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Lilly to Acquire Alnara Pharmaceuticals
Indianapolis and Cambridge
Jul 2, 2010
Alnara's Pancreatic Enzyme Replacement Therapy,
Liprotamase, Currently Under FDA Review
Eli Lilly and Company
(NYSE: LLY) and Alnara Pharmaceuticals, Inc. today announced
they have signed a definitive merger agreement whereby Lilly will
acquire Alnara, a privately held biotechnology company developing
protein therapeutics for the treatment of metabolic diseases. Alnara's
lead product in development is liprotamase, a non-porcine pancreatic
enzyme replacement therapy (PERT). Liprotamase is under review by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of exocrine
pancreatic insufficiency (EPI). Causes of EPI include cystic fibrosis,
chronic pancreatitis, pancreatectomy and other conditions.
Patients
with pancreatic insufficiency cannot properly digest and absorb fat,
protein, and carbohydrates -- preventing adequate nutrient absorption.
PERT is a treatment involving the administration of three pancreatic
enzymes. EPI often is associated with cystic fibrosis, a
life-threatening genetic disorder.
Cystic fibrosis affects
approximately 30,000 children and adults in the United States and nearly
100,000 people worldwide. Approximately 90 percent of cystic fibrosis
patients receive pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy to improve
nutritional status and bowel-related symptoms related to pancreatic
insufficiency.
Financial terms of the agreement are not being
disclosed. The transaction is contingent upon clearance under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act and other customary closing
conditions. J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. acted as the exclusive
financial advisor to Alnara Pharmaceuticals and WilmerHale is serving as
legal advisor to Alnara Pharmaceuticals.
"The acquisition of
Alnara provides Lilly with a promising entry into enzyme replacement
therapy -- an area with unmet medical needs as well as opportunities for
novel compounds that give patients additional treatment options," said Bryce
Carmine, executive vice president of Lilly and president of Lilly
BioMedicines. "Alnara has been very successful in the development of
liprotamase -- as indicated by its recent submission to the FDA -- and
we look forward to partnering with Alnara's experts during the
regulatory review process."
Alexey Margolin, Ph.D., chief
executive officer of Alnara, said: "Our agreement with Lilly is an
important development as we move liprotamase through FDA regulatory
review. Lilly's deep expertise in the U.S. pharmaceutical business,
including regulatory affairs and the development of innovative compounds
that address unmet medical needs, created a natural fit and could allow
for opportunities in markets beyond cystic fibrosis. We look forward to
finalizing the transaction and working together on next steps to bring
liprotamase to patients."
If approved, liprotamase will allow
many patients to use significantly fewer pills compared to current
treatment options. Treatments in the PERT class reduce malabsorption and
enhance nutrition in patients with EPI. Because it is not derived from a
porcine source, liprotamase could provide the added benefit for
patients of reduction in the risk of viral exposure. A pediatric
formulation of liprotamase also is in development.
About
Liprotamase & Pancreatic Enzyme Replacement Therapy (PERT)
Liprotamase
is an oral, non-porcine pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy designed
to treat maldigestion, malabsorption and malnutrition as a result of
exocrine pancreatic insufficiency associated with cystic fibrosis,
chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer, pancreatectomy and other
pancreatic diseases. Patients with pancreatic insufficiency cannot
properly digest and absorb fat, protein, and carbohydrates preventing
adequate nutrient absorption. PERT is a treatment involving the
administration of pancreatic enzymes, which in the case of liprotamase
includes protease, amylase and lipase.
Results from an
international, Phase 3 open-label, long-term safety study presented at
the North
American Cystic Fibrosis Conference in October, 2009
demonstrated the safety and nutritional benefits of liprotamase. The
nutritional parameters measured during the study showed nutritional
maintenance relative to the U.S. population, as well as a significantly
reduced pill burden.
About Alnara
Alnara
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is dedicated to developing and commercializing
novel protein therapeutics for the treatment of metabolic diseases. The
company's innovative approach focuses on designing effective protein
therapies that can be orally delivered directly to the gastrointestinal
tract without being absorbed into the bloodstream. Alnara's lead product
is liprotamase, a novel, non-porcine pancreatic enzyme replacement
therapy, which has completed Phase 3 clinical development in
collaboration with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Therapeutics, Inc.
(CFFT) and is currently under review by the FDA. The company is
committed to bringing breakthrough new treatments to patients with unmet
medical needs. Alnara was co-founded in 2008 by Alexey Margolin, Rich
Aldrich and Christoph Westphal. Based in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
Alnara is backed by an experienced management team and top-tier venture
investors, including Third Rock Ventures, Frazier Healthcare, MPM
Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners and Longwood Founders Fund.
About
Eli Lilly and Company
Lilly, a leading innovation-driven
corporation, is developing a growing portfolio of pharmaceutical
products by applying the latest research from its own worldwide
laboratories and from collaborations with eminent scientific
organizations. Headquartered in Indianapolis, Ind., Lilly provides
answers – through medicines and information – for some of the world's
most urgent medical needs.
This press release contains
forward-looking statements about the benefits of a merger between Lilly
and Alnara and the potential of Alnara's product pipeline. It reflects
Lilly's and Alnara's current beliefs, assuming that the transaction is
successfully closed; however, as with any such undertaking, there are
substantial risks and uncertainties in the process of implementing the
transaction and in drug development. There is no guarantee Lilly will
realize the expected benefits of the transaction, or that liprotamase
will be approved by the FDA on the anticipated timeline or at all, that
liprotamase will be commercially successful, or that Alnara's pipeline
will yield commercially successful pharmaceutical products. For further
discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties, please see
Lilly's latest Form 10-Q filed April 2010 and Form 10-K filed February
2010. The companies undertake no duty to update forward-looking
statements.
Source: Eli Lilly and Company
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