Bristol-Myers Squibb/Amylin – In our “No Deal” of the week, with Bydureon’s (long-acting exenatide) initial launch appearing to go better than expected, Amylin Pharmaceuticals has become a takeout target, reportedly drawing a $22-per-share buyout offer from partner Bristol-Myers Squibb. Amylin rejected the offer, prompting its share price to rise $8.38, or 54.5%, to $23.77 in same-day trading on March 28. That values Amylin at a market capitalization of $3.5 billion, amid speculation that it could yet obtain a better offer. Analysts agree, however, that Amylin is ripe to be acquired, potentially at a value higher than the bid reportedly made by Bristol. Bristol’s offer represented a 43% premium over Amylin’s previous day’s closing price of $15.39, but several analysts have revised their forecasts upward on the basis of strong early Bydureon sales and argue the stock could be valued in the high 20s to low 30s. If a bidder believes Bydureon sales could reach $1.5 billion in the U.S. by the end of the decade, with additional sales in Europe boosting global revenues well above $2 billion, the offer should be in the low $30s, wrote Leerink Swann’s Joshua Schimmer in a same-day research note. Meanwhile, reports also surfaced March 29 that Roche has increased its bid for gene-mapping tool specialist Illumina. Roche reportedly increased its hostile bid by 15% on March 28, causing another uptick in Illumina’s share price. The
Friday, March 30, 2012
Deals Of The Week: VCs Still Hoping To Cash Out But Growing Used To Earn-outs
Bristol-Myers Squibb/Amylin – In our “No Deal” of the week, with Bydureon’s (long-acting exenatide) initial launch appearing to go better than expected, Amylin Pharmaceuticals has become a takeout target, reportedly drawing a $22-per-share buyout offer from partner Bristol-Myers Squibb. Amylin rejected the offer, prompting its share price to rise $8.38, or 54.5%, to $23.77 in same-day trading on March 28. That values Amylin at a market capitalization of $3.5 billion, amid speculation that it could yet obtain a better offer. Analysts agree, however, that Amylin is ripe to be acquired, potentially at a value higher than the bid reportedly made by Bristol. Bristol’s offer represented a 43% premium over Amylin’s previous day’s closing price of $15.39, but several analysts have revised their forecasts upward on the basis of strong early Bydureon sales and argue the stock could be valued in the high 20s to low 30s. If a bidder believes Bydureon sales could reach $1.5 billion in the U.S. by the end of the decade, with additional sales in Europe boosting global revenues well above $2 billion, the offer should be in the low $30s, wrote Leerink Swann’s Joshua Schimmer in a same-day research note. Meanwhile, reports also surfaced March 29 that Roche has increased its bid for gene-mapping tool specialist Illumina. Roche reportedly increased its hostile bid by 15% on March 28, causing another uptick in Illumina’s share price. The
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Take the PharmAsia China Survey, Get a Discount to PharmAsia Summit-Shanghai
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photo by Josh Berlin
Monday, March 26, 2012
Supremes' Prometheus Ruling Has Dire Consequences for Personalized Medicine
by Michael Boss
It is astonishing when nine very smart people get it so wrong. I refer to the US Supreme Court decision in Mayo v. Prometheus.
Prometheus developed an assay to help identify the correct dose of thiopurine drugs in the treatment of autoimmune disease. If the drug is metabolized too fast the level will be too low and so not effective. Too slow a metabolism and the drug can be toxic.
Potentially lost in the supreme circus around arguments addressing the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, the court is going to announce today whether it will grant or deny the ACLU’s cert petition asking it to review its suit against Myriad and determine if genes are patentable. Lawyers anticipate the court will grant the petition, vacate the Federal Circuit’s decision in favor of Myriad and remand the case back to the Federal Circuit for reconsideration in light of its ruling in Prometheus.
While the specific circumstances of the Prometheus case revolve around analyte measurements, by simple analogy it seems to me that the argument can be extended to genes and any gene products. So the identification of genetic variants that, say, cause disease or resistance to treatment by a drug or potential toxic response to a drug would all fall under this Supreme Court ruling.
This is a devastating ruling at the dawn of the personalized medicine era. The Court has wiped out any incentive to figure out why certain individuals might do better on drug A rather than drug B and how much of drug B should be given. And what about all the technologies under development to define the optimal treatment of cancer? Again by analogy, finding out which drug kills the tumor cells to select the correct drug for the patient would seem remarkably similar to the Prometheus situation.
The patent laws were developed to foster innovation and development of commercial enterprises. This decision has set back a key field by as long as it takes to get the ruling reversed.
image of Jacob Jordaen's painting, Prometheus having his liver eaten by an eagle (in our version the eagle is apparently the Supreme Court), via wikimedia commons.
Michael Boss, a biotech executive with companies including Antisoma, Xanthus, Elan and Athena, is currently an independent consultant. He is also an inventor on a seminal biotech patent.
By Chris Morrison at 8:17 AM 3 comments
Labels: diagnostics, lawsuits, personalized medicine, Supreme Court
Friday, March 23, 2012
Financings of the Fortnight Starts Spring On the Right Foot
Happy spring, everyone, though it’s a bit less delicious when in many parts of the Northern Hemisphere, it’s been spring for weeks, even all winter. I give you Texoma, ladies and gentlemen.
Here at FOTF HQ, we’ve got strawberries peeking forth already (pictured above), which is enough to put a spring in anyone’s step. Closer to this column’s topic at hand, however, a couple other trends cropped up this past fortnight with the unveiling of two new funds: European-denominated cash and non-traditional sources. For the former, any cash that increases the chances of funding in the UK and EU biotech sector is a welcome sight after European VCs set a record fundraising low in 2011. For the latter, the alternative sources are Big Pharma – GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson & Johnson are providing half the capital of a new €150 million Index Ventures fund – and the UK’s largest charity, The Wellcome Trust, which unveiled a £200 million fund to invest in diverse healthcare areas with the temporary name of "Project Sigma," which sounds a bit like something James Bond would be assigned to infiltrate and destroy.
The funds won’t necessarily be confined to Europe, and the Wellcome fund is aiming beyond life sciences, but it’s safe to say -- would you please pay attention, 007 -- that a good deal of the new cash from Index and Project Sigma will flow, much-needed, into the UK and EU biotech sectors.
Note we say “sectors,” not “biotech companies,” because the Index fund will focus on developing assets, not building companies. It won’t let a thousand, let alone a dozen, traditional biotech firms bloom. But that’s not the direction the industry is going, anyway. Slowly but surely, venture-type resources are shaking loose to move products forward without traditional infrastructure and into the hands of pharma buyers that increasingly emphasize late-clinical development and marketing. Letting, instead, a thousand freelance project consultants bloom, we suppose.
Other asset-financing schemes of late include CMEA’s Velocity Pharmaceutical Development and the Atlas Venture Development Corp., which combined have publicly disclosed just one project, and Eli Lilly’s Mirror fund program, originally destined to partner with three venture firms but has made little noise since its inception a couple years ago. So we’re under no illusion that the direction is a permanent one.
Permanence is not a question for the massive Wellcome Trust, and with its new fund it has another investment outlet; it’s already been backing startups for years, such as Kymab, which made our 2010 A-List.
We’re highlighting another trend this fortnight: prostate cancer companies raising cash. The disease has seen a groundswell of treatment options in recent years, including several new drugs such as Dendreon’s Provenge (sipuleucel-T). Two more companies vying to bring drugs to market announced new cash raises to help push late-stage programs forward, although not with equal amounts of momentum, as we describe below (see Medivation and OncoGenex Pharmaceuticals).
And at first blush, three stem-cell companies announcing fundraisings in the same two weeks seemed to be another trend, but upon further review it was coincidence. Still, while two of the events were for peanuts -- $9 million for Athersys and $5 million for International Stem Cell – Aastrom Biosciences ended up with a rather convoluted and unusual situation, which we detail below.
When it comes to cell-based therapy, it's best to keep it simple -- like the vitamin D from the spring sunshine on our skin. We also highly recommend an extended dose of acute brain-cell stimulation, courtesy of....
Aastrom Biosciences: The Ann Arbor, Michigan firm said March 9 it has sold $40 million of convertible preferred stock in a private placement to Eastern Capital. The publicly traded firm, with a stock price that hasn’t cracked $3 since last June, says Eastern’s non-voting shares will convert to voting shares upon shareholder approval, required by Nasdaq because the voting shares will give Eastern more than 19.9% ownership. With accrual of shares over five years thanks to an 11.5% annual dividend (payable in stock, not cash), Eastern will eventually own about 25% of the company. Eastern is the investment arm of food packaging mogul Kenneth Dart, a US billionaire who relocated many years ago to the Cayman Islands (read: renounced US citizenship to dodge taxes). The $40 million -- which at the equivalent of $3.25 a share is an 80% premium to the pre-announcement $1.81 per share price -- is Aastrom’s largest single fund-raise ever, according to a blog post from its CEO Tim Mayleben. It gives the firm cash to push ahead with two late-stage trials, including the Phase III pivotal trial of its Ixmyelocel-T autologous adult stem cell therapy in critical limb ischemia. Mayleben also points out that the funding doesn’t have “dilutive warrants or expensive discounts,” which he describes as “expensive inducements [that] often have long-term negative consequences for existing investors.” What Mayleben didn’t mention, however, were Aastrom’s own outstanding warrants, 15 million of them, that could come due in the next few years. Those warrants are baked into analysts’ models, so Aastrom is happy to highlight the fact that the Eastern private placement doesn’t include warrants. Unless, of course, you figure that Eastern’s $40 million worth of preferred shares will eventually turn into 20 or 21 million common shares. “You could say it’s implied dilution,” Aastrom vice president of finance Brian Gibson told FOTF. “But it’s five years away, and most investors don’t have a five-year horizon.” Eastern negotiated other perks, too: The Aastrom board is waiving the shareholder rights plan – the poison pill – that would otherwise kick in, and Eastern also has participation rights for future fundraisings to prevent its own dilution. -- Alex Lash
Tarsa Therapeutics: Tarsa said March 16 it has raised a $28 million Series B round as it heads toward US and European regulatory filings for its oral recombinant calcitonin Ostora by the end of 2012. It would be the first oral formulation on the market of calcitonin, used to treat osteoporosis in post-menopausal women. Tarsa in-licensed rights to the Phase III compound from Unigene Laboratories in 2009. Novartis markets Miacalcin and Upsher-Smith sells Fortical, both nasal-spray formulations. New investor Foresite Capital led the round and was joined by existing A round backers Novo AS, MVM Life Science Partners and Quaker BioVentures. Tarsa raised a $24 million Series A round in 2009, led by MVM. Tarsa is bullish about Ostora’s market potential because Novartis announced earlier this year that as part of a restructuring it was abandoning its own effort to develop an oral version of calcitonin. Recently conducted follow-on market research indicated that Tarsa can hope to pick up about 20% of new and existing post-menopausal osteoporosis patients when Ostora reaches the market, thanks also to diminishing use of bisphosphonate therapies caused by safety concerns, Tarsa CEO David Brand said. Last year, Tarsa announced that Ostora had demonstrated statistically significant superiority and similar safety in a Phase II trial using Fortical as a comparator. -- Joseph Haas
OncoGenex Pharmaceuticals: The 12-year-old Seattle-area firm said March 16 it has raised nearly $50 million in a public stock offering as it revamps its late-stage clinical program for the prostate cancer treatment custirsen, which is partnered with Teva Pharmaceutical Industries. The increasingly crowded prostate cancer field has been shaken up recently by positive data from Johnson & Johnson’s Zytiga (abiraterone) and Medivation’s MDV-3100, prompting Medivation to raise cash through a debt offering (see below). OncoGenex had $65 million in cash and equivalents at the start of the year, which it expected to last only until 2014. Teva is largely responsible for the increased cost of custirsen development and OncoGenex’s $30 million allotment is already set aside. Instead, the new cash will help develop OGX-427 beyond its indications of prostate and bladder cancer, where it’s currently in Phase II testing, CEO Scott Cormack told our Pink Sheet colleagues. Cormack said earlier this month the big shifts in thecustirsen program – cancellation of a trial in second-line castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC); a new combination trial with Sanofi’s Jevtana (cabazitaxel); and expansion of a currently enrolling trial in a first-line chemotherapy CRPC setting. Custirsen is an antisense agent meant to boost the effects of chemo. Leerink Swann and Stifel Nicolaus Weisel led the offering, with help from Lazard Capital Markets and William Blair & Co. Underwriters have a 30-day option to buy up to 624,750 additional shares. -- Lisa LaMotta
Medivation: The once-high-profile Alzheimer’s company is now a prostate cancer developer, and on the strength of recent data from its new focus the San Francisco biotech raised nearly $260 million in convertible debt in an offering that closed March 19. The firm could join newly approved prostate cancer sponsors J&J, Dendreon and Sanofi, thanks to Phase III data from the AFFIRM trial of MDV3100, its androgen signaling receptor inhibitor, that showed side effect rates tracking those of placebo. MDV3100 also showed an overall survival (OS) benefit of nearly 5 months beyond placebo (18.4 months vs. 13.6 months), and 8.3 months of progression-free survival vs. 3 months for placebo, based on PSA tests. The OS benefit was large enough to spur discontinuation of the trial so all enrollees could go on the drug. It could have other advantages over the recent approvals: unlike Zytiga, it does not have to be administered with prednisone, it’s less complicated to prescribe and administer than Provenge, and it appears much safer than Jevtana. Medivation has partnered MDV3100 worldwide with Astellas Pharma. The notes, due in April 2017, pay 2.625% interest until April 2015, at which point Medivation can redeem them based on certain parameters of its stock price at that time. Citigroup ran the debt sale with help from Credit Suisse Securities Jefferies & Co. William Blair & Co. and Leerink Swann. – Staff reports
Photo "Sympathy for the Strawberry" courtesy of the FOTF Art Collective.
By Alex Lash at 8:48 AM 0 comments
Labels: asset financing, cell therapy, debt financing, financings of the fortnight, prostate cancer, stem cells, strawberries
Friday, March 16, 2012
Deals of the Week Seeks the Luck of the Irish
Sanofi/Pluromed: Sanofi has today announced the acquisition of Mass.-based surgical goo maker Pluromed for undisclosed terms. The deal brings Sanofi's biosurgery division Pluromed's proprietary polymer technology Rapid Transition Polymers and the FDA-approved LeGoo, a gel used during surgeries to temporarily plug blood vessels. (Conveniently for Sanofi and for our half-grasp of the language, LeGoo probably means The Goo in French.) The LeGoo goo was approved by FDA in September and in today's release Pluromed CEO Jean-Marie Vogel gives Sanofi a vote of confidence for its ability to launch the goo and drive adoption. Formerly Genzyme Biosurgery, Sanofi's biosurgery unit markets a suite of products focused on cartilage repair and osteoarthritis treatment. The deal underscores Sanofi's willingness to further diversify away from its core drugs business. -- Chris Morrison
By Paul Bonanos at 1:25 PM 1 comments
Labels: academia, alliances, deals of the week, mergers and acquisitions, mmm beer
Friday, March 09, 2012
Financings of the Fortnight Puts On The Weight
By Alex Lash at 11:40 AM 0 comments
Labels: advisory committees, FDA, FOPOs, IPO, obesity, rare diseases, Take a load off Fanny
Deals Of The Week: U.S./Russia Biotech Joint Venture Driven By An All-Too-Familiar Catalyst
Foundation Medicine/Array BioPharma – Array BioPharma and Foundation Medicine announced a partnership March 6 in which Array will use Foundation’s next-generation sequencing technology to analyze tumors and identify patients who may best respond to its targeted therapies. FMI, which emerged from stealth mode in 2010 advised by a team of experts in next-generation sequencing, has already has signed five other pharma partners, including Sanofi and Johnson & Johnson. In February, Foundation received Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) certification from CMS for its genomic sequencing lab, allowing the company to receive clinical samples from most U.S. states. The company is developing a test that will transition next-generation sequencing from research to routine clinical practice.--Jessica Merrill
Friday, March 02, 2012
Deals of the Week Sets Sail For The Galapagos
GlaxoSmithKline/ Daiichi Sankyo: Just two days after Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. unveiled more details about the global expansion of its new vaccine business – which it expects to become the top vaccine supplier in Japan - Daiichi Sankyo announced March 2 a vaccines joint venture with GSK that would create the number one vaccines business in Japan. The 50-50 joint venture Japan Vaccine Co., Ltd. will be led by co-CEO representatives from each company. The JV’s stated goal is to join GSK's extensive vaccine pipeline with Daiichi Sankyo's domestic manufacturing, sales and development presence. Keeping all things equal, the companies will sell their prophylactic vaccines into the JV, and will earn for 50-50 profits. Daiichi Sankyo and GSK will also split the ¥100 million start-up capital for the venture, and each will send three executives to sit on the six-member board. Each company will be responsible for their own research, preclinical and pre-proof-of-concept and ultimately manufacturing of their own products. Japan Vaccine will step in for development after proof-of-concept. GSK has been vocal about growth opportunities in Japan. The firm's Japan business grew 30% from 2010 to 2011, largely on the back of the human papillomavirus vaccine Cervarix (human papillomavirus types 16,18), which was added to a government reimbursement program for vaccines in 2010. Since then, Japan has leapfrogged to become Cervarix' largest market. The joint venture will begin operations July 2.—Dan Poppy
Image of Conrad Martens' painting of the HMS Beagle reproduced courtesy of the Wikimedia Commons.
By Paul Bonanos at 11:00 AM 1 comments
Labels: Abbott, alliances, Costello, deals of the week, GlaxoSmithKline, GSK, mergers and acquisitions, Reata, royalties