Showing posts with label oncology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oncology. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2011

Live From ASCO: Time To Cool Down?


It's day three of ASCO and the meeting is at a fever pitch, as the National Cancer Institute's Antonio Tito Fojo wryly observed during a panel on designing randomized controlled trials to achieve meaningful benefits. Not that it's an unusual state for the world's largest meeting on the largest field of drug development.

There is the typical fervor surrounding promising early data, a few major advances to report (for instance, the melanoma data from Roche and BMS covered by among others, the NYT, WSJ, Reuters, and, of course, "The Pink Sheet" Daily), and the meeting halls are packed with clinicians, investors, and journos. (Saturday's clinical science symposium on ovarian cancer had such throngs waiting for it to start that McCormick Place called in bouncers, from "Armageddon Security," nonetheless. And if you weren't in the initial crush, you probably got diverted to an overflow room. Or the second overflow room.)

Still, compared to other years, analysts aren't finding much to write home about. And, increasingly, the importance of the data being presented before packed meeting halls is being questioned. "We need to get away from things that add cost but not value," UnitedHealthcare's Lee Newcomer noted during a panel on health care reform.

Defining what value means, however, is a trickier subject.

Most clinical trials don't mean much for clinical practice, Ralph Meyer of Queen's University asserted at the plenary on randomized clinical trials. With all the controls and standardization, they represent the ideal – not real world practice. And registration studies are intended for that purpose.

In a talk called "Raising the Bar for Efficacy In Cancer Therapeutics," Alberto Sobrero, Head of the Medical Oncology Unit at Italy's Ospedale San Martino, took on whether or not those trials produce clinically meaningful data, or just go after statistical significance. Looking at the 15 pivotal Phase III trials for 9 biologics covering 8 different cancers approved over a 5-year period, he found that the hazard ratios (a statistical metric for calculating risk reduction) for progression-free survival and overall survival looked good at (respectively) 0.57 and 0.73. But when you considered the absolute gains of 2.7 and 2 months, the data were far less clear. Or as Sobrero put it, "Hmmm."

It's a complicated situation, he acknowledged. In an aggressive cancer like metastatic melanoma, a 0.8 HR would mean a 1.5 month gain – not really meaningful. But in breast cancer, that same 0.8 HR becomes worthwhile with a 6 month gain. So, both hazard ratios and absolute gain need to be considered --as well as the context of the specific tumor type-- when making a value judgement about a clinical benefit.

NCI's Fojo also questioned the significance of statistical significance. Paraphrasing an earlier researcher, he noted that if you torture data long enough, you can get it to confess to significance. Fojo found much of the clinical benefit shown in studies has marginal value. By definition, clinical benefit rate (CBR) is what you get when you add stable disease to partial and complete responses. Or, as Fojo put it, it's what you report when you have a drug that underperforms. It's "the corruption of an endpoint," he said.

Shrinking a tumor is good, he agreed, but unless it correlates with survival, stable disease does not mean anything. In prostate cancer, for instance, where some novel drugs have been reporting CBR, objective response rate (PR+CR) correlates highly with overall survival. But when you include patients that met stable disease criteria, the average benefit drops by more than half. "Because you're adding a parameter that has no value at all," Fojo said.

Of course, part of the concern is that these absolute gains aren't coming without costs. It's one thing for a drug to provide 2 months of life, quite another if it costs thousands of dollars and comes with toxicities. And given the proliferation of oncology drugs, there's more room for payers to actively manage the disease, benchmarking more expensive newer agents against cheaper, older ones, and using the ultimate metric --survival -- as the measuring stick. That's playing out at ASCO too, as Newcomer's comments indicate.

Unlike in the past, the skepticism of therapeutic value outlined in posters and abstracts isn't limited to the back corridors or the marginal sessions on clinical trial design and practice issues -- it's coming from the podium at scientific sessions. For instance, a review of recent Phase III trials in upper GI malignancies was organized around the theme of whether the findings were clinically meaningful or just statistically significant, and included a talk about the health care economics of treatment. (Hint: It wasn't pretty.)

It's all part of a larger trend toward more concentration on value, cost and payer issues as IN VIVO covered recently in the May 2011 issue.

It's great to see researchers and industry execs coming out of the convention with excitement about promising new pathways and the potential for combinations. But they should also start thinking harder about raising the bar. Otherwise climate change (of a reimbursement and/or regulatory nature) could spark a cool down in one of the hottest therapeutic areas of the industry.

Image courtesy of flickrer Joe Seggiola through a creative commons license.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Deals Of The Week: The ASCO Edition

ASCO is just moving into full swing, but already the press releases are flying fast and furious. Biotechs have long looked to this meeting as a means to showcase their smarts and increase their profile with public investors. But as big pharmas have set their sights on oncology as the therapeutic area of choice -- given its high unmet medical need and, historically, generous reimbursement, there's no doubt ASCO is now a critical meeting for even the biggest players in the industry.

Like last year, the particular tumor type driving a lot of investor interest at this year's Chicago confab is melanoma. Since presenting robust Phase III data at ASCO 2010 showing a survival benefit for Yervoy, Bristol-Myers Squibb has gone on to win rapid approval for its CTLA-4 inhibitor. This year, investors and clinicians will be watching for new data measuring Yervoy efficacy in pretreated melanoma patients; they'll also be monitoring the data associated with Plexxikon/Roche's vemurafenib, which is pending FDA approval for use in patients with the BRAF V600 mutation, a specific genetic abnormality observed in about 50% of melanoma patients.

As "The Pink Sheet" Daily notes, it's not entirely clear how the melanoma market will shake out when both products are finally on the market. They may be competitors, but given their different modes of action -- Yervoy stimulates the immune system, while the Plexx/Roche drug targets only tumor cells that carry the V600 abnormality -- it's equally likely they could act synergistically. Certainly neither drug on its own works in all patients or offers a long-term cure, even if both extend median patient survival in clinical trials.

Thus, the news June 2 that Roche/Plexxikon would find a way to work with BMS to study the two drugs in combination seemed almost a fait accompli. The press releases issued (from three different companies no less) were long on breathless prose and short on detail: the parties will conduct a Phase I/II study evaluating safety and efficacy of the two drugs in combo, but did not provide more clarity on the trial's design, its timing, or its enrollment. "If appropriate, the companies may conduct further development of the combination," Bristol said in its press release.

You will notice there's also no information on the economic sharing that might come from such a clinical collaboration either. That's hardly surprising. We've yet to see much in the way of financial deets for earlier tie-ups in oncology: AstraZeneca's 2009 alliance with Merck to combine development of their respective clinical-stage MEK inhibitor and AKT inhibitor; or Sanofi's December 2010 deal with Merck Serono to marry their Phase I PI3 Kinase- and MEK-targeting molecules.

Despite the increasing complexity of the oncology market, one in which payers are taking a more active role in controlling costs, such cross-collaboration remains the exception rather than the rule. There are plenty of reasons why: issues around control, valuation, and overlap with other non-partnered products mean it can be tough for two large companies to come to agreement on how to share knowledge and find ways to work together.

That BMS and Roche have found a way to do so can only be a smart thing. The reality is organizations like US Oncology, Cardinal's P4 Healthcare, and Via Oncology are going beyond traditional treatment guidelines recommended by the likes of ASCO and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, working with payers to provide "clinical pathways" that aim to standardize treatment for a specific disease or tumor type. Aimed for now at treating the most costly cancers, these programs, which are still in pilot mode at major players like Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield and Highmark, reduce the wide latitude US doctors have historically enjoyed when prescribing oncologics.

The ultimate impact of these pathways on the biopharma industry isn't yet known, but as we write in this IN VIVO feature, their advent has real consequences for how companies should approach drug development. And while it's very early days to be talking about a melanoma pathway, doing clinical trials to show the merit of your drug in conjunction with a competitor, when it's highly likely to see real-world use in such a combination, just makes sense. (We also wonder how this impacts GSK's Phase III melanoma drugs, its MEK1/2 inhibitor and its BRAF protein kinase inhibitor. Can these earlier stages medicines get traction in the current competitive marketplace? GSK certainly hopes so, and has its own combo trials ongoing.)

Will we see more cross-company clinical stage oncology pair-ups in the future? We hope so. Could such alliances be broader and extend beyond on-offs to a ViiV type arrangement? We're doubtful given the deal making complexities and nearly every pharma's desire to be tops in oncology. But as crazy as that idea sounds, it'd be a clear choice for 2011's DOTY.

In the interim, we always have ASCO (if not Paris) and...

Clovis/Pfizer: Attention biopharma trend watchers! We bring you this news flash of another sighting of that rare bird in the wild: the out-licensing. On June 2, Clovis announced it was licensing Pfizer's Phase I/II Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor, PF-01367338, for an undisclosed upfront sum. Under the terms of the agreement, Clovis Oncology will take over responsibility for global product development and commercialization, and in addition to paying the u/f, will owe Pfizer additional downstream fees milestones totaling up to $255 million (pending success in the clinic and commercially, of course). Interestingly, as part of the out-licensing, Pfizer Venture Investments is taking an equity stake in the biotech. (So it's a licensing AND a financing in one blow.) Not that Clovis is hurting in the cash department. Recall Clovis, a START-UP A-lister, pulled in one of the biggest Series As EVUH in 2009. PARP inhibition is, of course, a hot topic at ASCO, and a quick search of the pipeline database Inteleos, shows there are more than a dozen drugs in development against this target, including some that are much further along, including Sanofi's iniparib (Phase III, originally developed by BiPar), AstraZeneca's olaparib, and Cephalon's CEP-9722. The press release announcing the news emphasizes '338 is a "potent" PARP inhibitor, so it's a bit curious that Pfizer would give it up unless its trying to walk the talk of jettisoning anything not first-in-class or best-in-class. (But that raises other questions, including what does Clovis see in the compound?). Separately, Clovis also announced this week plans to develop in concert with Roche an in vitro PCR-based companion diagnostic linked to EGFR mutations.--EL

Johnson & Johnson/AVEO: Months after partnering its lead asset tivozanib in a lucrative deal with Astellas, Aveo has extended its network of partners with an early stage deal with Johnson & Johnson's Centocor Ortho Biotech division. The Cambridge, Mass.-based biotech announced the licensing deal for compounds targeting the RON (Recepteur d'Origine Nantais) receptor - believed to play a role in cancer development - for $15 million upfront May 31. Under the deal, Aveo will receive half of the $15 million in an upfront payment and the rest through a separate equity investment that gives J&J a 1.25% stake in the biotech. Given the early-stage nature of the deal, it's not surprising the arrangement is back-end loaded, with Aveo eligible to receive up to $540 million in development, regulatory and commercial milestones. Aveo will also receive tiered, double-digit royalties on sales of any products stemming from the collaboration. Centocor will be responsible for clinical development, manufacturing, commercialization and costs. J&J will also fund some research to be conducted by Aveo to identify biomarkers for patients most likely to respond to treatment with RON-targeted antibodies. "It is about building out a portfolio," said Aveo Chief Business Officer Elan Ezickson of the collaboration in an interview with "The Pink Sheet" DAILY. For J&J, the deal provides access to what could be an important product in oncology, an area of critical importance to the big pharma's overall business success. -- Jessica Merrill

AstraZeneca/Heptares: (
Spoiler alert. No oncology refs in this deal.) UK biotech Heptares Therapeutics signed its third Big Pharma agreement in two months this week, this time with AstraZeneca. The two companies have entered into a four-year research collaboration to discover and develop new medicines that target G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). AstraZeneca will have worldwide commercial rights to product candidates emerging from the collaboration, with Heptares receiving $6.25 million in unconditional upfront payments plus committed research funding and future milestones. Heptares will also receive royalties on product sales. Research teams drawn from both companies will focus on a number of GPCR targets known to be linked to CNS/pain, cardiovascular/metabolic and inflammatory disorders. The deal brings to more than $13 million the total upfront money that Heptares has received from its pharmaceutical partners this year, which together add an extra 18-20 months to the biotech's cash runway, according to CEO Malcolm Weir. It also represents further validation for the four-year-old company's technology, which helps stabilize GPCR molecules. That AstraZeneca is modality-agnostic in this deal - purporting to seek both small- and large-molecule candidates - reflects the growing importance of the Big Pharma's MedImmune biologics subsidiary within its overall R&D operations.--John Davis
Johnson & Johnson/Diamyd: J&J's Ortho-McNeil-Janssen (OMJP) signed one early stage deal this week -- and called it quits on another. It was barely a year ago when Elisabeth Lindner, then President and CEO of the Swedish diabetes outfit Diamyd, pronounced on a quarterly earnings call that "a new chapter has begun" as a result of the firm's $45 million upfront licensing agreement with OMJP. That chapter closed on June 1, when OMJP returned all rights to the Phase III GAD65, an antigen-based therapeutic vaccine designed to preserve beta cells in type 1 diabetics. A big disappointment to Diamyd and its shareholders, the news can hardly be called surprising. (We're even tempted to say the writing was on the wall.) On May 9, the two companies reported clinical trial data from a European pivotal study, showing GAD65 failed to meet the primary efficacy endpoint of preserving beta cell function in new diagnosed Type 1 diabetics after 15 months of therapy. Although the company noted "a small positive effect was seen", the data weren't good enough to keep OMJP engaged -- and, importantly, willing to shoulder any additional development costs. Recall the 2010 deal stipulated the two partners would share R&D costs until results of the first Phase III study were available, at which time OMJP had the option to assume full development of the drug candidate. It can't be an easy message to give shareholders, but Diamyd's acting president and CEO, Peter Zerhouni (who replaced Lindner after her abrupt departure in late April) did his best to spin the news positively. "With all the rights to returned to us we are free to decide on how to extract the most value from GAD65 going forward," he said. Whether Diamyd can sign a new partner near term is unclear -- a therapeutic vaccine for diabetes is scientifically risky and it's hard to see a lot of interest after the disappointing Phase III study results. (Even Diamyd doesn't seem that interested. In the wake of OMJP's decision it announced it would shelve a planned longer term follow-up of patients in the European trial.) Investors may have more clarity on GAD65's potential partnerability by end of June -- at the upcoming ADA meeting Diamyd will present data on the European trial, presumably providing greater detail about the small positive effect. There's also a Phase III ongoing in the US due to read out in 2012 and two other externally funded studies that may yet result in the vaccine's resurrection.--EL

Friday, December 17, 2010

2010 M&A DOTY Nominee: Celgene/Abraxis Bioscience

It's time for the IN VIVO Blog's Third Annual Deal of the Year! competition. This year we're 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 the nominations (four or five 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™.


As we noted a week ago, Celgene hasn't been shy about striking creative deals. The $2.9 billion cash and stock acquisition of Abraxis Bioscience fits the mold, for reasons we'll explain in a minute, but the creativity isn't what makes this deal worthy of a DOTY nomination.

It's actually Celgene's bet itself that intrigues us: after building its bona fides in liquid tumors with Thalomid (thalidomide) and the now-blockbuster Revlimid (lenalidomide), the New Jersey firm is spending nearly $3 billion to expand into solid tumors, an aggressive move at a time when retrenchment (Biogen Idec), reorganization (Genentech, via its parent Roche), desperate defense (Genzyme) and urgent reinvention (Amgen) are the main trends for big biotechs. In late 2007, Celgene's dealmakers high-stepped into the spotlight after years of relative silence, and they haven't relinquished the stage. The Abraxis deal, dollar-wise, is Celgene's largest yet.

For what, exactly? Abraxis' only marketed product is Abraxane, a reformulation of the generic chemotherapy paclitaxel using albumin nanoparticles that's been approved for metastatic breast cancer. It's a modest seller so far -- $360 million in 2009 revenue -- but Celgene sees promise in other solid tumor indications, including a potential submission for use in non-small cell lung cancer in the first half of 2011. Abraxis owns the "nab" nanoparticle delivery technology; whether Celgene puts it to use to reformulate other drugs remains to be seen. Investors at first were befuddled at the June 30 deal announcement, driving Celgene's stock below $50 from a high of $56.58, but they've since come round. Celgene ended trading Thursday, Dec. 16 at $58.79.

Terms of the acquisition were complicated and suggest this was a product Celgene had to have. In the end, Celgene paid $2.5 billion in cash and issued 10.7 million shares of common stock worth $58.21 each, or about $620 million, on Octo. 15, the day the acquisition finally closed.

In addition, Celgene has promised significant earn-outs, or contingent value rights (CVRs), to Abraxis shareholders -- most especially founder Patrick Soon-Shiong (pictured, right). The CVRs include a $250 million cash payment upon approval of Abraxane by FDA for NSCLC with a progression-free survival claim; either a $300 million or $400 million cash payment upon approval of Abraxane by FDA for pancreatic cancer with an overall survival claim; and potential cash royalty payments if Abraxane and certain pipeline drugs reach established sales thresholds.

It's hard to say CVRs are creative deal-making when so many acquisitions these days require them, though in the public markets, unlike the private side, they're still the exception, not the rule. There was an added twist, as well. To get the deal past the finish line, Celgene agreed to make the CVRs tradeable -- in essence, a tracking stock that follows the value of one product, Abraxane. Very few CVRs have ever been converted into tradeable securities, and Soon-Shiong has been involved in two of the most prominent examples as we discuss here.

Industry pundits continue to opine about the wisdom of spending billions for a single asset, but this diversification into solid tumors makes sense for Celgene. Data released at ASH suggests Revlimid may face headwinds in the maintenance setting for multiple myeloma. That could stymie the product's growth, a worrisome fact since it now accounts for 70% of Celgene's total revenue. Celgene wants to be one of the leaders in the increasingly competitive oncology space and it's not afraid to spend money or meet the deal requirements of the companies its courting. That chutzpah deserves your vote for DOTY, if nothing else.

Photo courtesy flickr user health2con.

Friday, November 5, 2010

DotW Considers Restructuring

As part of its announced restructuring this week, Biogen Idec decided to terminate or divest 11 programs in areas such as cardiovascular and oncology and instead focus on its historic strength in neurology and autoimmune disease, as well as promising hemophilia assets.

The ripples of that decision are already being felt, most immediately by Cardiokine, a privately-held biotech based in Philadelphia that has raised $87 million in venture dollars since its 2004 founding. Back in 2007 the start-up ,which counts Health Care Ventures and Care Capital among its backers, partnered its sole asset, a selective vasopressin receptor antagonist for hyponatremia called lixivaptan, to Biogen for $50 million upfront.

Amber Salzman, president and CEO of Cardiokine, did her best to spin the divestment news in a positive direction. "I am pleased we have regained exclusive global rights to lixivaptan, a potentially important advance in the treatment of hyponatremia," she said in a statement. "We are nearing the completion of the Phase 3 program and look forward to study results and confirming our registration plans in the near future.”

Biogen nabbed lixivaptan as it was rebuilding its late stage pipeline in the wake of a previous restructuring that began in 2005. At that time Biogen execs admitted they had neglected their pipeline to concentrate on the launch of Tysabri (natalizumab), a next-generation MS therapy that promised much greater efficacy than the interferon-based treatments dominating the market at the time. So they ramped up dramatically in several areas, including CV, buying rights to the pulmonary arterial hypertension drug Aviptadil from mondoBiotech and Adentri, an A1-adenosine receptor antagonist for heart failure, from CV Therapeutics. (Biogen dropped work on Adentri earlier this year. )

As a result of Biogen's new restructuring, Cardiokine loses out on a potential $170 million in milestones. At this point, it's got to hope Big Pharmas in need of late stage products (Lilly? Sanofi-Aventis?) could be drawn into a more lucrative partnership, or even an acquisition.

The safety-first mentality at FDA has resulted in a full-fledged flight away from anything that might be classified with a "C"and a "V," but lixivaptan has a few things going for it, not least that its in Phase III trials. Its use in hyponatremia, an electrolyte disorder characterized by an imbalance of sodium and water, is also a plus. There are currently no approved therapeutic treatments for the condition, which frequently goes undiagnosed. Thus, potential interested acquirers can check the "unmet medical need" box that is now de rigueur in any biopharma transaction. In all likelihood, no deal will emerge until potential acquirers have a gander at top-line data from the ongoing three pivotal trials, especially a 650-patient study in congestive heart failure.

Cardiokine wasn't the only entity to suffer the fall-out from revised priorities this week. The American people also decided to divest more than 60 Democrats from their Congressional pipeline, but for now we'll let others weigh in on the effects of the new portfolio, especially on health care reform. Meanwhile, it's time for this blogger to revisit her own priorities and call it a weekend...


McKesson/US Oncology: The big-ticket acquisition this week was health care services and IT player McKesson's $2.16 billion all-cash take-out of US Oncology, a physician practice management company for cancer physicians. McKesson will pay cash for the outstanding shares of privately-held US Oncology and assume its $1.6 billion in debt. The deal builds on McKesson's aspirations to expand in the oncology specialty services arena, helped out by its 2007 purchase of Oncology Therapeutics Network for $575 million. It also comes as demand for oncology products is on the rise, and drug makers both big and small are doing their best to develop differentiated medicines to tackle the disease, an event that will only increase the need for purveyors of oncology services. (That is until there is pushback from payors about the distribution of pricy cancer meds.) Bringing US Oncology in-house expands the number of oncologists to whom McKesson has access to 3000, according to executives on a November 1 investor call. Currently, The Woodlands, Tex.-based US Oncology supports about 1300 community-based physicians in 38 states. Analysts have reacted positively to the deal, which is expected to close by the end of 2010, because of the complementarity of the two businesses. In a note to investors, Tom Gallucci of Lazard Capital Markets says it gives McKesson “a meaningful land grab within the fast-growth oncology space, lending further scale to its distribution business.” -- Greg Twachtman & E.L.

Bristol-Myers Squibb/Simcere: Behold the rise of regional deal-making. As drug makers look to push into important emerging economies like China and India, they face important decisions related to the development and commercialization of products. Is it better to invest in costly infrastructure and distribution networks, building capacity from the ground up, or leverage the capabilities of an in-country firm that is more familiar with the "hows" and "whos" -- particularly the government regulators and KOLs -- of the local market? BMS chose the latter route in its tie-up with Simcere, a Chinese pharma with a diverse portfolio that includes branded generics and the proprietary medicine Endu, a recombinant human endostatin, for non-small lung cancer. Financial terms of the BMS/Simcere deal weren't disclosed, but as part of the agreement, Simcere receives exclusive rights in China to develop and commercialize BMS-817378, a preclinical MET/VEGFR2 inhibitor. BMS retains rights in all other markets, and the two firms will jointly determine development. Interestingly, it appears the early work will be carried out by Simcere, in what may be an attempt by BMS to leverage two critical advantages offered by China: 1) the still -- for now -- cheaper labor market keeps the R&D burn rate low; 2) with greater access to treatment naive patients, it can be much faster to run oncology trials in a place like China than the US or Europe, where competition for patients is greater. In 2009, Simcere inked a similar deal with OSI Pharmaceuticals for the development of OSI930, a small molecule oncologic in Phase I that targets multiple tyrosine kinases, including one of the same targets hit by BMS's drug, the VEGF2 receptor. -- E.L.

Gedeon Richter/Grunenthal: The European women’s health market is in significant flux with the third major deal in a month, and the second involving Budapest, Hungary-based Gedeon Richter. On November 3, Richter purchased Grunenthal’s oral contraceptive business for €236.5 million (about $331 million), roughly one month after Richter bought out Switzerland’s PregLem for CHF150 million ($156 million). Meanwhile on October 28 Teva purchased Merck Serono’s Théramex division for €265 million to deepen its geographic reach in women’s health and particularly in the contraceptive space. Like Teva/Théramex, Richter is eyeing both geographic expansion and growth of its oral contraceptive portfolio with the purchase of Germany’s Grunenthal. The small family-owned firm adds seven contraceptives including Belara to Richter’s portfolio, with sales largely based in Germany, Spain and Italy. The deal covers commercial rights in all markets where Grunenthal’s products are approved, except for Latin America. Richter said the transaction will provide a platform upon which it can establish a sales and marketing base in key Western European countries; currently, Richter’s primary commercial base is central eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States. -- Joseph Haas

