From here.
Amgen
has linked up with Bind Biosciences to develop a kinase inhibitor
nanomedicine for treating a range of solid tumours.
The
deal gives the US biotech major access to the technology at Bind,
which has developed "a new class of highly selective targeted
and programmable therapeutics", which it calls Accurins. The
partners are looking to develop a novel Accurin, "applying for
the first time tissue targeting to molecularly targeted drugs".
Cashwise,
BIND could receive upfront and development fees of $46.5 million, and
up to an additional $134 million in regulatory and sales milestone
payments for the first therapeutic indication. The
Massachusetts-based company is also eligible for tiered royalties.
Bind
chief executive Scott Minick said that Amgen "has recognised the
unique potential" of his firm's nanoengineering platform "to
create programmable oncology therapeutics that combine molecular and
tissue targeting for unsurpassed selectivity and activity". The
company's lead product candidate, BIND-014, is an Accurin that
contains the chemotherapy docetaxel.
I like this new
medicinal products! And the article has very juicy key words: highly
selective targeted and programmable therapeutics, molecular and
tissue targeting for unsurpassed selectivity and activity, and of
course (!) nanomedicine! With this stuff the success is guaranteed!
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