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Showing posts with label genomics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genomics. Show all posts

Friday, December 14, 2012

Deals Of The Week Sings Of An Icelandic Saga And The Path Forward



Our knee-jerk reaction to Monday’s announcement that Amgen is buying deCODE Genetics for $415 million in cash was “Say what?” It’s hard to get past the unlikely mix of cultures between Amgen, the most button-down of biotechs, and deCODE, whose irascible founder and CEO, Kari Stefansson, is anything but.

On second thought, though, the combination makes sense.  For Amgen, it’s a buy-versus-build way to install a broad-based, genetics-oriented discovery and target validation engine.  For deCODE’s investors Polaris Ventures and ARCH Venture Partners, it’s a timely and profitable exit: they put down roughly $14 million to bring the Icelandic genomics specialist out of bankruptcy in November 2009 and have been carrying it since.  And for deCODE’s scientists, it’s an opportunity to continue discovery research using population genetics and armed with blood samples from Icelanders and the country’s conserved genealogical and health care records.

As Polaris’ Terry McGuire blogged the day the deal broke: “Almost all of the other companies that started in this space gave up and moved to safer ground – developing drugs.  Kari Stefansson never lost sight of what was truly important, which is pioneering the genome.”

Equally true is that Stefansson’s broad vision caused his reach to exceed his grasp. As we wrote three years ago, the fundamental issue was one of business strategy – an overly optimistic view of the rate at which discoveries made with its genomics platform could convert into tangible drug and diagnostic assets, including IP, and justify the infrastructure investments the company had made.

deCODE's troubles stemmed from a combination of factors including a fragmented set of operations ranging across gene-based drug and diagnostics discovery and development as well as a foray into consumer genomics. As an Iceland-based company, it also had been especially sensitive to the impact of the global financial downturn in the latter half of the 2000s, which hit that country's banking industry very hard. Plus, an arrangement with Lehman Brothers to manage its money had left deCODE with essentially worthless paper.

Stefansson’s unwavering faith in deCODE’s expansive – and expensive – approach to discovery finally has paid off. “This was a 16-year saga,” says McGuire. "But true to the saga, Kari’s has been one of finding the path forward.” Polaris and ARCH together (via the aptly named Saga Investments, organized for the deCODE recapitalization) owned about 65%, roughly one-third each, of deCODE.  They’d put in around $50 million all told (plus some noncash obligations to turn the firm around), netting what appears to be more than a 5x return.

The business model for the recapitalized deCODE focused on establishing corporate partnerships, which is where Amgen came in.  The companies were discussing ideas for partnerships when, as sometimes happens, “there was a moment where they could see the breadth of this engine,” says McGuire.  Some of deCODE’s insights will directly relate to Amgen’s therapeutic areas of interest, he says, but as important will be deCODE’s long-term contribution to R&D.

Becoming part of Amgen presumably puts an end to deCODE’s aspirations as a developer of clinical diagnostics, an area very much in its sights when the firm relaunched.  In that respect, the deal speaks to the relative value of genomics in drug discovery versus clinical diagnostics development. – Mark Ratner



Teva/Xenon – In an effort to streamline its business, Teva Pharmaceuticals has decided to take a more focused approach to R&D, with an emphasis on respiratory diseases and central nervous system disorders (including pain and neurodegenerative disorders). A deal announced with Xenon Pharmaceuticals on Dec. 11 will fit snugly into the Israeli company’s new strategy. In exchange for the global rights to Xenon’s pain drug XEN 402, Teva will pay the Vancouver-based company $41 million upfront, as well as development, regulatory and sales milestones of up to $335 million. Xenon also will be entitled to royalty payments and have the chance to participate in U.S. commercialization, although details of the commercialization split were not disclosed. XEN 402, a Nav1.7 inhibitor, blocks sodium channels that are found in abundance at nerve endings and contribute to chronic pain conditions. Xenon has taken it through the start of Phase II for both inflammatory and neuropathic pain and in topical and oral formulations. Teva, which now has rights to both versions of the drug, plans to begin a full Phase IIb development program immediately. Xenon hasn’t been the only company working on Nav 1.7 inhibitors – a space that has drawn interest because its potential to be an alternative to opioid-based pain drugs. – Lisa Lamotta

Biogen Idec/Isis – Biogen Idec continues to demonstrate faith in antisense technology, announcing a third deal with Isis Pharmaceuticals Dec. 10. Much like the two previous deals between the companies, the recent tie-up focuses on neuromuscular targets. In exchange for access to three early-stage targets, Biogen will pay Isis $30 million upfront. The work is currently in the discovery phase. Once Phase II has begun, Biogen will have the right to option each of the three programs and continue development and commercialization activities. Isis is eligible to receive $200 million in total milestones per program, as well as double-digit royalties should any products be commercialized. In January, Biogen signed its first deal with Isis, agreeing to pay $29 million upfront as well as $45 million in potential milestones for the option to license Isis' Phase I spinal muscular atrophy compound. In late June, Biogen agreed to pay $12 million upfront for the right to a treatment for myotonic dystrophy type (DM1). Early-stage milestone payments could total $59 million. At the end of Phase II, Biogen has the option to license the drug; subsequent payments for meeting certain regulatory milestones could add up to $200 million. – L.L.

AstraZeneca/Isis – Antisense drug-discovery company Isis Pharmaceuticals also landed a second partnership on Dec. 11, an oncology deal with AstraZeneca that will address five targets including one program upon which clinical trials are already underway. For $25 million upfront, plus a $6 million near-term payment due in the second quarter of 2013 if research is ongoing, AstraZeneca gets rights to the Phase I/II clinical compound ISIS-STAT3Rx, as well as one preclinical program and options on other programs. AstraZeneca will fund ongoing research on the programs covered under the partnership, save for a small Phase II trial Isis is still conducting on ISIS-STAT3Rx for lymphoma. Isis also is eligible for $75 million in milestone payments over the next two years, including a $50 million payment if the ongoing study is completed; Isis would receive additional clinical and approval-related milestone payments, licensing fees and royalties on marketed drugs, but the companies didn’t provide further financial information. The partnership covers drugs that use Isis’ proprietary antisense technology, which destroys RNA that creates disease-causing proteins, as well as its Generation 2.5 technology that strengthens the potency of drugs. – Paul Bonanos

Bristol-Myers Squibb/The Medicines Company – In an example of a big pharma out-licensing deal, The Medicines Company has agreed to pay $115 million upfront to Bristol-Myers Squibb for the global rights to Bristol’s already-marketed topical recombinant thrombin product, Recothrom, which is used to stop non-arterial bleeding during surgical procedures. Approved in the U.S. in January 2008, Recothrom brought in $65 million in revenues in 2011. The Medicines Company plans to drive growth by seeking  approval of the drug in other countries. Bristol, which will be responsible for manufacturing, will receive royalties on the product during the two-year collaboration period. After that time, The Medicines Company will have the option to acquire Recothrom. Bristol said its decision to outlicense the drug is part of its effort to streamline operations and improve efficiency. For The Medicines Company, the deal bolsters its offerings in the hospital settings. The company also announced the same day that it has agreed to pay $115 million to acquire Incline Therapeutics, the maker of a needleless, patient-controlled analgesia device used in the hospital setting. – L.L.

Gilead/YM Biosciences – Gilead furthered its diversification strategy with expansion into oncology with the acquisition of Canadian cancer company YM BioSciences, announced  Dec. 12. Gilead will buy YM for $2.95 per share in cash, or about $510 million, with the transaction expected to close in the first quarter. YM had cash and equivalents of $125.5 million as of Sept. 30. The acquisition will give Gilead its sixth clinical-stage oncology compound, a Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, CYT387, which has shown promise in treating myelofibrosis. Gilead plans to initiate a Phase III study in the setting in the second half of 2013. The deal represents a solid exit for YM, which gained CYT387 when it merged with Australia’s Cytopia Ltd. in 2010 in a stock transaction that valued Cytopia at around $11 million. YM released results of a 166-patient Phase I/II clinical trial of the drug, its lead product, at the American Society of Hematology meeting Dec. 9, showing that treatment with CYT387, improved transfusion independence rates and spleen response in patients with myelofibrosis. But CYT387 will have to compete with a JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor already on the market for myelofibrosis. Incyte’s Jakafi (ruxolitinib) was approved by FDA for myelofibrosis in November 2011, and was the first JAK inhibitor approved for any indication. CYT387’s second-in-class status could dampen investor enthusiasm for the acquisition, but the fact the drug has been shown to increase hemoglobin and reduce the need for blood transfusions means it could offer a competitive advantage as the preferred treatment for the roughly 30% of myelofibrosis patients who have anemia. – Jessica Merrill

Somaxon/Pernix – Somaxon’s search for strategic alternatives has come to an end, but not exactly a lucrative one. Specialty pharma Pernix will acquire the sleep disorder company for $25 million in stock. That’s a small fraction of the at least $224 million that’s been invested in Somaxon since its 2003 inception. On Dec. 10, the day before the deal announcement, Somaxon’s market cap was a mere $10.5 million. It was trading just above its cash of $8.2 million at Sept. 30. During the third quarter, Deerfield Management initiated a position of 4.5 million shares in the company; that’s almost two-thirds of its shares outstanding. Somaxon shareholders still have to sign off on the deal. It’s been a steady slide for Somaxon. In September 2011, Procter & Gamble, the U.S. marketing partner for Somaxon insomnia drug Silenor (doxepin), terminated an August 2010 deal due to insufficient sales to support marketing expenses. Then in January, Somaxon said it was looking at strategic alternatives after a disappointing Silenor launch. The selling point for Silenor was supposed to be its approval for sleep maintenance, staying asleep into the seventh and eighth hours of sleep. But it’s proven difficult to gain a foothold in an insomnia market awash with generics, particularly of Ambien (zolpidem). Somaxon reported net product sales of $7.8 million in the first nine months of 2012. For its part, Pernix is adding a product to its ranks of generic, branded and OTC products. Until recently, the company has focused on pediatrics. But last month, it bought Cypress Pharmaceuticals for $101 million in cash and stock, thereby diversifying its product offerings. – Stacy Lawrence

Nuron/Pfizer – In another deal that has a big pharma unloading a non-priority asset, Pfizer sold its Meningitec vaccine to Exton, Pa.-based specialty biologic and immunotherapy developer Nuron Biotech. The vaccine is aimed at preventing bacterial diseases such as meningitis, sepsis and pneumonia caused by Neisseria meningitides serogroup C. The product is currently registered in 23 countries, and Nuron plans to expand its availability to markets with unvaccinated and under-vaccinated populations, the company said. N.meningitidis is estimated to cause 500,000 cases of disease annually worldwide with a 10%-20% fatality rate. The company previously acquired the HibTiter Haemophilus influenza Type b conjugate vaccine from Pfizer in April 2011 and is looking to relaunch the product, marketed in the 1990s by Wyeth, in the U.S. following discussions with FDA. Nuron has several vaccines and biologics in development. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. – J.M.

Friday, December 07, 2012

Deals of the Year Exit/Financing Nominee: Warp Drive Bio

It's time for the IN VIVO Blog's Fifth Annual Deal of the Year! competition. We're once again presenting awards in three categories to highlight the most interesting and creative deal making solutions of the year. The categories are M&A Deal of the Year, Alliance Deal of the Year, and Exit/Financing Deal of the Year. We'll supply a half dozen nominations in each category throughout December and you, the voting public, will decide the winners by voting early and often, commencing once we've announced all the nominees. Strap yourselves in, it's The Race for the Roger™.


No life science venture firm makes more blockbuster early-stage investments than Third Rock Ventures, often without syndicate partners. But the bicoastal firm opened 2012 with a twist on its typical modus operandi when it unveiled Warp Drive Bio in early January.

Warp Drive itself is a new approach to an old concept. The firm is using new computational technology to find the basis of new drugs in natural products -- or if you prefer, pharmacognosy -- once the main hunting ground for the pharmaceutical industry but left behind in the era of high-throughput screening of vast libraries of synthetic compounds. Warp Drive is building what it calls a genomic search engine to comb through all accessible bacterial genomes and look for conserved chemical structures that signal underlying gene expression with “novel and profound biological effects” and higher potential of drug-like properties. The firm calls these structures “chemomemes” – a term coined in an early Warp Drive meeting by scientific advisor Rick Klausner, a former National Cancer Institute chief and current VC at The Column Group (which is not a Warp Drive investor).

CEO Alexis Borisy reckons his team has sequenced “more microbial genomes than the rest of the planet a couple times over just this year alone,” and has moved on to step two: searching through the digitized genomes, more than 40,000 so far, for chemomemes that point the way to potential drugs. “We don’t tell anyone what we’re looking for,” says Borisy. “It’s a closely guarded secret. We think it’ll cause a lot of people to go ‘Wow.’”

Hello? Any drugs here?
Borisy thinks Warp Drive will be ready to unveil the secret in scientific papers a year or so from now. For now, he says the proof of concept is working; the team has already put searches to the test and gotten “hits,” to use search-engine parlance. The firm will stick to bacteria, which dominate every corner of the planet, and will later investigate fungi. Plants are much more difficult, says Borisy.

The total for the round was tabbed at $125 million, 60 percent of which was equity. As the lead investor, Third Rock wanted not only to build a syndicate to spread the investment risk but also find a potential buyer who could guarantee a healthy return. With that in mind, Third Rock recruited two others for the Series A: Sanofi and Greylock Partners. Sanofi’s involvement is where the deal twist comes in. The multinational pharma company, with an undisclosed equity stake, also has an option to buy Warp Drive. It’s a two-way street, in fact: The investors can force a sale to Sanofi if Warp Drive hits certain goals. The strike prices for each side are pre-determined but undisclosed, as are the milestones that would trigger the put and call sales.

Sanofi receives the chance to collaborate on early-stage research and feed its pipeline, while Warp Drive gets cash to develop its platform and form a drug pipeline of its own. Under the Sanofi collaboration, the sides would like to get at least two drugs into the clinic within the next five years.

Third Rock had already incubated Warp Drive Bio for “a couple of years,” according to Borisy, when conversations with Sanofi began in mid-2011. Warp Drive Bio was built around the ideas of Harvard University professor (and Third Rock partner) Greg Verdine. Harvard University genetics professor George Church, and the University of California, San Francisco pharmaceutical sciences professor James Wells are co-founders. 

The plan upon unveiling was to spend 2012 building the platform, then spend the next couple of years building a pipeline, going after previously undruggable targets. Borisy says the firm is ahead of schedule and has already triggered some of the equity and non-equity milestones with its build-out and its early chemomeme search activities. Warp Drive should grow from its current dozen staffers to about 40 next year.

The Warp Drive deal kicked off another year of Series A activity for Third Rock. It has since funded, either solo or with syndicate partners, the companies Alcresta (nutritional supplements), Global Blood Therapeutics (blood disorders), Myokardia (allosteric modulators for cardiovascular defects) and Cibiem (carotid body modulation device).-- Alex Lash

Photo of Yellowstone extremeophiles courtesy of flickr user Tim Pearce.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Deals Of The Week: A Better Way To Investigate Clinical Trial Investigators?



In tandem with a 10-company effort launched in September to resolve clinical development hurdles, three pharmas are coming together to establish a databank that participants will be able to use to evaluate potential clinical trial sites and investigators. The Investigator Databank initially will be a joint effort of Johnson & Johnson, Merck & Co. and Eli Lilly, but other participants from the non-profit TransCelerate BioPharma initiative are expected to join in eventually.

Andreas Koester, head of clinical trial innovation/external alliances for J&J’s Janssen R&D, said the initiative’s primary goal will be to “avoid redundancy” in paperwork for selecting and approving trial sites and in training clinical trial investigators.

Koester, who will lead the effort, told Deals of the Week that the Investigator Databank should be ready to go by the end of this year. The initial three participating firms already have uploaded their information into the databank but it is behind firewalls for now so none of the companies can access another’s data until the initiative begins. Other companies participating in TransCelerate are expected to begin contributing information by the middle of 2013.

“The R&D team at Janssen came together last year to look at our clinical-trial process and see what could be improved upon and what could be streamlined,” Koester said. “There were some things that needed a common solution and would only work if we teamed up with our peers.”

The databank, which will not include any patient data, is intended to serve as a one-stop repository where key information about trial sites, such as what equipment a site does or doesn’t have and the Good Clinical Practice (GCP) training records of its personnel, can be accessed by any participating company. The expectation is that the jointly provided data will minimize redundacy in much of the site- and investigator-selection process, such as prequalification and CGP training. To aid the effort, each participating company will agree to acknowledge one another’s GCP protocols and work toward an industry standard, Koester noted.

J&J and Lilly were among the 10 pharma companies (Merck was not, however) that announced Sept. 18 the creation of TransCelerate and its five goals, one of which was the centralization of trial site prequalification and training. TransCelerate CEO Garry Neil said the databank’s work will be aligned with the non-profit’s focus on clinical study execution.

“Industry collaboration, including pre-competitive data-sharing, is critical to ensuring continued progress to improve industry-wide clinical trial practices,” Neil said.

Beyond the benefits of time conservation, the databank also is expected to benefit clinical trial quality by making it more feasible for investigators to participate in multiple trials. Koester said that many investigators don’t participate in more than one or two clinical trials because the paperwork tends to be too time-consuming and takes away from time spent with patients. Companies therefore churn through investigators and often have trouble finding more.

“Sharing our investigator databases will help optimize administrative activities by mutually recognizing training and other essential information that is required of our investigators, as well as allow us the ability to include key investigators around the world with whom we have not worked in the past,” said David Detoro, head of global trial management for Merck Research Laboratories. “All of this will help lead to more efficient clinical trial execution – a critical component of getting novel products to patients in a timely fashion.”

While biopharmaceutical companies are finding ways to work together to make clinical trials more efficient, they nonetheless continue competing in the business development world. For the latest examples, check out our latest summary of  …



Forest/Adamas: Adamas Pharmaceuticals and Forest Laboratories are counting on simplification and reduced frequency of dosing to carry Arimenda, a fixed-dose combination of two long-marketed drugs to treat dementia associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Privately held Adamas out-licensed the drug to Forest Nov. 14 in a deal that includes a $65 million upfront payment as well as potential milestone payments and sales royalties. The deal, under which Forest will assume all developmental and commercialization costs for the drug in the U.S. market, brings Adamas a $65 million upfront payment. In addition, Adamas could earn up to $95 million in development and regulatory milestones, as well as royalties on net sales beginning five years after U.S. launch of the memantine/donepezil combo product. Arimenda is a fixed-dose combination of extended-release memantine (Forest’s Namenda XR) and immediate-release donepezil (Eisai/Pfizer’s Aricept), which Adamas was developing using its own extended-release technology. However, Forest, which has been working to ameliorate a looming patent cliff as Namenda and antidepressant Lexapro (escitalopram) lose exclusivity, bought out U.S. rights to Arimenda with a plan to use its own proprietary extended-release memantine formulation in the product. That formulation, combined with several Adamas patents, will give the new product patent protection into 2029 and could help Forest extend the life of its franchise. It’s unclear if Forest intends to use the Arimenda brand name. – Joseph Haas

Colby/MannKind: Small, privately held Colby Pharmaceutical has built a portfolio of clinical-stage assets, focused mainly in cancer, in the last year through in-licensing and acquisitions. The most recent of three transactions is a licensing deal with MannKind, announced Nov. 13. Colby acquired worldwide rights to develop and commercialize disease-specific antigen compounds and intra-lymph node delivery technologies from MannKind’s novel MKC1106 immunotherapy programs, currently being studied for the treatment of melanoma, prostate cancer and hematological disorders. In exchange, Colby agreed to pay $140 million in upfront and potential milestone payments to MannKind. The San Jose, Calif.-based company plans to further develop the MKC1106-MT regimen in a Phase II melanoma trial. It is the most advanced intra-lymph node injection regimen from the program, and also plans to study the technology with its lead compound, the cancer adjuvant JVRS-100, a cationic lipid-based immune activator, and eventually with other adjuvants that might be in development outside the company. The partnership with MannKind is one of three deals Colby has completed since September 2011. At that time, Colby acquired worldwide rights to the lipid-based immune activator JVRS-100 from Juvaris BioTherapeutics, along with the company’s broader technology platform, called cationic lipid-DNA complex. Colby also acquired Othera Pharmaceuticals in September, obtaining a portfolio of small-molecule compounds for Nrf-2 regulated diseases characterized by oxidative stress injury. – Jessica Merrill

Pernix/Cypress/Hawthorn: Houston-based specialty drug manufacturer Pernix Therapeutics Holdings announced a deal to acquire generic drug maker Cypress Pharmaceuticals and its subsidiary Hawthorn Pharmaceuticals, a branded business, on Nov. 14. Under the terms of the agreement, Pernix will pay $68.5 million upfront in cash along with $12.5 million in equity. A delayed payment of $10 million will be paid out in December 2013 and the final $10 million will be paid in milestone payments, the triggers of those milestones were not disclosed. Cypress and Hawthorn are privately held companies founded in 1993 and based in Madison, Miss. They are expected to report out revenues of about $50 million in 2012. More than half of the company’s sales come from generic products including cough and cold medications, nutritional supplements, analgesics, urinary tract remedies and women’s health treatments. The remaining 46% of revenues were brought in by the branded side of the business under the Hawthorn name, which includes pharmaceutical products for allergy, respiratory, iron deficiency, nephrology and pain management. The acquisition is expected bring Pernix’s 2013 revenues to a range of $135 million to $145 million. The deal also will have synergies with the last acquisition Pernix made – its $4.9 million acquisition of Houston-based contract manufacturer Great Southern Laboratories in July. – Lisa LaMotta

Foundation Medicine/AstraZeneca/Ariad: Cancer genomic analysis play Foundation Medicine announced a pair of partnerships Nov. 12-13, bringing its number of disclosed partnerships to seven this year. Financial details weren’t disclosed for either deal. The AstraZeneca collaboration is a multi-year tie-up in which the partners will work to identify alterations in cancer-related genes to help predict patient response or resistance to targeted therapies. AstraZeneca hopes to use the information to aid drug development. Foundation Medicine also was granted right-of-first-negotiation for developing diagnostics as part of the deal. The Ariad Pharmaceuticals partnership is focused on genomic profiling for a specific candidate, AP26113. The companies will develop genomic profiles of patients in an ongoing Phase I/II trial to treat non-small cell lung cancer and match them to clinical observations on the activity and selectivity of AP26113. The idea is to identify the best patient population for the dual-inhibitor of ALK and EGFR, which could speed development time. Foundation Medicine launched its first product in June, FoundationOne, which enables physicians to identify the molecular alterations involved in a particular patient’s cancer and match them with relevant approved therapies and clinical trials. The firm raised $42.5 million from 10 investors in a Series B financing that closed in September. – Stacy Lawrence

Alnylam/Tekmira: In our “Revised Deal of the Week,” Alnylam Pharmaceuticals has settled a trade-secrets suit brought by partner Tekmira Pharmaceuticals and inked a new licensing agreement that restructures their relationship. The twin actions free Alnylam from a thorny legal problem and enable it to manufacture its own drug candidates. Under the new agreement, Alnylam will make a one-time payment of $30 million to Tekmira to buy out manufacturing obligations so that Alnylam can independently manufacture lipid nanoparticle (LNP) technology for RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutics. In addition, Alnylam said it will make a one-time payment of $35 million related to the termination of prior license agreements and a “significant reduction in milestone and royalty payments” for its lead RNAi programs, ALN-VSP, ALN-PCS and ALN-TTR02. In a Nov. 13 conference call, Alnylam CEO John Maraganore said that over the past year the company has developed internal capabilities and proprietary processes for manufacturing LNP-based products. He noted that Alnylam would be able to manufacture its lead compound ALN-TTRO2, being developed for treatment of transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis, for the start of Phase III trials and expects to supply the drug at least through the early stages of commercialization. Phase II trial data on ALN-TTRO2 are expected in mid-2013 and the pivotal study is to begin by the end of 2013. Tekmira also is eligible to receive an additional $10 million in near-term milestones – a $5 million payment when ALN-TTR02 enters a pivotal trial and a $5 million payment when clinical trials for ALN-VSP begin in China. Tekmira also will receive five additional non-exclusive licenses to develop and commercialize RNAi therapeutics based on Alnylam’s siRNA payload technologies and will pay Alnylam milestones and royalties for these products. – Brenda Sandburg

TG Therapeutics/Ildong Pharmaceutical: Korea’s Ildong Pharmaceutical signed a licensing agreement with TG Therapeutics on Nov. 15 to co-develop and commercialize the latter’s anti-CD20 antibody ublituximab (TGTX-1101) in South Korea and Southeast Asia. MedCI LLC served as licensing advisor and provided assistance to TG Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the acquisition, development and commercialization of treatments for cancer and other underserved therapeutic needs. Under the terms of the agreement, TG Therapeutics is receiving an upfront payment of $2 million in addition to sales-based milestone and royalty payments in exchange for exclusive rights to develop and commercialize Ublituximab for all therapeutic indications in the territory, which also includes Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Myanmar and Vietnam. TG Therapeutics is developing ublituximab for hematologic malignancies and other B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders. Currently, it is being evaluated in a North American Phase I/II clinical trial in patients with relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. – Peter Chang

But those weren't the only deals made during the past business week. Here is a roundup of other business development transactions occurring in the biopharmaceutical arena in the past seven days:

  • MedImmune and biOasis Technologies entered an R&D agreement Nov. 14 to investigate the latter's Transcend technology for delivery of compounds to the brain;
  • Reckitt Benckiser made a $1.4 billion offer Nov. 15 to buy out Schiff Nutritional, topping an earlier offer from Bayer AG;
  • GlaxoSmithKline and Aptuit announced a multi-year expansion of their drug-development partnership in Verona, Italy, on Nov. 13;
  • Boehringer Ingelheim and BaroFold signed a non-exclusive license on Nov. 13 to use BaroFold's PreEMT (Pressure Enabled Manufacturing Technology) platform for protein refolding work in BI's drug production; and
  • Synthetic Biologics acquired clinical-stage beta-lactamase assets for prevention of Clostridium difficile infections Nov. 12 from Prev AbR LLC.
Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

Friday, June 29, 2012

Deals Of The Week: Whose Mind Is On Deals Anyway?


To rehash The Event of this week: the Supreme Court ruled 5-to-4 to uphold the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act June 28, including the mandate requiring individuals to have health insurance.

The decision seems favorable to the pharmaceutical industry, and may have surprised a few who already were scheming of ways to get back the billions spent on that excise tax to the federal government in 2011. We look forward to sorting out the implications for the pharmaceutical and biotech industries in the weeks and months ahead. Our sister publication, “The Pink Sheet,” DAILY did an initial review here, making the point that many changes already were set in motion by the passage of the act itself. And we'll have much more to say in the days and weeks ahead.

The pharma industry stands to benefit from the expected increase in insured patients. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services project about 22 million newly insured patients, and that spending on prescription drugs by public and private payers will increase 8.8% in 2014 over 2013 – the year major coverage expansions under the ACA are scheduled to begin – compared to 4.1% growth if it had not passed.

Still, there’s no guarantee of the volume trends newly insured patients will deliver when it comes to pharmaceuticals. “The actual volume upside may be lower and more modest then some expect,” noted Barclays Capital analyst Anthony Butler in a same-day note. A significant portion of the uninsured are believed to be young people who may not use health care services or pharmaceuticals. “The addition of these segments into the coverage pool through the individual mandate may be a smaller net positive from the volume perspective for the pharma sector than some have expected,” Butler said.

There will be plenty of uncertainties as we navigate through health care reform, but for now isn’t it about time to celebrate the federal government’s executive, legislative and judicial branches in action, by heading to the beach for July 4? – Jessica Merrill


Merck Serono/Compugen – The corporate venture arm of Germany’s Merck Serono is collaborating with Compugen to establish a new company, Neviah Genomics, to discover, develop and market novel biomarkers for drug toxicity, with the aim of bringing a product to market within a few years. The Neviah collaboration, announced June 25, is the first investment under Merck Serono Ventures’ Israel Bioincubator program, established by Merck Serono in 2011 with initial funding of €10 million over seven years. Compugen, a Tel Aviv-based biotech with a pipeline of preclinical protein therapeutics and monoclonal antibodies, will bring its predictive discovery technologies to the partnership. The deal is structured so both Merck Serono Ventures and Compugen will be shareholders in Neviah, which will have its own board that will determine how any product profits will be distributed. Compugen also will earn royalties from product sales. Further financial details were not disclosed, including the amount of Merck Serono’s initial investment. The companies have worked together as part of a 2008 partnership to co-develop CGEN855, a GCPR peptide investigated in inflammatory disease. – Joseph Haas

Lilly/PrimeraDx – Massachusetts-based PrimeraDx has entered into a multi-year collaboration with Eli Lilly to develop companion diagnostics for several unspecified clinical candidates, initially focusing on oncology. Neither terms nor timelines were disclosed. PrimeraDx, will develop multiplexed assays using its proprietary ICEPlex system, which is capable of simultaneous detection and quantification of numerous target types such as mRNA, miRNA, SNPs and DNA. Founded in 2004 and formerly known as Primera Biosystems, Inc., the company sells instrumentation, software, assays and consumables. Primary customers are clinical labs at large academic research centers and reference laboratories and biopharmaceutical companies. PrimeraDx is backed by venture investors including Abingworth, InterWest, CHL Medical, MPM Capital, Burrill & Co., and the Malaysian Technology Development Corporation. It last raised a $20 million series C in September 2009. – Mike Goodman

Celgene/Inhibrx – Drug-discovery firm Inhibrx has signed a notable partner, announcing June 27 that Celgene has licensed a preclinical antibody program. The target of the program was not disclosed. The potential value of the deal is $500 million, including upfront, clinical and regulatory milestones. Inhibrx, based in La Jolla, Calif., is focused on the discovery and development of novel drugs for cancer and inflammatory disease. – J.M.

Merck/AstraZeneca – Merck and AstraZeneca announced an agreement to extend their longstanding partnership June 27 after coming to terms that could benefit both parties. The original partnership dates back to 1982 when Sweden’s Astra AB tapped Merck to market its proton pump inhibitor drugs in the US. Nexium (esomeprazole), which is expected to post dwindling sales once losing patent protection in 2014, and Prilosec (omeprazole), which is now sold as an over-the-counter medication, remain the only drugs still under the agreement. AstraZeneca now will have the option to buy the remainder of Merck’s stake in the drugs in the first quarter of 2014 for $347 million plus an amount equal to 10 times Merck's average 1% annual profit allocation in the partnership, which AstraZeneca estimates to be about $80 million. The price paid by AstraZeneca also could include the net present value of up to 5% of future U.S. sales of the painkiller Vimovo (naproxen/esomeprazole). While the extension of the deal will have no immediate effect on AstraZeneca’s earnings, it will help Merck deal with the patent expiration of the blockbuster allergy drug Singulair (monteklast) by adding $200 million in revenues to the 2012 top line. – Lisa LaMotta

Biogen Idec/Isis – Antisense drug-discovery platform operator Isis Pharmaceuticals has partnered prolifically over the years. Its latest deal with Biogen Idec is the second collaboration between the two companies, an arrangement to develop and commercialize a treatment for myotonic dystrophy type 1. The disorder, also known as Steinert disease, is a form of muscular dystrophy that afflicts adults. Biogen Idec will pay $12 million up front to enter the collaboration, but could pay much more over time if it licenses the drug at the end of Phase II. The deal includes $59 million in milestone payments prior to licensing, as well as up to $200 million for a licensing fee and and further clinical milestones. The companies will attempt to develop a drug that repairs a repeating defect in the coding of the dystrophia myotonia-protein kinase gene that results in abnormally long strands of RNA, leading to buildup in cells. Isis and Biogen already have an alliance in spinal muscular atrophy, revealed in January. – Paul Bonanos

Sanofi/Oxford – The UK's Oxford BioMedica announced June 29 that it has earned a $3 million option exercise payment from Sanofi, which has decided to acquire worldwide license to a pair of Phase I/II gene-based treatments discovered by Oxford. Under terms of an agreement signed in 2009, Sanofi has acquired rights to develop, manufacture and commercialize StarGen for Stargardt disease and UshStat for Usher syndrome type 1B. Oxford discovered and developed both candidates using its proprietary LentiVector platform technology. – Joseph Haas

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