Domain Invest

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 9 October 2007

Chomp! Wyeth Snaps Up Haptogen

Posted on 03:20 by Unknown
The names are different but the premise seems the same: a struggling big pharma snaps up a promising biologics player to add bite to its large molecule divsion. Less than two weeks after BMS announced its buy-out of next-generation protein player Adnexus, Wyeth broadcast its decision to buy the Scottish biotech Haptogen.

This is the twelfth acquisition by either a big pharma or big biotech in the biologics space since September 1 2006 according to Windhover's Strategic Transactions Database. Does IN VIVO blog see a trend? Hint: Do fish swim?

It's no secret that pharmas have lately had a tough go getting drugs approved. The FDA has approved just 10 new molecular entities through September, representing a 17% drop year-over-year and matching a 10-year nadir, according to a report today by Jim Kumpel, an analyst with Friedman Billings Ramsey. (Kudos to Pharmalot for its posting.)

Desperate to get access to new therapeutic modalities, cash-rish pharmas have spent the last several years trawling for biologics players. Recall these recent deals: Roche's acquisitions of GlycArt Biotechnology and THP; Merck's take-outs of GlycoFi, Abmaxis, and Sirna; GSK's purchase of Domantis; and AZ's $15.6 billion stunner for MedImmune. (Yeah, we're still talking about that deal. If you haven't read our take, click here and here. FYI, there will be even more in the October IN VIVO.)

It's not hard to see why a company like MedImmune would make a pharma salivate--the company's pipeline was full; and they had soup-to-nuts capabilities--from discovery through marketing--in biologics. But why the interest in Adnexus or Haptogen--companies with interesting platforms but no late stage products?

It's easy: Access. Most companies just launching large molecules programs are shut out of the most desirable targets because licenses to them--at least through "gold standard" antibody providers such as Medarex and Genmab--have already been given away.

“If you want to develop a product to one of those really important targets—say the CD-20 antibody—you’re blacked out,” notes Donald Drakeman, former CEO of Medarex and now with the VC firm Advent Ventures.

Better, it seems, to spend some dough and acquire new platform technologies that provide freedom to operate—for example, GlycoFi’s yeast engineering capabilities or Adnexus’s protein program--than engage in licensing deals that may blow up when a next-generation player gets acquired by a competitor.

The Wyeth/Haptogen deal fits nicely in this paradigm. Wyeth, though comparatively biologics-rich thanks to its acquisition of Genetics Institute about a decade ago and its focus on large molecule Alzheimer's Disease therapies, has had it's own share of pipeline troubles.

According to Cavan Redmond, EVP and general manager of Wyeth's biopharmaceuticals division, the pharma has been on the look-out for "technology driven companies that help us take it [biologics] up a notch, so that we can customize antibodies even more than in the past."

That was certainly the thinking behind the pharma's 2006 deal with Trubion, which included a $40 million up-front payment for access to the biotech's CD-20 therapy for rheumatoid arthritis, Tru-15.

Seems like the same philosophy applies to Haptogen. The Scottish biotech promises it can generate antibodies against targets normally too small to elicit an immune response. In addition, the company has developed novel drug discovery techniques based on the shark immune system. (And you thought it was just a great shark picture. Ha!)

Haptogen's shark platform "has a lot of potential to generate smaller therapuetic proteins that can be taken as oral drugs," Steven Projan, VP and head of biological technologies at Wyeth, told BioWorld Today (subscription required).

Wyeth and Haptogen didn't disclose deal terms, but its doubtful there was big money on the table. Wyeth, after all, is notoriously frugal in the business development department. And, in the biologics space, the pharma tends to pursue one-off opportunities, where it can leverage its own biologics infrastructure to lower the total cost of the deal.

There's no sign that pharma's biologics feeding frenzy will abate anytime soon. Who's next? The IN VIVO Blog's crystal ball is cloudy, so it's hard to say for certain. But companies worthy of keeping an eye on include: Ablynx, which makes camelid antibodies; Biolex, which recently registered for its IPO, and uses the plant Lemna to manufacture its proteins; and Xencor, which produces souped-up antibodies using its proprietary protein engineering platform.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in AstraZeneca, biologics, BMS, mergers and acquisitions, Wyeth | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ventana Accepts $3.4 Billion
    Roche finally nabs its man. Or in this case, its diagnostics company. All it took was an extra $14.50 per share. From the companies' pre...
  • Merck: Embracing Externalization, From the Top Down
    Updated Below . One business magazine greeted the tenure of Dick Clark as Merck's new CEO in 2005 with the instruction to "say hel...
  • While You Were Coming Back
    It would be wrong for us not to mention the Red Sox in this space, the Boston nine having completed their three-game comback victory over th...
  • Unusual Suspects: If Pfizer Decides to Really Rattle the R&D Cages
    Yesterday, we listed a group of people -- we called them the usual suspects -- that we think Pfizer will try to woo if it ends up turning to...
  • Avandia and Rezulin: Parallels that Should Make GSK Nervous
    History doesn’t repeat itself but it does rhyme. That old Mark Twain saying must be making GlaxoSmithKline sweat as Avandia is starting to ...
  • Private Equity Goes Public
    One of the simplest metrics we have to measure interest in a company or industry is just how jammed the rooms are at the JP Morgan conferenc...
  • High Noon at Myogen
    Most VC meetings provide a feel-good story for the portfolio CEOs—usually a variation on the business resurrection theme. The Atlas Venture ...
  • While You Were Watching the Upsets
    This weekend we were in Cardiff for the Rugby World Cup quarterfinal between France and New Zealand, which saw France upsetting the favorite...
  • Deals of the Week: You Can't Always Get What You Want
    It's been a busy--and, for some, disheartening--week in biopharma land. Just three days after researchers disclosed that Vytorin , the h...
  • Sorry, I Still Don’t Get It
    Pfizer launched its first TV campaign for Exubera this past week in an attempt to breathe a little life into the stalled inhaled insulin br...

Categories

  • Abbott
  • activist shareholders
  • ADHD
  • advisory committees
  • alliances
  • Alnylam
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • Amgen
  • Andrew von Eschenbach
  • Andrew Witty
  • Astellas
  • AstraZeneca
  • Avandia
  • Avastin
  • Barack Obama
  • Barr
  • Bayer
  • Big Pharma
  • BIO
  • Biogen Idec
  • biologics
  • biosimilars
  • blogging
  • BMS
  • Boston Scientific
  • brand names
  • business development
  • business models
  • cancer vaccines
  • Carl Icahn
  • CBO
  • CDER
  • Celgene
  • Cephalon
  • China
  • clinical development
  • CMS
  • co-promotes
  • comparative effectiveness
  • conference
  • Congress
  • consumer genomics
  • corporate culture
  • corporate governance
  • corporate venture capital
  • CVS Caremark
  • Cytyc
  • David Kessler
  • deals of the week
  • debt financing
  • Diabetes
  • diagnostics
  • Dick Clark
  • drug approvals
  • drug delivery
  • drug discovery
  • drug eluting stents
  • Drug Pricing
  • drug safety
  • drug samples
  • DTC Advertising
  • e-health
  • Eisai
  • Elan
  • Eli Lilly
  • Emphasys
  • emphysema
  • Endo
  • epo
  • Euro-Biotech Forum
  • Exits
  • Exubera
  • FDA
  • FDA/CMS Summit
  • FDAAA
  • Film and TV
  • financing
  • FOBs
  • Forest Labs
  • Galvus
  • gene therapy
  • Genentech
  • General Electric
  • generics
  • Genzyme
  • Gleevec
  • Google
  • GSK
  • Guidant
  • haircuts
  • Happy Holidays
  • HCV
  • Headhunting
  • Health Care Reform
  • hedge funds
  • Henry Waxman
  • hGH
  • HHS
  • Hillary Clinton
  • Hologic
  • hostile takeovers
  • hypertension
  • ImClone
  • IMS Health
  • In vitro diagnostics
  • In3
  • India
  • insomnia
  • instrumentation
  • insulin
  • Inverness
  • IP
  • IPO
  • IPO pricing
  • Isis Pharmaceuticals
  • Israel
  • IT
  • JAMA
  • Januvia
  • Japan
  • John McCain
  • Johnson and Johnson
  • JP Morgan
  • LaMattina
  • lawsuits
  • layoffs
  • legislation
  • Life-Cycle Management
  • Lipitor
  • Lucentis
  • management succession
  • Mark McClellan
  • marketing
  • Martin Mackay
  • medical devices
  • Medicare
  • Medicare Part D
  • Medimmune
  • Medtech Insight
  • Medtronic
  • Merck
  • Merck-Serono
  • mergers and acquisitions
  • Michael McCaughan
  • Millennium
  • mmm beer
  • MRI
  • multiple sclerosis
  • music
  • nanotechnology
  • NEJM
  • new drug approvals
  • new funds
  • NICE
  • NicOx
  • NIH
  • Nobel Prize
  • Novartis
  • Novo Nordisk
  • Nycomed
  • off-label promotion
  • oncology
  • ophthalmology
  • Orthopedics
  • osteoporosis
  • OTC drugs
  • Out-Partnering
  • Oxycontin
  • pain
  • Part D
  • Patient Advocacy
  • PDUFA
  • personalized medicine
  • Pfizer
  • pharmacy benefits
  • PhRMA
  • politics
  • poll results
  • PR
  • prasugrel
  • Presidential Election
  • Press Release of the Week
  • Primary Care
  • private equity
  • Procter and Gamble
  • PSA
  • Purdue Pharma
  • rare diseases
  • reimbursement
  • research and development productivity
  • research and development strategies
  • reverse mergers
  • rimonabant
  • RiskMAP
  • RNAi
  • Roche
  • Roger Longman
  • royalties
  • sales forces
  • Sanofi-aventis
  • Schering-Plough
  • Science Matters
  • Sepracor
  • shameless self-promotion
  • share buybacks
  • Shire
  • Sirtris
  • Smith and Nephew
  • Solvay
  • SPACs
  • spec pharma
  • spin-outs
  • sports
  • Start-Up
  • statins
  • Steve Nissen
  • Stryker
  • Supreme Court
  • Takeda
  • Teva
  • Thanksgiving
  • The RPM Report
  • UCB
  • vaccines
  • Velcade
  • Ventana
  • venture capital
  • venture debt
  • Venture Round
  • Vertex
  • Vioxx
  • Vytorin
  • Wacky World of Generics
  • While You Were ...
  • Wyeth
  • Zetia
  • Zimmer
  • ZymoGenetics

