Sector News

Alder CEO leaves as CGRP migraine race nears end

March 21, 2018
Life sciences

Alder BioPharmaceuticals has parted company with its CEO. The decision, which Alder described as mutual, leaves the biotech without a permanent leader in the runup to filing for approval of migraine drug eptinezumab.

Neither Alder nor outgoing CEO Randall Schatzman, Ph.D., have provided much detail about the motivations for the split. Schatzman said now is the “right time” to pass control over to “the next generation of leadership” in prepared remarks included in Alder’s release about the change at the top. Alder said the decision for Schatzman to leave step down as president, CEO and director was mutual.

Bothell, Washington-based Alder has put board member Paul Cleveland in charge on an interim basis while it searches for a permanent successor with the support of executive recruitment firm Russell Reynolds Associates.

Schatzman cofounded Alder in 2002 and has led the biotech ever since. In the final years of his time at the company, Schatzman took Alder public and raced against Amgen, Novartis, Eli Lilly and Teva to bring an anti-CGRP migraine drug to market.

With a BLA penciled in for the second half of the year, Alder will finish the race behind at least some of the other runners and riders. Beyond that, Alder faces the prospect of finding a partner or buyer or pitting a fledgling sales team against the well-established commercial machines run by its rivals. Late-phase data suggest Alder may struggle to persuade payers and physicians that its drug offers a clear advantage over the competition.

Those factors have dampened perceptions of Alder’s prospects over the past 30 months, causing the stock to fall 70% from the highs it hit in 2015. Responsibility for engineering a happy ending to the story will now fall on Cleveland and his successor, although Schatzman will remain affiliated to the biotech through an 18-month consulting agreement.

By Nick Paul Taylor

Source: Fierce Biotech

comments closed

Related News

April 20, 2024

CureVac and MD Anderson Cancer Center partner to develop new cancer vaccines

Life sciences

CureVac and the University of Texas’s MD Anderson Cancer Center have announced a co-development and licensing agreement to develop novel messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)-based cancer vaccines. The strategic collaboration will focus on the development of differentiated cancer vaccine candidates in selected haematological and solid tumour indications with high unmet medical needs.

April 20, 2024

FUJIFILM plans $1.2 billion investment in major US manufacturing facility

Life sciences

FUJIFILM Corporation is planning to invest $1.2 billion to expand the planned FUJIFILM Diosynth Biotechnologies manufacturing facility in Holly Springs, North Carolina, US. This news follows the organisation’s announcement of a $2 billion investment in the facility in March 2021. This additional financial boost totals the investment to over $3.2 billion, FUJIFILM confirmed.

April 20, 2024

Sanofi cuts staff in Belgium as early-stage research dwindles

Life sciences

Sanofi’s global restructuring and downsizing is now fully underway, with layoffs stretching to the company’s Belgian offices. Belgian newspaper De Tijd reports that 67 employees have been laid off at a site in Ghent and 32 jobs are on the chopping block at Sanofi’s Belgium HQ in Diegem.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach