If Big Pharma isn't yet striking, some companies are still buying, licensing, and partnering. You won't get thirty days in the jailhouse, but you won't be abreast of this week's dealmaking news without...
Valeant/Obagi: Canada’s Valeant Pharmaceuticals is again strengthening its dermatology business through acquisition, this time by buying Obagi Medical Products, the maker of several proprietary aesthetic and prescription skin-care lines sold through physician offices. The companies announced Valeant’s plans to acquire the Long Beach, Calif., company March 20 for $19.75 per share in cash, or about $360 million. Valeant’s offer represents a 42% premium to Obagi’s closing share price March 14, the last trading day prior to the disclosure of its fourth quarter and full-year 2012 earnings. The company generated sales of $120.7 million in 2012. Obagi’s portfolio includes a range of skin-care lines, including Obagi Nu-Derm, Obagi-C Rx, Obagi Condition & Enhance and ObagiCLENZIderm M.D. acne therapeutic system. Valeant has built itself into one of the world’s leading dermatology players through acquisitions. Last year, Valeant announced plans to buy Medicis Pharmaceutical for $2.6 billion, positioning it as the largest dermatology player in the U.S. and second in the world behind only Galderma. - Jessica Merrill
AstraZeneca/Moderna: Along with its new R&D strategy and organizational restructuring, AstraZeneca unveiled a massive bet on an early-stage biotech platform March 21 that suggests the big pharma has taken to heart its new CEO’s directive to be more willing to embrace risk. The deal, an option agreement for up to 40 programs across several therapeutic areas with privately held Moderna Therapeutics, carries an eye-catching price tag: $240 million up front, plus potential earn-outs. All told, Moderna, which aims to use messenger RNA (mRNA) as therapeutics, could earn more than $1 billion under the deal with AstraZeneca, announced March 21. That same day, AstraZeneca also unveiled a research partnership in cardiovascular, metabolic and regenerative disease with Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, one of several collaborations between those two groups in recent years. Beyond the $240 million upfront payment – the largest this year in a biotech/pharma collaboration and one of the biggest ever for a deal built around preclinical assets – Moderna also can earn up to $180 million in “technical milestones,” an arrangement Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel described as almost a secondary, contingent upfront payment. Moderna also could bring home development, regulatory and commercial milestones for each drug candidate licensed by AstraZeneca, as well as sales royalties ranging from the high single digits to low double digits. - Joseph Haas
Celgene/bluebird bio: Speaking of Celgene, the Summit, N.J., gene- and protein-regulation specialist has teamed up with 2012 Deals of the Year nominee bluebird bio in a gene-therapy deal (pdf) that will target oncology. Specifically, the two companies will collaborate to develop therapies that modify a patient’s own chimeric antigen receptor T-cells, then re-introduce them to target cancer cells. Although bluebird bio will foot the bill for Phase I trials on clinical products, Celgene will have the option to obtain a global license for each for an unspecified fee; bluebird bio retains the right to share U.S. rights in exchange for reduced milestone payments. Celgene’s upfront payment wasn’t revealed, but total fees including milestones for each product could total $225 million plus royalties. Celgene also agreed to collaborate on CAR T-cell research with scientists at the Center for Cell and Gene Therapy at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital and The Methodist Hospital, Houston. The team at bluebird bio also will have access to the scientists, led by Baylor professor Malcolm Brenner. - P.B.
NPS/Takeda: Two assets came full-circle March 19 as NPS Pharmaceuticals re-acquired ex-U.S. rights to a pair of rare disease drugs in a deal that will increase the equity position of Japanese pharma Takeda Pharmaceutical. NPS previously out-licensed the rights to teduglutide and PTH 1-84 in separate deals with Nycomed Pharma, which then was acquired by Takeda. In an unusual deal structure, NPS, which is marketing teduglutide in the U.S. as Gattex and hopes to file PTH 1-84 under the brand name Natpara later this year as a biologic therapy for hypoparathyroidism, brought the ex-U.S. rights to those two compounds in-house in exchange for $50 million in common stock. Down the road, Takeda can earn an additional $30 million, which will be either cash or additional equity at NPS’ discretion, when the two drugs achieve combined worldwide, single-year net sales of $750 million. Takeda holds an equity position of about 7% following this deal, NPS President and CEO Francois Nader said. Both the licensing fee and the sales-based milestone were structured as equity (although the milestone can be paid out as cash if NPS opts) partly to preserve cash, Nader said. An ex-U.S. license to both drugs is just the start of what NPS gains under the deal. The transaction also transfers an inventory of active pharmaceutical ingredients for both drugs to NPS, a less-expensive method for making teduglutide, a glucagon-like peptide 2 (GLP-2) analog, and a pen delivery system that could be used with PTH 1-84. - J.A.H.
Merck Serono/Nordic Bioscience and Merck KGaA/BMS: Merck Serono, a unit of Merck KGaA, said on March 18 it formed a strategic alliance with Denmark-based Nordic Bioscience AS around the German drug maker’s investigational therapy sprifermin, or recombinant human FGF-18, in osteoarthritis of the knee. Under the terms of the agreement, Nordic Bioscience will provide Merck with clinical development services on a shared-risk basis in exchange for a payment structure that includes service fees and potential milestone and royalty payments on the program. Financial terms of the collaboration were not disclosed; however. Merck retains full responsibility for the development and commercialization of the investigational drug. According to the World Health Organization, more than 5% of adults over 40 in developed countries, or more than 30 million people, suffer from osteoarthritis of the knee. A multi-national Phase IIb trial, dubbed the FORWARD study, is expected to begin enrolment in the second half of 2013 to evaluate further sprifermin for inhibition of the progression of structural damage, reduction in pain and improvement of physical function in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee. Sprifermin is a protein thought to induce chondrocyte stimulation leading to matrix synthesis and chondrocyte renewal. It is delivered by intra-articular injection. Two phase I trials in moderate/severe osteoarthritis of the knee previously were completed; a Phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety in patients with cartilage injury of the knee is ongoing. The program was originally was in-licensed in 2004 from ZymoGenetics, a Bristol-Myers subsidiary. The next day, on March 19, Merck KGaA said it inked a deal with Bristol to promote type 2 diabetes drug Glucophage (metformin hydrochloride) under different formulations in China. Under terms of the agreement, Merck Serono and Bristol will co-promote Glucophage in China through a profit-sharing arrangement. Glucophage has been marketed by Bristol-Myers Squibb-SASS in China since 1999. The two companies will tap existing resources and complementary strengths, with Bristol-Myers Squibb-SASS continuing to manufacture Glucophage’s IR (immediate release) formulation. The collaboration will seek to expand the geographic distribution of Glucophage and provide diabetes-related health and medical information including education for health professionals. In addition, the co-promotion will significantly increase outreach to hospitals. Other terms of the agreement were not disclosed. -- S.S.
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