Well we can report now that the Big Pharma has made its move, though it's not the move that some reports were salivating after. In fact, it's quite modest in scope compared to most rumors, even if it is a strategic leap for AstraZeneca.
AZ has teamed with Nomura Phase4 Ventures to create a new Swedish biotech, Albireo, around one clinical and an undisclosed number of preclinical GI assets from AZ. David Chiswell, a founder of Cambridge Antibody Technology and a man who knows his way around the European biotech scene, is the firm's executive chairman.
AZ is hanging onto a significant minority interest in the newco, which has raised $27 million out of a planned total $40 million Series A from Nomura, TVM Capital, and Scottish Widows Investment Partnership. AZ retains its GERD franchise (namely the blockbuster Nexium) and reflux R&D.
As we said at the time: AZ is simply too big to manage the internal research it’s got – let alone depend on the notion that it can afford big bets on areas unlikely to generate big advances in medical care. (For an in-depth discussion of GI R&D strategies, see this story in the November IN VIVO).
It isn't the first pharma to spin off its GI assets--Movetis took a handful of Johnson & Johnson projects when it spun out backed by €49 million from Sofinnova et al. back in early 2007. But this is the first such move in any therapeutic area from AZ--a taste of what's to come?
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