Sector News

UniQure CEO quits after nine months in the job

September 23, 2016
Life sciences

Daniel Soland has quit as CEO of uniQure nine months after taking the job. Soland said the decision “was solely due to personal family reasons,” but the upshot for uniQure is more disruption at the top of its leadership at a time when it is is struggling to make a case for its pipeline of gene therapies.

UniQure unveiled former ViroPharma COO Soland as its leader in December. Soland arrived with a CV burnished by his role in driving ViroPharma to its $4 billion (€3.6 billion) takeover by Shire. That track record was enough to persuade the uniQure board Soland was the man to step in when Jörn Aldag stepped down, but his reign at the top was short, unsuccessful in some important regards and leaves the company with more turmoil at the top.

“I regret the abrupt nature of this decision but believe that it is in the best interests of uniQure, its employees and shareholders to ensure that the business has the fully committed leadership it requires,” Soland said in a statement. “I have continued confidence in the company’s gene therapy platform, its research and clinical development programs and its leadership in manufacturing. I wish everyone associated with the company tremendous success.”

“Tremendous success” isn’t a phrase that has been used much to describe uniQure over the past 12 months, least of all by its investors. The Dutch gene therapy specialist is down more than 50% on its IPO price. And the fall has been even steeper for those who bought in during the heady month of September 2015.

Since then, uniQure has been through two CEOs, lost its chief business officer and director of regulatory affairs, scrapped plans to seek FDA approval for Glybera and struggled to make the case that its hemophilia B program can compete with Spark Therapeutics’ rival gene therapy.

The task of improving uniQure’s fortunes will fall, at least on an interim basis, on Matthew Kapusta. UniQure hired Kapusta as CFO in January 2015, and is now seemingly set to give him a decent run at the top of the leadership tree.

“At this time, the board has elected not to initiate a search process for a permanent CEO while the company focuses on implementing the corporate strategy being finalized with Matt and the leadership team,” uniQure Chairman Philip Astley-Sparke said.

The decision is perhaps indicative of uniQure’s confidence in Kapusta, who was becoming one of the more visible members of the leadership team even before news of Soland’s resignation broke. When uniQure posted its calendar for September and October last month, Soland was listed as attending one of the five events. Kapusta was down to speak at three of the events, a number that increased to four when he replaced Soland on the roster for the Rodman & Renshaw 18th Annual Global Investment Conference earlier this month.

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