Kadmon/Valeant: Just one week after Kadmon Pharmaceuticals, Sam Waksal's post-ImClone reprise, emerged from stealth mode with the acquisition of Three Rivers Pharmaceuticals, the biotech is back in the limelight. On November 1, the biotech announced a pair of strategic agreements with Valeant Pharmaceuticals that allows the start-up to hit the ground running with a mid-stage HCV candidate. In part one of the two-part alliance, New York-based Kadmon licensed worldwide development and commercialization rights (excluding Japan) to taribavirin, an analog of ribavirin that has completed Phase IIb studies for HCV, for $5 million upfront. Toronto-based Valeant, which said continuing development of taribavirin no longer fit its specialty pharma business model, stands to earn development milestones and sales royalties between 8% and 12% of future net sales related to taribavirin. That doesn't mean Valeant is getting out of selling hep C medicines altogether, however. The deal's second part calls for Valeant to pay Kadmon $7.5 million for rights to distribute in six Eastern European nations the start-up's Ribasphere and RibaPak, formulations of ribavirin that Kadmon acquired via the Three Rivers' deal. Kadmon will serve as the supplier of the two drugs. For Kadmon, a still stealthy company that has released little information about its financial backers, the complicated deal means the company nets $2.5 million and gains a mid-stage asset simultaneously. For Valeant, the outlicensing is consistent with its streamlining after the Biovail merger, as it looks to divest programs that require sizeable R&D dollars to get to market. -- J.H. & E.L.


Swedish Orphan Biovitrum/Amgen: Stockholm-based Swedish Orphan Biovitrum, which wants to be known as “Sobi” -- a decision IN VIVO Blog supports because it sounds like a tasty buckwheat noodle -- is selling back to Amgen its co-promotion rights in Nordic countries to hyperthyroidism compound Mimpara (cinacalcet). "Strategic business reasons" were a driving factor in the "mutual agreement," according to the press release announcing the split. Unfortunately, the two companies declined to say more about why the seven-year deal was ending, or how much Amgen will pay Sobi to wind down the deal. It can't be much. Sobi's revenues from Mimpara were a scant 26.2 million Swedish Krona ($3.9 millon) in 2009. Could this be the converse to the regional dealmaking brouhaha in India and China (see above)? Certainly it's well known that co-promotion deals limited to a handful of smaller markets are time-consuming and complex to manage, which may make the return for both parties de minimus. For its part, Sobi, which has developed its marketing capabilities throughout Europe, is to reallocate resources to its newer products, such as Yondelis, Multiferon and Ruconest. -- John Davis

Johnson & Johnson/Arena: On November 5, J&J's Ortho-Macneil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals division officially called it quits on the development of ADP597, a GPR119 agonist for type 2 diabetes it in-licensed from Arena as part of a two-compound 2004 deal worth $17.5 million upfront. The news marks the end of the six-year collaboration between the two parties; in 2008, J&J discontinued work on another GPR119 called APD668 in order to devote more resources to ADP597, which was believed to be the more potent compound. As of December 28, 2010, all rights to ADP597 officially revert to Arena, which has a portfolio of internally discovered GPR119 agonists, including follow-on versions of APD597 that weren't part of the original J&J deal. It's not clear why Janssen returned rights to the drug, which had just finished Phase I and demonstrated no obvious safety signals, according to company reports. Preliminary data suggest the oral molecule may have utility both alone and in combination with DPP-IV inhibitors like Januvia or Onglyza. It's possible the competitive landscape was one reason the deal came to an end. An interesting new class of small molecule drugs for type 2 diabetes, GPR119 agonists are a hot target in the type 2 diabetes landscape, with players such as Boehringer Ingelheim and GlaxoSmithKline vying to be first to market. The drugs target a protein expressed on the surface of pancreatic beta cells and endocrine cells in the gastrointestinal tract. In preclinical and clinical studies, GPR119 activation has been show to stimulate the relase of GLP-1 and other incretins that play an important role in insulin regulation. All told, Arena netted $32 million from the six-year collaboration with J&J, according to Elsevier's Strategic Transactions database. The return of the asset is another piece of negative news for Arena, which in late October received a complete response letter for its obesity drug lorcaserin. -- E.L.

Image courtesy of
flickrer jasoneppink.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

VEGF & Colorectal Cancer: How Do You Know When to Stop?

Fifty million Elvis fans can't be wrong. What about nine Phase III trials?

Avastin is a $5.7 billion drug, with activity in at least five tumor types with every indication of gaining more (it's pending for approval in gastric cancer based on data presented at the 2009 ASCO annual meeting [it is not (Herceptin is!); IVB regrets the error] and positive data in ovarian cancer was presented at the plenary of the 2010 meeting). Some projections have it becoming the top selling drug in the world in 2014 with annual sales of $9 billion. (For more on Avastin's performance in ovarian cancer, check out "The Pink Sheet.")

But it all started out with colorectal cancer.

With success like that, and the VEGF mechanism of action seemingly proven in the setting, of course other drug development projects followed. "There is clearly room to improve on anti-angiogenic therapy in CRC," Scott Kopetz from MD Anderson Cancer Center said at this year's ASCO meeting, and agents with oral bioavailability and lower production costs could have real market advantages.

But, as Kopetz reminded us during an ASCO session on novel possibilities for treating colorectal cancer, small molecule angiogenesis inhibitor options – including the multi-targeted receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors – haven't worked. Fourteen small molecule VEGF receptor antagonists have been tested (and failed) in CRC – among them early disappointments like AstraZenenca/Schering's PTK787 and more recent failures with Pfizer's sunitinib, GlaxoSmithKline's pazopanib, Bristol-Myers Squibb's brivanib, and AstraZeneca's vandetanib and cediranib just weeks ago. (see Pharmaceutical Approvals Monthly). That includes a total of nine Phase III trials and over 10,000 patients studied, by Kopetz's calculations.

And - "despite over 10,000 patients enrolled," he said, "unfortunately there's no evidence yet that anti-angiogenic agents, besides bevacizumab, confer benefit."

With such a host of attempts and no positive results, maybe it's time to move beyond VEGF in colorectal cancer. After all, there's scads of other pathways to pursue – from MEK to PI3 kinase to Src to Notch to Hedgehog, as Wells Messersmith from the University of Colorado mapped out.

Maybe it isn't quite time to call it quits on angiogenesis, though. Kopetz held out a little hope – and from the back of a McCormick Place hangar it was hard to see how much of a veil of Avastin glory was in his eyes – there's still the large molecule angiogenesis projects out there.

The Phase III on VEGF-Trap, sanofi-aventis/Regeneron's aflibercept, should report out in December. So perhaps we should all keep our hopes up a little longer.

Friday, May 28, 2010

DotW: Navel Gazing

It was a week of painful navel-gazing from many in the venture community, as some of the industry’s best and brightest gathered in Napa for the annual C21 Bioventures conference at the Meritage Resort.

A panel of VCs kicked off the event with a gloom-and-doom overview of the private financing world. As Ilan Zipkin, a partner with Prospect Ventures succinctly put it, "It’s a good thing we’re not holding this meeting in San Francisco. Here in Napa there are no bridges to jump off."

Ouch. Are things really that bad in private biotech land?

As we’ve been pointing out for some time, for VCs, the answer is yes. Funds raising money now are having a tough time and the expectation is future fund sizes will be smaller too, with returns down across the board. As InterWest Partners’ Chris Ehrlich put it: "People feel worse about themselves. LPs, the life blood of capital for venture, are saying the role of VC an asset class is limited. That casts a pall." Ehrlich likened the current climate for VCs who came of age in the most recent decade as "born in the crossfire of a hurricane." (Our heart goes out to Ehrlich and we’d likely be far more sympathetic--if we weren’t in the publishing industry.)

For biotechs looking for financing, things are a bit more hopeful, thanks to the rise of corporate venture groups, including newly formed units from Boehringer Ingelheim and Abbott. But certainly expectations must be adjusted. In terms of exits, Alison Kiley of Alta Partners is telling her firms to "keep their heads down, operating as if there will be NO IPOs." And, as IVB has said in the past, the shift is away from big M&A to back-end licensing deals, with pharmas using their leverage to make smaller biotechs share the risk and cost of early stage drug development. Still, a negative discussion about the rise of option-based deals in the final panel of the first day suggests many in our own industry are refusing to face up to the new economic realities.

In the words of the immortal Charles Darwin, it’s worth remembering that "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change."

Of course, VCs and early stage biotechs aren’t the only ones who need to adapt. J&J and BP come to mind as well. On that cheery note...we break for a holiday weekend and no more tsk-tsking from your mother for wearing white shoes. It's time to fire up the barbecue, crack open a cold one, and turn on the tunes (The Ramones "I want to be sedated" and Greed Day's "Basket Case" come to mind.) All the while reading another edition of …

Sanofi-Aventis/ Nichi-Iko: Sanofi’s deal team has been on a role, especially when it comes to inking very early stage collaborations (see below) or tie-ups with players in the consumer and generics spaces. (So much for the coming M&A storm, eh?) The French drug maker continues its eastward march, moving from Poland to Japan this week with a joint venture with one of the top Japanese generics’ firms, Nichi-Iko. Sanofi-Aventis owns 51% of the new J/V which is less than creatively named Sanofi-Aventis Nichi-Ikko K.K. (we’re guessing the abbreviation of choice will be SANI not SANK.) One of the J/V’s top initial priorities will be to rake over marketing and distribution rights in Japan for Sanofi’s anti-insomnia medicine Amoban, which generated 2009 sales of roughly €43 million. As our sister publication PharmAsia News has noted many a time, western pharmas are increasingly interested in tapping into the Japanese generics market because of a series of national policies that are encouraging generic drug use. (Japanese cos are interested too; hence Daiichi’s desire in 2008 to take partial ownership of Ranbaxy.) Pfizer, Merck, and Novartis have all made forays into the Japanese generics market, as has Teva. In allying with Nichi-Iko, Sanofi gains a considerable footprint in the island nation. Nichi-Iko owns five distribution centers and supplies drugs to 120,000 medical facilities in Japan. Last month the company reported generic sales grew 13.7%, with net profits up 103.9% for the quarter ending in February.—Ellen Foster Licking

Sanofi-Aventis/Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Another week, another corporate/academic research collaboration surfaces. This week it’s Sanofi-Aventis’ turn to make headlines, announcing a three-year, $4.2 million research collaboration with MIT’s Center for Biomedical Innovation. The collaboration's initial focus will be in the areas of nanotechnology and biologics. Although no funding has been awarded yet, the pharma is most interested in emerging technologies that provide new solutions for patients, such as next-generation nanoparticles for drug delivery, novel sensor technologies for diagnostic purposes, needle-free and wireless drug-delivery tools, and devices that monitor clinically relevant metabolites and biomarkers. As such, it fits Sanofi’s evolving belief that the drug companies of the future will be those that provide not just pharmaceuticals but end-to-end health care solutions in the vein of its recent acquisition of glucose monitoring play AgaMatrix. The MIT partnership will build on Sanofi's existing presence in Cambridge, Mass., which includes a 60-person research center and the company's vaccine subsidiary, Sanofi Pasteur Biologics. With Big Pharma companies looking at ways to reduce R&D spending, low-risk partnerships with academia and startup drug companies, in which drug makers get access to external R&D for a nominal price, are becoming more common. Pfizer recently announced a five-year tie up with Washington University in which university researchers are granted access to Pfizer compounds and data in a reprofiling effort. In the case of Sanofi's alliance with MIT, a joint steering committee will allocate annual grants ranging from $100,000 to $150,000 to academic researchers, with the French pharma holding an option on any completed research to fund further work.—Joseph Haas

Clovis/Avila: Clovis Oncology, which raised an impressive $145 million Series A in 2009, has partnered with three-year old Avila Therapeutics to develop and commercialize Avila's preclinical epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutant-selective inhibitor (EMSI) and a companion diagnostic. Under the terms of the deal, Avila and Clovis will collaborate on the preclinical development of the drug, which is being tested as a potential non-small cell lung cancer therapy. Clovis bears responsibility—and cost—for the drug’s clinical development and commercialization, as well as for the creation of the diagnostic. Total biobucks associated with the deal are $209 million, with Avila receiving an undisclosed upfront fee. For Clovis, the deal, announced May 25, marks the second asset the company has acquired since its initial financing. The company-- led by Pat Mahaffy and a band of cohorts formerly from the oncology play Pharmion--was formed with the aim of in-licensing oncology drug candidates in clinical development and pushing them through to commercialization. In November 2009, Mahaffy’s company bought Clavis Pharma’s Phase II lipid-conjugated formula of Eli Lilly's chemotherapy Gemzar (gemcitabine) in development for pancreatic cancer for $15 million upfront. In both the Avila and Clavis deals, the importance of a companion diagnostic targeting the appropriate patients has been a central part of the deal logic. Whether or not Clovis does the actual dx development is a different question. Earlier this year, Clovis signed a deal with Roche's Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. to develop and commercialize the diagnostic for the gemcitabine compound.—Jessica Merrill

Gentiva/Odyssey Healthcare: IVB doesn’t typically devote much space to healthcare services but the size of the Gentiva/Odyssey tie-up makes it impossible to ignore. Gentiva is a major provider of home health care services, while Odyssey is one of the leaders in hospice care in the U.S. Both companies have strong balance sheets and scale, so as Daily Finance writer Tom Tauli put it "assuming the integration is seamless, the result will be a powerful combination." Gentiva will spend about $1 billion to bring Odyssey’s 20 in-patient facilities and 92 Medicare-certified programs in-house, as well as the ability to provide a seamless transition from in-home care to end-of-life care. The $27-a-share price for Odyssey represents a 40% premium to the company’s closing stock price on Friday May 21, the day before the merger was announced. Hospice care is a relative new industry but one of increasing importance, given the aging demographics in the U.S. Analysts have been debating the merits of combining hospice and home-based care for some time, with proponents emphasizing synergies in shared referral and recruitment sources and marketing staff. Certainly the recent regulatory scrutiny over home health-care billing practices may have encouraged Gentiva to diversify, especially after it divested non-core assets in respiratory and infusion therapy back in February. Still, according to the WSJ, at least one analyst, Arthur Henderson of Jefferies & Co., was "taken aback by the magnitude" of the deal, Gentiva’s first in the hospice space. "We view this deal as an indication of management’s renewed vigor in driving accelerated growth through an aggressive acquisition strategy," Henderson said.--EFL

Image courtesy of flickrer vasta used with permission through a creative commons license.

Ed. Note: Let's Go Flyers!