Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
As Published In: Windhover Information Inc. | windhover.com | Vol. 14 No. 9 | OCTOBER 2009 Venture Eyes Ophthalmology— And Likes What It Sees Ophthalmology has long been the darling of venture investors who seem unlikely to avert their gaze thanks to the therapeutic area’s big markets, medical necessity, and an enlarged list of potential acquirers BY ELLEN FOSTER LICKING ■ As pharma and med-tech players look to diversify, ophthalmology is an attractive market because of high unmet medical need and large market sizes. ■ Venture capitalists are eager to fund new biotechs, especially companies developing treatments for age-related macular degeneration and glaucoma, or drug delivery approaches that reduce the health care burden. ■ Although VCs have invested heavily in the sector, exits are still mostly an event of the future. ■ On the pharma side, venture capitalists have hedged the development risk, showing a preference for funding companies specializing in in-licensing rather than discovery. On October 1, Sanofi-Aventis and the ophthalmology start-up Fovea Pharmaceuticals SA announced a $538 million marriage that unequivocally demonstrates the French pharmaceutical company’s interest in developing treatments for eye diseases. Fovea, which has a mid-stage clinical program for allergic conjunctivitis and earlier ones for macular edema, will become Sanofi ’s eyes in ophthalmology, operating as an independent business unit to build the drug maker’s pipeline via a combination of in-licensing and in-house development. Sanofi is by no means the only large health care company to awaken to the potential of ophthalmology. Lured by the promise of large markets and high unmet medical need, both pharmaceutical and med-tech giants are increasingly interested in developing capabilities in this therapeutic area. Novartis AG has bet heavily on the sector, shelling out billions to purchase a 25% stake in Nestle SA’s Alcon Inc. via a transaction that also allows Nestle to put additional Alcon shares to the Swiss pharma for billions more. Meantime, 1 OCTOBER 2009 | START-UP | www.ElsevierBI.com Bausch & Lomb Inc., a storied player in terms of consumer product offerings, looks to be reinventing itself after its 2008 acquisition of Eyeonics Inc., while GlaxoSmithKline PLC and AstraZeneca PLC have both publicly signaled an interest in the therapeutic area. “There isn’t another sector where all the demographics are working in the right direction,” says James Mazzo, the former CEO and chairman of Advanced Medical Optics (AMO) and currently president of Abbott Medical Optics Inc., Abbott Laboratories Inc.’s global vision care division. Mazzo ought to know. This year Abbott made its own big move into ophthalmology, spending nearly $3.5 billion to buy AMO and privately held Visiogen Inc. to gain more than a foothold in a market that is growing by double digits. Exits like those of Visiogen and Fovea—while still a scarcity— show that innovative ophthalmology assets with compelling proofof-concept data are in high demand. That’s good news for venture capital firms such as SV Life Sciences, Versant Ventures, InterWest Partners, and Domain Associates, all of which have made big bets that ophthalmology would command greater interest from potential acquirers. (See Exhibit 1.) Indeed, the attractive demographics, strong reimbursement prospects for new therapies, and specialist focus make ophthalmology, already a popular sector for venture, even more appealing. An analysis by START-UP shows that private investors have poured nearly $1.8 billion into 58 ophthalmology start-ups since 1999, with the money split nearly 50/50 in terms of device and drug investments. (See Exhibit 2.) “This is probably the only hot sector in VC these days,” admits Mark Brooks, managing director at Scale Venture Partners and an investor in both Oraya Therapeutics Inc., an age-related macular degeneration (AMD) device start-up, and Alimera Sciences Inc., a biotech developing a drug/device combination to treat diabetic macular edema. Although VCs still view ophthalmology as an attractive investment arena, they’re also aware of its potential investment challenges. According to Brooks, “everyone’s trying to take a program further OPHTHALMOLOGY On the pharmaceutical side, for instance, the increasing regulatory and do it with less money” in the hopes of enticing a pharma or and commercial risks of me-too products are shifting drug compamed-tech company into an acquisition. And the ability of Genennies away from their therapeutic standbys—notably cardiovascutech Inc.’s (part of Roche) anti-vascular endothelial growth factor lar medicines, proton pump inhibitors, and antidepressants—to inhibitor (VEGF) ranibizumab (Lucentis) to rapidly displace pegapmore specialist markets. Cancer and large molecule platforms tanib (Macugen) as the therapy of choice for the wet version of remain the hottest areas for big pharma, but even dermatology— AMD, a progressive disease characterized by uncontrolled growth long considered a therapeutic backwater, is commanding interof blood vessels in the eye’s macula, illustrates another important est. Witness Glaxo’s February purchase of the dermatology player point: clinical efficacy is king. “If ophthalmologists find something Stiefel Laboratories Inc. for $2.9 billion. better, their adoption