Blog Archive

  • ►  2008 (76)
    • ►  February (25)
    • ►  January (51)
  • ▼  2007 (329)
    • ►  December (32)
    • ►  November (42)
    • ▼  October (37)
      • Dicerna Crashes RNAi Party
      • Nail in the Coffin for GPC?
      • How Do Some of the Biggest Deals the Year Measure ...
      • Take the Money…or Let it Roll?
      • While You Were Sweeping
      • Deals of the Week! Inaugural Edition
      • The Chinese Gene Therapy Hotspot
      • Amgen Feels the Effects of CMS’ Long Shadow
      • Who Do You Buy?
      • Cracks in Crucible of Evidence-Based Medicine Crea...
      • Schering-Plough's Wake Up Call
      • While You Were Coming Back
      • Exubera: Fun with the Classics
      • Exdoomera: Why Is Sanofi-Aventis Smiling?
      • Biosimilars in Europe: Docs Decide
      • Musical Chairs at Novartis, Except When the Music ...
      • The Biogen Idec Sale: It’s About Revenues – Not Bi...
      • FDA Sides With CMS in EPO Battle; Labeling Change ...
      • Headline Risk: Drug Prices on Capitol Hill
      • Genentech Gets Tough: Who is the Target?
      • While You Were Considering the Alternatives
      • Another Reason to Watch C-SPAN
      • For IPO and M&A Exits, One Hand Washes the Other
      • $80 million upfront? About Average
      • Forsight Scores Big
      • Spec Pharma: Wrong Bandwagon, Guys
      • Shire’s Clean-Out: Dynepo Next?
      • Chomp! Wyeth Snaps Up Haptogen
      • While You Were Watching the Upsets
      • Venture Round: Ascension Raises Second Fund
      • If Hamlet Were a VC
      • How Much Does Pfizer Want to Succeed?
      • On the Beach at St. Tropez
      • Dollens: Reimbursement Uncertainty May Slow Innova...
      • High Noon at Myogen
      • Don't Miss Dollens
      • While You Were Winning the NL East!
    • ►  September (33)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (39)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (43)
    • ►  April (16)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2006 (8)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile