Founding and initial acquisitions (1781–2010) , Japan Takeda Pharmaceuticals was founded in 1781 by
Chobei Takeda, and was incorporated on January 29, 1925. One of the firm's mainstay drugs is Actos (
pioglitazone), a compound in the
thiazolidinedione class of drugs used in the treatment of
type 2 diabetes. It was launched in 1999. In February 2005, Takeda acquired
San Diego,
California, based Syrrx, a company specializing in high-throughput
X-ray crystallography, for US$270 million. In February 2008, Takeda acquired the Japanese operations of
Amgen and rights to a dozen of the California biotechnology company's pipeline candidates for the Japanese market. In April, Takeda acquired
Millennium Pharmaceuticals of
Cambridge,
Massachusetts, a company specializing in
cancer drug research, for US$8.8 billion. The acquisition brought in
Velcade, a drug indicated for hematological malignancies, as well as a portfolio of pipeline candidates in the oncology, inflammation, and cardiovascular therapeutic areas. Millennium now operates as an independent subsidiary.
Further expansion and research (2011–present) In September 2011, Takeda acquired
Nycomed for
€9.6 billion. In May 2012, Takeda purchased Brazilian pharmaceutical company Multilab for
R$540 million. In June, Takeda announced it would acquire URL Pharma, then run by the founder's son
Richard Roberts, for US$800 million. In September 2014, Takeda announced it would team up with
BioMotiv to identify and develop new compounds over a five-year period, worth approximately US$25 million. On 30 September 2014, Takeda announced it would expand a collaboration with MacroGenics, valued up to US$1.6 billion. The collaboration focused on the co-development of the preclinical
autoimmune compound MGD010. MGD010 is a therapy which targets the
B-cell surface proteins
CD32B and
CD79B, and is indicated for
lupus and
rheumatoid arthritis. In 2015, Takeda sold its respiratory drugs business to
AstraZeneca for $575 million (about £383 million), which included
roflumilast and
ciclesonide. On November, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration approved
Ixazomib developed by Takeda for use in combination with
lenalidomide and
dexamethasone for the treatment of
multiple myeloma after at least one prior therapy. In December 2016, the company spun out its neuroscience research division into Cerevance, a joint venture along with Lightstone Ventures. In February 2017, Takeda acquired
Ariad Pharmaceuticals for $5.2 billion, expanding the company's oncology and hematology divisions. In January 2018, the company acquired stem cell therapy developer
TiGenix for up to €520 million ($632 million). In January 2019, Takeda acquired
Shire for more than . In October, Takeda announced it had sold a portfolio of over-the-counter and prescription medicines in the
Middle East and
Africa to Swiss pharmaceuticals company Acino International for more than $200 million. In January 2020, Takeda announced a research partnership with the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to advance discoveries in
artificial intelligence and health. The MIT-Takeda Program is housed in the
MIT Jameel Clinic, and is led by Professor
James J. Collins, with a steering committee led by Professor
Anantha P. Chandrakasan, dean of the
MIT School of Engineering, and Anne Heatherington, senior vice president and head of Data Sciences Institute (DSI) at Takeda. In March 2020, Takeda announced that it has entered into an exclusive agreement to divest a portfolio of non-core products in
Latin America to Hypera S.A. for a total value of $825 million. In March 2021, the company announced it would acquire Maverick Therapeutics, Inc. and its two major programs
TAK-186 (MVC-101) in trials for the treatment of
EGFR-expressing tumours and
TAK-280 (MVC-280) for use in the treatment of patients with B7H3-expressing tumors. In October, they acquired
GammaDelta Therapeutics and its gamma delta (γδ)
T cell immunotherapy programme. In January 2022, Takeda announced it would exercise its option to acquire
Adaptate Biotherapeutics and its antibody-based γδ T cell technology, reuniting Adaptate and its former parent company, GammaDelta Therapeutics, in a single organisation. In December of the same year, the company announced it would acquire Nimbus Lakshmi, Inc. and its lead compound
NDI-034858 which is an
allosteric TYK2 inhibitor for the treatment of various autoimmune diseases, from Nimbus Therapeutics, LLC for up to $6 billion. In February 2024, Takeda Pharmaceutical gained approval from the FDA for
Eohilia, the first oral approval for allergic inflammation of the
esophagus for patients 11 years and older. At the time of the announcement, the treatment
Dupixent from
Sanofi and
Regeneron was the only alternative. In May 2024, Takeda announced it would be laying off 641 employees based in
Massachusetts between July 2024 and March 2025 as part of a restructuring. It was expected to affect 495 people based in
Cambridge and 146 people in
Lexington. In October 2025, Takeda signed an $11.4 billion deal with China's
Innovent Biologics to help the company accelerate the development of immuno-oncology and antibody-drug conjugate cancer therapies. The deal includes a $1.2 billion upfront payment from Takeda.
TAP Pharmaceuticals (1977–2008) In 1977, Takeda first entered the U.S. pharmaceutical market by developing a joint venture with
Abbott Laboratories called TAP Pharmaceuticals. Through TAP Pharmaceuticals Takeda and Abbott launched
blockbuster drugs Lupron (
leuprorelin), in 1985, then Prevacid (
lansoprazole), in 1995. In 2001, TAP's illegal marketing of Lupron resulted in both civil and criminal charges by the U.S. Department of Justice and the Illinois attorney general for federal and state
medicare fraud. TAP was fined $875 million, then reported as the
largest pharmaceutical settlement in history. In March 2008, Takeda and
Abbott Laboratories announced plans to conclude their 30-year-old joint venture, TAP Pharmaceuticals. The split resulted in Abbott acquiring U.S. rights to Lupron and the drug's support staff. Takeda received rights to Prevacid and TAP's pipeline candidates. == Acquisition history ==