won’t be a ripple moving across the contiOphthalmology is no exception. Like dermatology, ophthalmology nent, but a simultaneous wave,” says Paul Chaney, formerly COO offers a diversity of products ranging from consumer-based over-theof Macugen developer Eyetech Pharmaceuticals Inc. and currently counter treatments to physician-prescribed medicines; in the past, this CEO of the newly created PanOptica Inc. For pharmaceutical-fovariety of product types would almost certainly have been viewed as cused start-ups looking to stay ahead of the curve, that’s meant a a disadvantage. In today’s environment, where companies believe size greater focus on in-licensing molecules, especially compounds that and an industrial focus can only help weather the uncertainties of drug hit de-risked targets originally developed for other indications like development, that’s no longer the case. (See “Why Doesn’t Pharma Get oncology or hypertension. Smaller,” IN VIVO, June 2009 and “Pfizer/Wyeth: Industrializing Pharma,” Anecdotally, most investors think ophthalmology will remain IN VIVO, February 2009.) Moreover, if companies were previously put a desirable place to invest for some time to come, especially if off by the number of disparate—and differently treated—eye diseases recent M&A activity continues. Drug delivery options that obviate warranting attention, they’ve recognized the inherent advantages of the need for patient-unfriendly eye injections and messy topical marketing products to an audience that is both technically savvy and applications continue to command significant attention from VCs. So, too, do novel therapeutics for wet and dry AMD and glaucoma. Drugs for these diseases “are on everyone’s wish Exhibit 1 list,” says Chaney. But as competition in The Industry’s Most Active Ophthalmology Investors those particular eye diseases increases, entrepreneurs will look for areas where VENTURE CAPITAL FIRM PRIVATE OPHTHALMOLOGY INVESTMENTS the reimbursement hurdles are easier, including uveitis and dry eye. Versant Ventures AcuFocus, Eyeonics, ForeSight Vision IV, ForeSight Vision III, ForeSight NewCo II, Glaukos, Intralase, I-Therapeutix, LenSx, NeoVista, NeuroTech Pharmaceutical, Refractec, Transcend Medical, plus two additional companies SV Life Sciences AcuFocus, ESBATech, EyeTech Pharmaceuticals, I-Therapeutix, LenSx, Lux Biosciences, NeoVista, NeuroTech Pharmaceutical, Ophthotech, PanOptica InterWest Partners Glaukos, Inspire Pharmaceuticals, Intralase, LenSx, MacuSight, Ophthonix, Revision Optics Domain Ventures Alimera Sciences, CoDa Therapeutics, Glaukos, Intralase, Optherion, Oraya, Revision Optics Polaris Venture Partners Alimera Sciences, Arsenal Medical, I-Therapeutix Johnson & Johnson Development Corporation iScience, Optherion, Othera Three Arch Partners iScience, Visiogen, Vision Care Ophthalmic Technologies De Novo Ventures iScience, SynergEyes, VitreoRetinal Technologies Alloy Ventures MacuSight, OptiMedica, SynergEyes Essex Woodlands Control Delivery Systems, Neovista, Oraya DAG Ventures I-Therapeutix, Ophthonix, OptiMedica RETHINKING OPHTHALMOLOGY “In the past, one of the knocks [against ophthalmology] had been that there weren’t acquirers,” notes Charles Warden, managing director of Versant Ventures, by far the most active VC in the space, with investments in 15 different eye-focused start-ups. Indeed, mention eye disease and the first names that come to mind aren’t the big device or drug makers but the specialty outfits: Allergan Inc., Alcon, Bausch & Lomb, and the Japanese pharma Santen Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. While these companies certainly proved their willingness to spend over the years—in the past decade, for instance, Alcon has inked more than 20 deals and Allergan nearly a dozen not including its 2002 spin-out of AMO—their smaller market caps have by necessity also led to smaller deal values. If the murmurings bubbling up from business development heads at big pharmaceutical and med-tech firms are any guide, the landscape of potential ophthalmology acquirers is likely to undergo significant changes in the coming years. Source: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions; Company web sites © 2009 Windhover Information Inc., an Elsevier company. | START-UP | OCTOBER 2009 2 OPHTHALMOLOGY made the decision to become a bigger player in ophthalmology easily reached with small numbers of sales reps—there are just 1,000 after Christopher Viehbacher took the reins as the drug company’s general ophthalmologists and another 1,000 retinal specialists in the leader. “Sanofi looked at dozens of companies, including many US, for instance. developing anti-VEGFs like Lucentis,” There’s also less pushback on the payor he says. Now Fovea will become the front because of the high unmet medical need drug maker’s ophthalmic business unit, associated with diseases such as glaucoma, and the team, including Fovea’s scienAMD, and uveitis. “It’s an unmanaged area tific founder, the renowned ophthalif you look at the per member, per month mologist José Sahel, will evaluate all spend,” says Vlad Hogenhuis,MD, SVP and ongoing and future eye-related drug general manager of Merck & Co. Inc.’s Neudevelopment. That means the Fovea roscience and Ophthalmology franchise. personnel could be tapped to oversee But by far the biggest reason driving wouldthe gene-therapy-based ophthalmology be acquirers into the space is the lucrative programs Sanofi in-licensed earlier this profits brought in by anti-vascular endothelial year from Oxford BioMedica PLC. growth factor inhibitors such as Genentech’s –James Mazzo, Meantime, Merck, which develLucentis, which in 2008 pulled in sales totaling Abbott Medical Optics oped timolol (Timoptic), the first $875 million in the US alone. At one time “we modern glaucoma medicine to lower had to educate all the [Big Pharma] players that elevated intraocular pressure, will wet AMD was a multi-billion opportunity,” says continue to look for innovative prodDavid Guyer, MD, the co-founder and former ucts that leverage “this core strength,” CEO of Eyetech and now a partner with SV. according to Hogenhuis. In April, the company inked a deal with “It’s a little easier now because the market sizes are appreciated.” Santen Pharmaceutical, gaining exclusive marketing rights in various areas of the world, including North and South America, WHO’S BUYING for the Japanese pharma’s preservative-free prostaglandin analog Among the big drug makers, Merck, Pfizer, Novartis—and now tafluprost (branded as Taflotan, Tapros, and Saflutan). Merck is also Sanofi—have internal capabilities that make them potential acquirlikely to try and leverage the technology from its RNAi subsidiary, ers. According to Bernard Gilly, Fovea’s president and CEO, Sanofi “There isn’t another sector where all the demographics are working in the right direction.” Exhibit 2 Total Venture Investment in Ophthalmology (1999-2009) Since 1999, VCs have poured nearly $1.8 billion in 58 private ophthalmology companies, inking 89 deals. 16 400 14 350 300 Number of deals (Dx/Device) Number of deals (Rx) Total VC funding raised 10 250 8 200 6 150 4 100 2 50 0 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Year SOURCE: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions 3 OCTOBER 2009 | START-UP | www.ElsevierBI.com 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Dollars ($ millions) Number of Deals 12 OPHTHALMOLOGY Sirna Therapeutics Inc., especially in AMD and glaucoma, but Hogenhuis insists that’s a longer-term objective as the division continues to optimize delivery to the eye and improve both the specificity and half-life of its RNA therapies. Like Merck, Pfizer has in the past been active in ophthalmology, attempting to build off the success of its blockbuster prostaglandin analog latanoprost (Xalatan), which was acquired through its 2002 acquisition of Pharmacia Corp. That same year, the New York-based behemoth inked one of the first big money deals in the AMD space, agreeing to commercialize Eyetech’s Macugen in a transaction worth $100 million up front. The advent of the vastly better therapy Lucentis cut short the commercial lifespan of Macugen and seems to have colored Pfizer’s efforts in the therapeutic space. Unconvinced by the therapeutic potential of NicOx SA’s phase II experimental glaucoma therapy, for instance, Pfizer returned all rights to the drug to the French biotech in early August. Instead, the drug maker –Vlad Hogenhuis, has shifted its focus to smaller, more Merck R&D-centered deals that allow access to innovation for little money, such as a stem-cell related deal with University College London’s Institute of Ophthalmology to develop therapies for wet and dry AMD and a $3 million investment in the Series A of EyeCyte Inc. Novartis, meanwhile, appears to be making bets primarily by leveraging the ophthalmology expertise of specialty player Alcon. In 2008, Novartis plunked down $11 billion for a 25% stake in Alcon, and has rights to purchase additional shares of the unit at a preset price in 2010. In terms of novel therapies, the Swiss pharma, which helped launch QLT Inc.’s photodynamic therapy verteporfin (Visudyne) back in 2000 and licensed ex-US rights three years later to Lucentis, is actively developing a wet AMD antibody targeting Il-1 beta, as well as a rho kinase inhibitor for glaucoma. But if Novartis has bet big on Alcon, it’s hard to know if it has the interest—or the financial wherewithal—to seek out additional eye-related business development deals. A very expensive “put” option could force the pharma to spend another $28 billion to purchase another 52% of Alcon. Thus, having spent so much money on the Alcon stake, it seems unlikely Novartis will seek out additional eye-related business development deals—at least for the near term. AstraZeneca is also tied into Alcon. Never a big ophthalmology player, AZ signed a very interesting deal with Alcon earlier this summer, providing the specialty eye company access to early stage compounds that might—based on preclinical data—have some utility treating various eye diseases. The joint partnership has Alcon doing the basic R&D but if compounds look promising, there is the opportunity for AstraZeneca to claw back certain assets and in-license others on a case-by-case basis. “Ophthalmology is a potentially interesting long term opportunity. We had to decide do we build the capabilities ourselves or look for a partner,” says Kris Matykiewicz, VP of marketing for AZ’s new opportunities group. “This partnership with Alcon is the best option to most quickly bring drugs to market.” Importantly for VCs, Sanofi ’s acquisition of Fovea, and Alcon’s deals with both Novartis and AstraZeneca suggest a definite interest in ophthalmology and perhaps a desire to be a bigger player in the future. They aren’t alone. GSK has also overhauled its R&D priorities, making ophthalmology one of its eight strategic areas of interest, created a dedicated drug performance unit called Ophthiris, and hired as chief medical officer Ellen Strahlman, MD, a trained ophthalmologist whose industry experience has included stints at both Pfizer and Bausch & Lomb. In February, the company announced its own tie-up with UCL: a three-year deal in which the academic group will conduct further research on ophthalmic molecules and reagents of interest to GSK. Ophthalmology “is an unmanaged area if you look at the per member, per month spend.” ABBOTT’S DEALS PRESAGE AN IMPORTANT NEW OPHTHALMOLOGY PLAYER GSK’s announcements amount to toe-dipping in comparison to Abbott, which made an undeniable splash this year with its purchases of AMO and Visiogen. Abbott’s January purchase of AMO gave the diversified MD, health care giant a breadth of offerings, including the Array multifocal lens and a femtosecond laser treatment for presbyopia. (See “Abbott Buys AMO, Gets Double-Digit Growth Engine,” IN VIVO, January 2009.) But with no accommodating intraocular lens technology in-house, the company was missing out on one of the highest growth areas of the vision correction market. Thus, it made perfect sense for Abbott’s new division to scoop up Visiogen, the most advanced company in a crop of developers of presbyopia IOLs that includes laggards Lenstec Inc., Tekia Inc., NuLens Ltd., Calhoun Vision Inc. and PowerVision Inc. (See “Ophthalmology’s Next Frontier,” Medtech Insight, January 2007.) Having raised $70 million in private money and another $8 million in debt through its Series E financing in April, the 5x return garnered by Visiogen’s backers, which include Novartis Venture Fund, Technology Partners, Prospect Venture Partners, and New Leaf Venture Partners, provided exactly the hoped-for outcome. Jeani Delagardelle, managing director at New Leaf Venture Partners and an investor in Visiogen’s first institutional round, says Visiogen had a long list of characteristics VCs look for: it addressed large markets and unmet needs, with novel technology, strong IP, and low reimbursement risk. “There aren’t many investment opportunities that can check all those boxes. In a fairly turbulent market, we were able to get multiple term sheets for the financing earlier in the year,” she says. EXITS FEW AND FAR BETWEEN Indeed, even with recent interest from new acquirers, exits like Visiogen’s or Fovea’s are still far from the norm. An analysis by STARTUP shows that in ophthalmology there have been just 12 device exits and another 9 pharmaceutical deals in the past 10 years. That lack of deal-flow makes it impossible to calculate average VC returns for the therapeutic area as a whole. (See Exhibit 3 for an analysis of major exits, both public and private.) In addition to Visiogen, notable device exits include Allergan’s 2006 acquisition of Groupe Corneal Laboratories for $217 million, and AMO’s purchase of WaveFront Sciences Inc. © 2009 Windhover Information Inc., an Elsevier company. | START-UP | OCTOBER 2009 4 OPHTHALMOLOGY Exhibit 3 Notable Ophthalmic Acquisitions (1999-2009) COMPANY (DATE) ACQUIRER ANALYSIS Fovea (2009) Sanofi-Aventis Sanofi opts into ophthalmology with the $538 million acquisition of Fovea in October 2009. The French pharma pays an undisclosed up-front plus clinical-based earn-outs, providing financial incentives for Fovea’s management team to remain post-acquisition. The biotech, which has three clinical assets (all in-licensed) including a Phase II topical medicine for allergic conjunctivitis, will operate as a stand-alone unit within Sanofi, responsible for the larger company’s ophthalmic drug development. ESBATech (2009) Alcon ESBATech’s decision to refocus its large molecule platform on ophthalmic targets pays off big. Alcon acquires in September for $150 million upfront, plus another $439 million in earn-outs tied to the achievement of R&D milestones. As part of the deal, Alcon gets all technologies and IP related to ophthalmic conditions. ESBATech’s remaining platforms will be spun off into a new company, Delenex Therapeutics, with backing from existing shareholders, including SV Life Sciences, Clarus Ventures, and HBM BioVentures. Visiogen (2009) Abbott Labs Just eight months after paying $2.86bn for Advanced Medical Optics, Abbott continues its buying spree, taking out privately-held intraocular lens maker Visiogen for $400mm in cash. The device start-up’s Synchrony, a 3-D dual-optic accommodating IOL and pre-loaded injector, offers patients a full range of vision because it mimics the eye’s natural ability to change focus; it’s already been launched in Europe and could hit the U.S. markets by 2010. Since its 2001 inception, Visiogen has raised over $80mm in financings, resulting in a nice return for the company’s backers, which include Three Arch Partners, New Leaf Venture Partners, and Novartis Venture Fund. Advanced Medical Optics (2009) Abbott Labs One year after AMO attempts and fails to acquire Bausch & Lomb, Abbott takes out the company in a deal worth $2.86bn. The deal makes Abbott, which plans to run AMO as a stand-alone business unit called Abbott Medical Optics, a central player in the ophthalmic space. AMO, which spun off from Allergan in 2002, is a leader in laser vision correction (Lasik) products, cataract surgical devices, and contact lens care products. Marketed products/ technologies include: ReZoom; Verisyse; Tecnis IOLs; and Visx, IntraLase and Advanced CustomVue Lasik technologies. Eyeonics (2008) Bausch & Lomb Newly private B&L acquires Eyeonics for an undisclosed amount, gaining access to the privately-held company’s IOL Crystalens, the only FDA-approved accommodating IOL that has already captured about 30% of the U.S. presbyopic IOL market. Eyeonics was founded in 1999 as C&C Vision and had 2007 revenues of $34 million. Outside analysts predict Eyeonics staffers will become the cornerstone of B&L’s U.S. surgical business. Alcon (2008) Novartis In a bid to diversify, Novartis buys 25% of Alcon for about $11bn. A put option from Alcon’s owner Nestle can force the Swiss pharma to buy another 52% of the company between early-2010 and mid-2011 for an additional $28 billion. Novartis says Alcon’s products complement its own contact lens and ophthalmic businesses, giving the Big Pharma access to revenues from the sales of prescription products such as Travatan for glaucoma, Vigamox for eye infections, and Pataday and Patanol for allergies, as well as over-the-counter offerings. Alcon also has a robust device business focused on cataract surgeries, vitreoretinal procedures for retinal detachment, macular holes, vitreous hemorrhage, and laser correction. Bausch & Lomb (2007) Warburg Pincus One year after it was forced to take a key contact lens solution off the market because of the potential for dangerous eye infections, Bausch & Lomb was taken private by Warburg Pincus in a deal worth $3.67bn in cash and another $830mm in debt. Founded in 1853, the ophthalmic giant’s biggest businesses are contact lenses and eye care drugs, including ocular vitamins, OTC medicines, and brand and generic prescription products for diseases such as glaucoma and dry eye. In December 2006 B&L acquired Alimera Sciences ‘ consumer eye allergy unit, which recently got FDA approval for the antihistamine Alaway. IntraLase (2007) AMO Advanced Medical Optics acquires IntraLase for $808mm in cash. Founded in 1997, IntraLase specializes in a bladesfree technology used in Lasik surgery. The procedure has been used in over 600,000 surgeries to date and is sold in the US and internationally. IntraLase, which went public through an $87mm IPO in 2004, grossed $94.4mm in revenues in 2005. While the deal solidified AMO’s LASIK offerings, its cost helped set up Abbott’s take-out of AMO two years later. Up until the Abbott take-out, AMO was one of the most aggressive acquirers, purchasing in 2004 VisX and Pfizer’s surgical ophthalmology businesses for $1.26bn and $450mm respectively. Eyetech Pharmaceuticals (2005) OSI Pharmaceuticals OSI makes a big bet to diversify beyond its cancer and diabetes treatments, purchasing Eyetech for nearly $900 million in cash and stock just one year after the ophthalmology company went public, raising $146 million in the process. The deal gives OSI Macugen, the first anti-VEGF therapy for age-related macular degeneration to hit the market. But Macugen’s leadership position lasts only until 2006 when Genentech launches Lucentis, a competing anti-VEGF inhibitor with better efficacy. Macugen’s market share collapses and OSI takes steps to move away from ophthalmology. Ex-Eyetech officials, meanwhile, play a critical role in forming the next wave of ophthalmology start-ups, including PanOptica and Ophthotech. Oculex Pharmaceuticals (2003) Allergan Allergan buys privately-held Oculex (intraocular pharmaceuticals and delivery systems) for about $230mm in cash, two years after the two companies inked a collaboration to discover and develop ophthalmic meds based on the start-up’s drug delivery technology. Central to the deal: Oculex’s lead compound, Posurdex, a biodegradable, sustained-release implant that delivers dexamethasone to the specific site of the disease at the back of the eye and is a potential treatment for macular edema, diabetic retinopathy, and uveitis. Source: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions 5 OCTOBER 2009 | START-UP | www.ElsevierBI.com OPHTHALMOLOGY While pSvida Ltd.’s 2005 take-out of drug delivery play Control Delivery Systems Inc. for $104 million provided a step-up of 2.7, a reasonable exit for Essex Woodlands, Brookside Capital, and other CDS backers, the merger of privately held Sirion Therapeutics Inc. with Sytera Inc. in 2006 represents less an exit than an attempt by the two biotechs’ backers to create critical mass. Meanwhile, Sanofi ’s purchase of Fovea and Alcon’s recent decision to take out large molecule player EsbaTech Inc. may be suggestive of pharmaceutical acquirers’ future leanings. The success of the antibody fragment Lucentis has eye companies, which have tended to focus on repositioning or reformulating small molecules, searching for technologies that allow the creation of anti-VEGF follow-ons as well as other more novel therapies. “Lucentis definitely changed things,” notes Graham Boulnois, a partner at SV that invested in EsbaTech’s 2006 $63 million Series B recapitalization. Tim Haines, a partner with Abingworth Management and a Fovea board member agrees, noting that one reason Fovea was so attractive to Sanofi was that it wasn’t vying to supplant anti-VEGF therapy. “We think that train has left the station,” he says. Exhibit 4 Out-licensing Activity by Eye Disease Partners most interested in age-related macular degeneration when it comes to licensing, but conjunctivitis and dry eye also command attention. (Other category includes alliances that cross multiple eye disease indications.) (Percentage of Total Deal Number) Other 20% Vision Correction AMD 27% 8% Uveitis 3% 3% 3% IOL Anti-Infective 12% 7% 10% 7% Conjunctivitis Glaucoma Dry Eye DME SOURCE: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions Exhibit 5 Total Venture Investment by Specific Ophthalmic Indication (1999-2009) Investments in age-related macular degeneration and vision correction dominate when analyzed as a function of number of deals and dollars raised. Glaucoma, diabetic macular edema, and intraocular lenses are also commanding considerable interest. 700 600 Total Dollars ($millions) 27 500 400 300 16 200 5 100 10 7 4 2 4 Conjunctivitis Diagnostic 4 0 AMD DME Dry Eye Glaucoma Uveitis 5 Drug Delivery Vision Correction Cataract/IOL (5) Undisclosed *Number of venture deals (1999-2009) per indication in parentheses SOURCE: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions © 2009 Windhover Information Inc., an Elsevier company. | START-UP | OCTOBER 2009 6 OPHTHALMOLOGY Eyeing the AMD Market Given the effectiveness of Lucentis—Genentech’s antibody fragment that stops progression of AMD in virtually all patients tested and leads to improved vision 33% of the time—one might think interest in developing new therapeutics for the disease would have dimmed. Not so, says SV Life Sciences partner David Guyer, MD: “Lucentis is an improvement [over existing therapies], but it’s still not a cure,” he says. The potential to improve anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy has driven investment in a number of companies, including Ophthotech and Yale University spin-out Iconic Therapeutics Inc. That’s good news for Cleveland Clinic spin-off AngioQuest Inc., a start-up developing two non-VEGF mediated therapies and a biomarker for AMD that is currently in the process of raising a Series A. Novel treatments for the dry form of AMD, whose pathophysiology remains mysterious but is linked to the formation of fatty, yellow deposits called drusen—are also commanding significant venture money. As SV’s Guyer puts it, “dry is the new wet.” To date, most of the money has gone to fund the development of so-called complement inhibitor molecules, with eight different firms vying to be the first to lock up bragging rights to a viable therapy. In addition to Ophthotech and Jerini Ophthalmics Inc., a division of Jerini AS in the process of being spun out after that company’s 2008 purchase by Shire PLC, other start-ups developing drugs in this pathway include Potentia Pharmaceuticals Inc., Othera Pharmaceuticals Inc., Taligen and Optherion Inc. (See “Biotechs Eye Adult Macular Degeneration,” START-UP, July 2009.) The science of complement—which attempts to forge a link between inflammation and AMD—is moving so fast and the race is now so crowded that some VCs say it’s overheated. Handicapping the various start-ups is also impossible given the paucity of clinical data. “There’s just four years of biology supporting the complement story,” notes Anthony Adamis, MD, an Eyetech co-founder and now CEO and president of Jerini Ophthalmic. “We won’t know for sure what works until we get into the clinic.” Venture investors believe that future AMD therapy will not be limited solely to therapeutic approaches, however. Current treatments such as Lucentis require regular monthly injections, which are not only uncomfortable for patients but are also a drain on physicians, who must allocate large blocks of time to deliver the therapies. “The drug works but the method of treatment is so cumbersome,” notes Mark Brooks, of Scale Venture Partners. Thus, delivery or device approaches that increase the time between injections or obviate their need altogether are gaining support. On the delivery side, two biotechs worth watching are Neurotech Pharmaceutical Inc., whose encapsulated cell technology administers the neuroprotectant ciliary neurotophic factor (CNTF) to the back of the eye via a rice-grainsized biodegradable polymer capsule, and Buckeye Ocular Inc., a pre-Series A drug/device play that uses alternating current to drive drugs administered via a contact lens into the eye. The device plays NeoVista Inc. and Oraya Therapeutics Inc. also hope to become major players in the AMD space if clinical trials of their respective beta radiation and IRay technologies yield positive clinical trial data. (See “NeoVista: Toward A More Sustainable Treatment Paradigm for AMD,” IN VIVO, March 2009.) 7 OCTOBER 2009 | START-UP | www.ElsevierBI.com Fovea, an in-licensing play whose lead product is a Phase II fixed combination of prednisolone and cyclosporine delivered via eye drops, is also developing two earlier-stage compounds, an intravitreal formulation of a plasma kallikrein inhibitor for retinal vein occlusion in-licensed from Dyax Corp. and a bradykinin B1 receptor antagonist for diabetic macular edema obtained from Solvay SA. The deal’s $538 million purchase price affords Fovea’s backers—which aside from Abingworth include The Wellcome Trust, and Credit Agricole Private Equity, among others—a tidy exit. Although the ultimate price tag is tied to earn-outs, Fovea’s Gilly says the drug maker is paying an undisclosed but “significant” chunk up front, with the rest due upon achievement of concrete, clinical milestones that could materialize in as little as three years. The internal rate of return “is very nice” agrees Haines who has invested in both the biotech’s $25 million Series A and $44 million Series B. If Fovea’s acquisition suggests big pharma are eager to tap therapies beyond anti-VEGF, the take-out of EsbaTech shows there’s also “a much sharper focus on the utility of [large molecule] technologies,” in ophthalmology, says SV’s Boulnois. Indeed, EsbaTech, which was one of the earliest next-generation antibody companies to emerge, struggled to gain traction until in 2005 it refocused its single chain antibody platform around the local delivery of its anti-TNF antibody fragment to treat uveitis. According to Boulnois, Alcon had been following EsbaTech’s progress for some time, but was unwilling to pull the trigger until the biotech showed in Phase I clinical trials that it could safely and adequately deliver the anti-inflammatory via eye drops. Talks then progressed quickly, resulting in a deal worth $150 million up front, a 2x return for Series B backers SV, Clarus Ventures, and HBM Bioventures. Like Fovea, EsbaTech will operate as an independent subsidiary of Alcon and become its large molecule center. Predefi ned R&D milestones worth up to an additional $439 million may sweeten the VCs’ return significantly, to as much as 9 times the initial investment. (Even better, the Alcon acquisition is limited solely to EsbaTech’s ophthalmology intellectual property; the biotech’s investors have retained the non-eye related IP and are in the process of spinning out a new entity, Delenex Therapeutics AG, to develop the remaining rheumatology and respiratory pipeline candidates.) The potential for a nearly 10x return and ophthalmology’s newfound visibility should have VCs thinking hard about the merits of spinning OPHTHALMOLOGY drew interest; among the four deals inked in the period, two had potential deal values in excess of $50 million: Alimera’s partnership with Control Delivery Systems to in-license Iluvien (formerly known as Medidur), an injectable implant that delivers fluocinolone acetonide to the back of the eye; and Santen Pharmaceuticals’ decision to pay $50 million up front for Asian rights to MacuSight Inc.’s specially formulated version of rapamycin, known as sirolimus. Because 12 deals involved products that spanned ophthalmic indications, these partnerships were classified as “Other” in START-UP’s analysis. (See Exhibit 4.) Not too surprisingly, the trends illustrated in Exhibit 4 are closely mirrored by various venture fi rms’ funding commitments—and again the emphasis is on treatments for diseases that blind. (See “The Eyes Still Have It: Finding Cures For Diseases that Blind Remains Top Focus For Investors, Entrepreneurs,” START-UP, September 2007.) From 1999 to present day, VCs have invested in 58 privately held ophthalmology companies at various stages of development. During this time period, 18 biotechs pulled in more than $700 million—roughly half of all the venture money invested in eye diseases—to develop treatments for AMD (See Exhibits 5 and 6, and the sidebar, “Eyeing the AMD Market.”) Beyond AMD, private backers spent nearly $400 million to finance multiple players in the IOL, cataract, and vision correction markets. Glaucoma also remains an area of avid interest: nine off—or at least partnering—assets with potential utility in eye diseases. Two companies with potential AMD therapies—Catalyst Biosciences Inc. and Taligen Therapeutics Inc.—could potentially carve out their ophthalmology offerings while they continue to develop their respective hemophilia and rheumatoid arthritis therapies, for instance. Similarly, Resolvyx Pharmaceuticals Inc., which pulled in $29 million in financing in 2008 from a venture syndicate, is attempting to build a pipeline of novel candidate molecules called resolvins to treat a variety of inflammatory diseases. In August, the company announced positive Phase II data in dry eye for its topical eye drop resolvin, Rx-10045. With opportunities in its pipeline to apply resolvins for multiple diseases, Resolvyx may consider partnering the ophthalmology-related assets. “It’s an intriguing option,” says Jamie Nichols, PhD, Resolvyx’s COO and head of corporate development. More than likely the company will wait and see what comes of the recent $10 million licensing/option agreement inked between next-generation biologics developer Pieris AG and Allergan. Beyond the modest up-front, financial details of the deal, announced one day after Alcon and EsbaTech revealed their tieup, were scarce, but it is known that Allergan is picking up the discovery and development tab for the ophthalmology molecules. Moreover, it’s certainly good news for Pieris—the Allergan deal is the biotech’s first major collaboration and could provide the platform some much needed validity. If private ophthalmology exits don’t provide many benchmarks for future deals, private out-licensings like Pieris’ deal with Allergan may be more helpful. Using Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions database, START-UP analyzed alliances inked since 1999 by privately held device or drug ophthalmology companies and identified 60 pertinent deals totaling more than $985 million in commitments. These partnerships were also parsed according to therapeutic use. In terms of deal numbers, AMD assets or related procedures commanded the most attention, with 16 companies inking partnerships worth north of $660 million. In addition to Pfizer’s licensing of Macugen, other notable AMD deals include a 2008 partnership that gave Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. Japanese rights to Acucela Inc.’s novel visual modulators for the dry version of AMD. In-licensors have also signed seven partnerships each for either vision correction and IOL technologies or conjunctivitis treatments. Therapies for diabetic macular edema also Exhibit 6 Analysis of Ophthalmology Venture Investment By Series Raise VCs put slightly more money to work in Series C stage companies than A or B, but in terms of deal number, Series A companies garnered the most interest. 500 Ave = $21.21 Ave = $25.43 450 Ave = $15.53 400 350 Dollars ($ Millions) WHERE THE VENTURE MONEY IS FLOWING (11) (8) Ave = $25.13 (12) 300 (12) 250 (18) (10) 200 (8) 150 100 50 (2) 0 A B C D-F Series Raise Total VC Dollars (Device/Dx) Total VC Dollars (Pharma) NOTE: Number of companies indicated in parentheses SOURCE: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions © 2009 Windhover Information Inc., an Elsevier company. | START-UP | OCTOBER 2009 8 OPHTHALMOLOGY Exhibit 7 Discovery or In-licensing? In-licensing continues to be the preferred approach to building ophthalmology companies when analyzed by both number of new company starts and capital raised. Number of New Ophthalmology Starts Discovery In-licensed Compounds (10) (18) Percentage of VC Funding To In-licensing or Discovery Ophthalmology Companies (Pharma Only) Discovery ($190.5 million) In-licensed Compounds ($778 million) SOURCE: Elsevier’s Strategic Transactions glaucoma players pulled in over $150 million in venture money in 10 different deals during the past decade. Inotek Pharmaceuticals Corp. and Aerie Pharmaceuticals Inc. are among the privately held companies vying to develop a drug that can supplant soon-to-be-generic Xalatan. The race is also on to develop a device approach to treat the disease, with VCs pouring money into companies such as Glaukos Corp., Transcend Medical Inc., and iScience Interventional, which since 2008 have raised a $35 million Series D, a $35 million Series B, and a $20.5 million Series F, respectively. IN-LICENSING: THE PREFERRED MODEL FOR COMPANY CREATION? One reason VCs have been enamored with ophthalmology is the opportunity it provides to lessen the risk—and development costs—of a company’s creation via in-licensing. As researchers learn more about the pathophysiology of specific eye diseases, there have been numerous opportunities to repurpose drugs that have already been vetted in preclinical or clinical studies for use in the eye. Indeed, anti-VEGF inhibitors, originally discovered as a way to starve tumors of their blood supply, are an excellent example of this knowledge transference. (See “Post-Macugen, Still In-licensing to Uncover Value in Ophthalmology,” START-UP, July 2006.) An analysis by START-UP shows that for the past 10 years in-licensing was the prevailing strategy du jour for ophthalmology companies developing drug-based solutions, resulting in the creation of Fovea, Lux Biosciences Inc., Ophthotech Corp., PanOptica, and Sirion Holdings Inc. (See Exhibit 7.) But this approach only works if there are quality assets for the taking. In the past this model may have worked well in ophthalmology because of the industry’s historical lack of interest in developing treatments for eye diseases. Given big drug makers’ purported interest in ophthalmology, pulling de-risked assets out 9 OCTOBER 2009 | START-UP | www.ElsevierBI.com of their laboratories may become harder and harder. Both Sanofi and AstraZeneca’s molecules, for instance, are presumably off the table, given their recent respective deals with Fovea and Alcon. As a result, the pendulum may swing back to platform-like approaches à la EsbaTech or big discovery bets, where the risks are greater, but so too are the rewards. Indeed, viewed through this lens, ophthalmology may be seen as a microcosm of more general VC investment practice, where there is growing realization that pharmaceutical companies won’t purchase incremental advances because of potential pushback from payors. [A#2009900201] Reporting contributed by Christopher Morrison, Melanie Senior and Mary Stuart. E-MAIL THE AUTHOR AT: [email protected] RELATED READING Biotechs Eye Adult Macular Degeneration, START-UP, July 2009 [A#2009900152] Why Doesn’t Pharma Get Smaller, IN VIVO, June 2009 [A#2009800109] NeoVista: Toward A More Sustainable Treatment Paradigm for AMD, IN VIVO, March 2009 [A#2009800052] Pfizer/Wyeth: Industrializing Pharma, IN VIVO, February 2009 [A#2009800031] Abbott Buys AMO, Gets Double-Digit Growth Engine, IN VIVO, January 2009 [A#2009800006] The Eyes Still Have It: Finding Cures For Diseases that Blind Remains Top Focus For Investors, Entrepreneurs, START-UP, September 2007 [A#2007900162] Ophthalmology’s Next Frontier, Medtech Insight, January 2007 [A#2007400003] Post-Macugen, Still In-licensing to Uncover Value in Ophthalmology, START-UP, July 2006 [A#2006900143] ACCESS THESE ARTICLES AT OUR ONLINE STORE: www.windhover.com/article