Monday, June 29, 2015

Gene therapy - game over!?!

Celladon ($CLDN) is circling the drain, suspending all research tied to its failed gene therapy and again halving its payroll as management searches for a sale and flirts with liquidation.

The San Diego company, which watched its share value evaporate after an April clinical trial failure, is laying off about 50% of its 17-person workforce. Celladon is also halting development of Mydicar, a gene therapy for heart failure that missed its goals in Phase IIb, as well as all of its preclinical programs.

The plan now is to find a merger or sale that can salvage some value, and Celladon has retained Wedbush PacGrow Healthcare to help it find a way forward. If it can't find any takers, the company is prepared to liquidate what assets it has, figuring it can return about $25 million to $30 million in cash to its shareholders.

Celladon was once among the highest profile companies in the gene therapy space, developing a treatment for the common ailment of heart failure in contrast to the rare disease R&D that has largely dominated the field. Mydicar won the FDA's breakthrough-therapy designation last year as the company worked through its Phase IIb study, with management hoping the results might be positive enough to submit to global regulators straightaway.

In the end, Mydicar failed to reduce hospitalizations, improve cardio survival rates or free patients from the need for ventricular-assist devices and heart transplants, an across-the-board failure that decimated the company's market value. Celladon's shares have fallen nearly 90% since the biotech disclosed Mydicar's data, trading at around $1.50.

Earlier this month, CEO Krisztina Zsebo resigned after a decade at Celladon, ceding the reins to former CFO Paul Cleveland as the company began its search for a buyer.

"Our board of directors has unanimously determined that seeking a merger or sale, in lieu of further development of our remaining programs and assets, gives us the best opportunity to maximize shareholder value," Cleveland said in a statement Friday. "We are aggressively pursuing that course."
http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/celladon-pulls-plug-rd-after-crushing-gene-therapy-failure/2015-06-26?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=feedly&utm_campaign=rss

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Bayer: M&A sucks!

  • While it seems that many biopharma shops are scaling back R&D departments in the wake of mergers and consolidation, Bayer is investing about $4.5 billion in R&D this year. In fact, the firm has 14,000 employees dedicated solely to research and development.
  • Bayer's R&D spending represents about 8.5% of its revenues.
  • Development costs for Xarelto (rivoroxaban), a blood thinner, were roughly $2.5 billion.
http://www.biopharmadive.com/news/bayer-beefs-up-rd-investment-to-45-billion-this-year/401079/

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Allergan to buy Kythera Biopharmaceuticals in $2.1 billion deal

Science is sexy!

GlaxoSmithKline is planning to create an independent, nonprofit research institute that will attempt to pioneer new technologies and approaches for decoding how genes are controlled and how they function.
“Dramatic breakthroughs in understanding how the human genome functions are still in their infancy in terms of how they can be applied to drug discovery, but we can see their potential to transform the process,” said Lon Cardon, senior vice president of alternative discovery and development at GlaxoSmithKline.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Just never try again!!!

Briggs Morrison, the executive vice president for R&D at AstraZeneca ($AZN) and a major player in the pharma company's turnaround attempt over the past three years, is leaving the pharma giant and taking the helm of a private pharma company, FierceBiotech has learned.

Staffers were buzzing this morning that Morrison's abrupt departure was left unexplained, as CEO Pascal Soriot spread the word that he would be stepping in to run late-stage R&D in the interim. A spokesperson confirmed the exit this morning, saying that colleagues were notified earlier today. 
 
According to AstraZeneca, Morrison is taking a job as CEO of a "small, privately-held pharmaceutical company." A spokesperson declined to name the company and Morrison did not immediately return a message from FierceBiotech. "It's a great opportunity for him," she added. Soriot will take on Morrison's responsibilities as chief medical officer in charge of global development at AstraZeneca until a successor is named.



http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/astrazeneca-rd-chief-briggs-morrison-makes-unexpected-exit/2015-06-10?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=feedly&utm_campaign=rss

Yeah...

A trio of insider traders banked about $530,000 on tips from within Ardea Biosciences, according to the SEC, buying shares ahead of major news right up until AstraZeneca ($AZN) bought the company for $1.3 billion.
http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/sec-insider-traders-lined-their-pockets-astrazenecas-13b-ardea-deal/2015-06-09?utm_medium=rss&utm_source=feedly&utm_campaign=rss