Lundbeck Partners with Cradle to Discover and Optimize Brain Disorder Treatments

03.06.2026

Collaboration's initial focus will focus on two antibody programs targeting CNS diseases    

VALBY, Denmark and AMSTERDAM, June 3, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- H. Lundbeck A/S (Lundbeck), a global biopharmaceutical company focused exclusively on brain health, and Cradle, a leading AI platform for protein engineering, today announced a partnership to help Lundbeck discover and optimize biotherapeutics that ultimately can improve patient outcomes.

Cradle

It is estimated that more than half of the world's population is impacted by brain disorders, and the effects are felt throughout society. Speeding up innovation time to develop high-quality biologics is a critical part of bringing effective new treatments to patients. As part of its aim to ease this burden and bring new treatments to patients in need, Lundbeck is deploying Cradle's AI-powered protein design platform to develop multiple higher-performing candidates that can accelerate breakthroughs for neurological conditions.

"Lundbeck is committed to becoming a bionic company, embedding AI into how we work to complement human expertise and bring faster results," said Tarek Samad, SVP, Global Head of Research and Corporate Patents at Lundbeck. "Our partnership with Cradle fits perfectly with this commitment as their platform provides our scientists with powerful AI that fits seamlessly into our processes, strengthening our ability to discover and optimize therapeutics."

The partnership is powering Lundbeck's first end-to-end AI-guided protein engineering workflow, where experimental results are continuously fed back into the model, enabling each iteration to improve prediction accuracy and accelerate convergence toward viable candidates. The platform will initially be used to advance two antibody programs targeting CNS diseases. Lundbeck's protein engineers and computational biologists will use Cradle's generative AI platform to engineer higher-quality antibody candidates while reducing the number of wet-lab iterations required to reach lead candidates.

"Lundbeck has a strong biotherapeutic pipeline in CNS and is now strengthening that position with the power of AI across their research and development organization," said Stef van Grieken, CEO and Co-Founder of Cradle. "The Cradle platform has been shown in internal and partner programs to accelerate design cycles significantly. By closing the loop between computation and the lab, we can help Lundbeck reach high-quality antibody candidates faster and with fewer iterations."

The Cradle partnership builds on Lundbeck's systematic embrace of AI to accelerate its Focused Innovator strategy. It complements a recently announced partnership with the Danish Centre for AI Innovation, which provides Lundbeck access to Denmark's Gefion AI supercomputer with advanced AI computing power for large-scale scientific modelling and discovery. Together, the two partnerships will strengthen Lundbeck's end-to-end AI discovery capabilities, from expanding the scientific search space to improving and accelerating specific biologic candidates.

Across the organization, Lundbeck estimates AI-driven initiatives are already contributing more than 12,000 hours saved per week through efficiency gains. In drug discovery specifically, AI-enabled structural insights and predictions that once took months can now be generated in under 24 hours, while expanding the searchable scientific space by approximately 50,000x.

About H. Lundbeck A/S

Lundbeck is a biopharmaceutical company focusing exclusively on brain health. With more than 70 years of experience in neuroscience, we are committed to improving the lives of people with neurological and psychiatric diseases.

Brain disorders affect a large part of the world's population, and the effects are felt throughout society. With the rapidly improving understanding of the biology of the brain, we hold ourselves accountable for advancing brain health by curiously exploring new opportunities for treatments.

As a focused innovator, we strive for our research and development programs to tackle some of the most complex neurological challenges. We develop transformative medicines targeting people for whom there are few or no treatments available, expanding into neuro-specialty and neuro-rare from our strong legacy within psychiatry and neurology.

We are committed to fighting stigma and we act to improve health equity. We strive to create long term value for our shareholders by making a positive contribution to patients, their families and society as a whole.

Lundbeck has more than 5,000 employees in more than 20 countries and our products are available in more than 80 countries. For additional information, we encourage you to visit our corporate site www.lundbeck.com and connect with us via LinkedIn.

About Cradle

Cradle's mission is to make engineering biology easier, quicker and more cost-effective. Its enterprise-grade AI software platform currently serves eight out of the top 25 global pharma companies, and is used across over 50 R&D programs. With Cradle, scientists can engineer better proteins, faster and more successfully, speeding up the development cycle of new therapeutics and bio-based products such as, antibodies, enzymes, and bio-based materials by 2-12x. Cradle is based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Zurich, Switzerland and the United States with a team of machine learning and biotech research specialists with experience at many of the world's leading technology and biotech companies, including Google, Novartis, Meta, Zymergen, Uber, Deepmind and Generate Biomedicines. Cradle is backed by IVP as well as Index Ventures and Kindred Capital. For more information, visit cradle.bio.

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2846228/Cradle_Logo.jpg

Cision View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/lundbeck-partners-with-cradle-to-discover-and-optimize-brain-disorder-treatments-302789420.html

Other news

Medizinische Hilfe oft nur der erste Schritt: Studie zeigt Versorgungslücken bei Gewaltopfern

30.04.2026

Sexuelle Gewalt hinterlässt bei den Betroffenen deutlich tiefere und länger anhaltende Spuren, als bislang in der Schweiz weithin angenommen. Das zeigt eine neue Studie aus der Romandie, die vom Genfer Universitätsspital (HUG) koordiniert wurde und nach Angaben der Forschenden erstmals eine systematische Nachverfolgung von Opfern über einen Zeitraum von zwölf Monaten vornimmt. Beteiligt waren neben dem HUG der Spitalverbund Wallis sowie fünf Waadtländer Spitäler.

Für die Untersuchung wurden 181 von sexueller Gewalt betroffene Personen – 180 Frauen und ein Transmann – ein Jahr lang begleitet. Die Auswertung ergibt ein klares Bild: 71 Prozent der Teilnehmenden zeigen zwölf Monate nach der Tat depressive Symptome, 68 Prozent weisen Anzeichen einer posttraumatischen Belastungsstörung auf, 57 Prozent leiden unter ausgeprägter Angst. Mehr als die Hälfte der Befragten berichtet zudem weiterhin über körperliche Beschwerden wie chronische Schmerzen, Schlafstörungen oder anhaltende Erschöpfung.

Besonders gravierend sind die Folgen im Intimbereich. Rund zwei Drittel der Betroffenen, die sexuell aktiv sind, geben an, auch ein Jahr nach dem Übergriff unter sexuellen Funktionsstörungen zu leiden. „Diese Daten zeigen klar, dass sexuelle Gewalt ein tiefgreifendes und dauerhaftes Trauma ist“, wird Studienleiterin Jasmine Abdulcadir in der Mitteilung zur Studie zitiert. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass es sich nicht um vorübergehende Reaktionen handelt, sondern um anhaltende Beeinträchtigungen mit potenziell weitreichenden Auswirkungen auf Partnerschaft, Familie und Berufsleben.

Die Datenerhebung bestätigt zudem bekannte Muster bei sexueller Gewalt. In der Mehrheit der Fälle kennen die Betroffenen die Täterperson, häufig stammt diese aus dem nahen Umfeld. Die gemeldeten Übergriffe ereignen sich überwiegend in privaten Räumen. Zwar suchen viele Opfer laut Studie rasch nach der Tat medizinische Hilfe, doch die Forschenden verweisen darauf, dass die anschliessende Betreuung häufig unzureichend bleibt. Angesichts der hohen Belastung über mindestens ein Jahr hinweg sehen Fachleute dringenden Handlungsbedarf bei der langfristigen psychischen, körperlichen und sexuellen Versorgung von Betroffenen.