Sector News

Takeda sells Shire’s Xiidra, transfers 400 staffers to Novartis in $3.4B deal

May 13, 2019
Life sciences

Takeda is looking to lighten the huge debt burden from the Shire buyout. Novartis wants to beef up its eye medicine portfolio after the Alcon spinoff. Now, the two companies have found a deal where their needs align.

As previously rumored, Takeda is selling Shire’s dry-eye drug Xiidra. To take it in, Novartis is shelling out $3.4 billion upfront and commits potential milestone payments of up to $1.9 billion, and gets a therapy that “fits strategically” with its ophthalmic pharmaceutical portfolio, the Swiss drugmaker said Thursday.

The pair expect the deal to close in the second half of this year. Once that happens, nearly 400 Takeda employees associated with Xiidra and based mainly in the U.S. and Canada will come over to Novartis.

Xiidra, which competes against Allergan’s Restasis, generated sales of about $400 million last year and is “well positioned for blockbuster potential,” Novartis said. In 2018, Novartis’ entire ophthalmology medicine franchise, led by Roche-shared blockbuster wet age-related macular degeneration therapy Lucentis, returned $4.56 billion, down 1% over the previous year mainly due to generic erosions to its intraocular hypertension drug Travatan and pink eye therapy Pataday.

“Xiidra, with its unique dual benefits, is an example of the type of innovative advances we invest in for the benefit of patients,” Novartis’ pharma chief Paul Hudson said in a statement. “We look forward to leveraging our well-established commercial infrastructure to bring this medicine to more patients.”

Novartis has its own dry eye therapy in development: ECF843, a recombinant form of human lubricin in-licensed from Lubris in 2017, is in phase 2 with a planned first regulatory submission in 2022. Through a deal in late 2016, Novartis took in Encore Vision and its UNR844, a potentially first-in-class topical treatment for presbyopia. The Swiss drugmaker is counting on the Xiidra team’s commercial experience to help with those front-of-the-eye pipeline products.

For Takeda, the Xiidra deal marks the first selloff since the $62 billion Shire takeover. The Japanese pharma is hoping to divest around $10 billion worth of products to help cut down debt incurred with the acquisition. Other rumored or confirmed castoffs include its European over-the-counter business, its entire Latin American unit, Shire’s hypoparathyroidism drug Natpara, and a Shire inflammatory bowel disease candidate.

Separately, Takeda also said it will sell TachoSil surgical patch to Johnson & Johnson’s Ethicon for about $400 million. For the fiscal year ended last March, Takeda recorded $155 million sales for TachoSil. Together with the product, about 80 employees will join J&J. But Takeda will keep a manufacturing facility in Linz, Austria, that makes the TachoSil and will continue to supply it for J&J under a long-term agreement, Takeda said on Wednesday.

“These initial divestitures represent important steps in advancing the growth strategy Takeda outlined following our transformational acquisition of Shire earlier this year,” Takeda CEO Christophe Weber said in a statement. The company is sharpening its focus on the core areas of gastroenterology, rare diseases, plasma-derived therapies, oncology and neuroscience.

By Angus Liu

Source: Fierce Pharma

comments closed

Related News

May 4, 2024

Novartis acquires Mariana in $1.75bn deal to strengthen radioligand portfolio

Life sciences

Novartis will acquire Mariana’s lead candidate MC-339, a radioligand therapy (RLT) designed to target small-cell lung cancer. Last year, Mariana had raised $175m in a Series B round from several funds and pharma giant Eli Lilly.

May 4, 2024

Novo Nordisk aims for market domination, boasts $1.5bn obesity sales in Q1

Life sciences

The company’s aspiration to expand the use of its obesity products to cardiovascular indications has been successful. In March, its blockbuster drug Wegovy was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for reducing the risk of cardiovascular diseases in obese or overweight adults.

May 4, 2024

Ono Pharmaceutical acquires cancer-focused biopharma Deciphera for $2.4bn

Life sciences

Massachusetts-based Deciphera brings to the table an extensive kinase inhibitor pipeline, kinase drug discovery expertise, and a strong commercial and sales platform in the US and European markets that is meant to advance Ono’s capabilities and presence in the oncology space.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach