Celgene Corp. continues
its march to win the hearts and minds – or at least the votes – of the
biopharma industry, as measured by The IN VIVO Blog’s Deals of the Year poll.
When the polls closed Jan. 4 for the 2012 contest, Epizyme Inc.’s April tie-up with Celgene
walked away with nearly 60% of the vote in the Alliance category – the largest
vote percentage in all three categories.
It's the second win in five years for a Celgene deal, following its $2.9
billion cash-and-stock-and-contingent value rights deal with Abraxis Bioscience targeting solid
tumors in 2010.
This achievement could reflect widespread
industry recognition for Celgene’s deal strategy over the years. Or perhaps it
reflects a vigorous get-out-the-vote campaign in some quarters that would spark
jealousy in Washington (and given our editors’ frequent entreaties to vote
early and often, it's heart-warming to think our readers are listening).
Also taking the winners' circle this year was the Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc./Bristol-Myers
Squibb Co./AstraZeneca PLC three-way deal
in the M&A category, barely edging out Biogen
Idec Inc.’s acquisition of Stromedix
Inc. The unique collaboration raises the stakes in the diabetes drug
market, particularly the increasingly competitive market for glucagon-like
peptide-1 agonist therapies, and its unusual structure allowed two pharmas to share the spoils of the recently-approved potential blockbuster Bydureon (long-acting exenatide).
And in the financing category, Foundation Medicine Inc.’s
Series B took the honors, topping gene therapy company bluebird bio's funding. (One impassioned commenter devoted kind words to Intarcia's $210 million funding as well.) Foundation's funding was one of the
smaller-sized deals vying for voters' favor, but the company has attracted
interest from a large number of pharma companies for its genomics testing
technology. The company raised a $43.5 million Series B round to fund
marketing of its first product, FoundationOne,
a test to identify all classes of genomic alterations (including copy number
alterations, insertions, deletions and rearrangements) in about 200
cancer-related genes.
As in past years, the IN VIVO Blog invites the winners to make acceptance speeches in this space. As for the new year, we've already got some new tales to tell. To the winners go the
spoils, and to you, we present 2013's first...
AstraZeneca/Cellular Dynamics: Madison, Wisc.-based stem cell research company Cellular Dynamics International Inc. said
AstraZeneca PLC will use its
technology to conduct drug safety tests as part of the drug discovery process.
In a deal announced Jan. 3, CDI said AstraZeneca would both use its
broad-ranging, commercially available iCell products and genetically engineer
new products using CDI’s MyCell lines for specific patient groups, as part of
the discovery and testing process for novel compounds, including in vitro
disease research. CDI markets induced pluripotent stem cell products, which
are modified cells from biopsies taken from adult patients rather than
harvested from embryonic lines, and can be differentiated into various tissue
cell groups from an individual’s own stem cell line. The company, which has
raised at least $100 million since 2004, believes that its cells can be used
during the drug discovery and pre-clinical testing phases to reveal information
about safety and efficacy while avoiding ethical concerns and reducing clinical
costs.CDI also counts Roche as a customer and partner, under
agreements dating to 2008 and since expanded multiple times. Financial terms of
the new deal with AstraZeneca weren’t disclosed. -- P.B.
Pfizer/Philogen: The Italian-Swiss targeted antibody company Philogen SPA has attracted another big
pharma collaborator, Pfizer Inc.,
for its angiogenesis-related products. The two companies announced Jan. 3 a worldwide licensing agreement to
develop Philogen's Phase I antibody product, Dekavil, in autoimmune diseases. Pfizer intends to evaluate Dekavil in inflammatory bowel
disease, as well as continuing Philogen's current clinical program in
rheumatoid arthritis. The product consists of an antibody targeting inflammatory
disease sites coupled to the immunoregulatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10).
Because IL-10 modulates immune responses rather than suppressing them, the
companies hope Dekavil will not be associated with unwanted side effects. Philogen will receive an upfront payment and will be
eligible to receive milestone and royalty payments, while Pfizer will have
exclusive rights to market any products developed in the collaboration. Further
terms were not disclosed. Pfizer already has a smaller collaboration with a
Philogen unit, Philochem, involving the discovery of cancer targets. Philogen
is also collaborating with New Jersey-based Actinium Pharmaceuticals Inc. on attaching alpha-particle emitting
radionuclides to its antibodies, with Merck Serono on molecular biomarkers, and
with MedImmune on encoded chemical libraries. Philogen researchers helped pioneer the targeting of
cytokines, radionuclides, and drugs to the site of disease using antibodies
against stromal (connective tissue) antigens. It has five products in Phase
I/II studies: darleukin (L19 antibody linked to interleukin-2); teleukin (F16
antibody linked to IL-2); fibromun (L19 antibody linked to tumor necrosis
factor); radretumab (F8 antibody labeled with I-131); and Dekavil (F8 antibody
linked to Il-10). Back in 2011, Bayer withdrew from a near 12-year strategic
collaboration with Philogen on radretumab and darleukin, citing a change of
strategy and scuppering Philogen's planned IPO on an Italian stock exchange. -- John Davis
Sanofi Pasteur/Sutro: Protein therapeutics platform developer Sutro Biopharma Inc.’s latest partner
intends to create new products using its cell-free protein synthesis
technology. The privately held, South San Francisco-based start-up’s newest
ally is vaccine specialist Sanofi
Pasteur, which plans to develop two new vaccines based on Sutro’s platform.
Specific terms of the deal, announced Jan. 3, were not revealed.
Sutro typically uses its platform to develop antibody-drug
conjugates and bifunctional antibodies for oncology, but the new deal may range
into new territories; the companies did not disclose which targets they will
pursue. In December, Sutro announced a tie-up with Celgene Corp. under which the companies will discover ADCs and bifunctional
antibodies; that alliance could be worth up to $500 million. Venture investors including Skyline Ventures, Lilly
Ventures, Amgen Ventures, SV Life Sciences and Alta Partners have supplied
Sutro with nearly $60 million since its 2003 inception, with the latest $18
million tranche of its Series C round arriving in May 2012. The company also
inked a multi-year partnership with Pfizer in early 2011 to discover novel
peptide-based therapeutics. -- P.B.
Pfizer/Repligen: Pfizer continued its multi-deal first week of 2013 on Jan.
3 by acquiring exclusive worldwide license to Repligen Corp.’s program for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), led by
Phase I, small-molecule candidate RG3039. Pfizer, which will pay Repligen $5
million upfront with the potential for up to $65 million in milestones and
royalties on sales of any product reaching market for SMA, also gets backup
compounds and enabling technologies from the Waltham, Mass.-based biotech.Repligen previously in-licensed ‘3039 from the patient
group Families of SMA, which had invested more than $13 million in preclinical
development. Under the deal, Repligen will complete two active cohorts of an
ongoing Phase I trial in healthy volunteers, expected to finish during the
first quarter of this year. At that point, Repligen will transfer the program
to Pfizer, which will be responsible for all subsequent clinical development of
‘3039. The compound has orphan drug status in both the U.S. and Europe. Repligen President and CEO Walter Herlihy said the
transaction is consistent with his firm’s strategic decision announced in
August 2012 to seek external partners for its drug-development programs while
focusing internally on bioprocessing. -- Joseph Haas
Takeda/Amylin: This was one tie-up that didn’t survive a change of
control. Four months after the Roger-winning Bristol/AZ takeout of Amylin, a co-development
partnership for obesity compounds between Amylin and Takeda was formally
severed. It didn’t come as a shock: the partners had in fact discontinued
development of their top candidate, the Phase II pramlintide/metreplin combo,
in August 2011. Takeda had originally paid $75 million upfront in late
2009 to initiate the partnership. Development and sales milestones across the
multiple programs could have totaled more than $1 billion. The deal called for
development milestones up to $200 million for two specific products and up to
$50 million for any additional products. Commercial milestones were set at $140
million per product related to first sale of the products and up to $800
million per product for other sales-based milestones. Amylin was responsible
for all development through Phase II in the United States, with Takeda taking
over for Phase III and for all phases outside the U.S. It is unlikely Takeda
ever paid any milestones.-- Alex Lash
Thanks to Denise Peterson for this week's lead section.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.