Pink Sheet is part of Pharma Intelligence UK Limited

This site is operated by Pharma Intelligence UK Limited, a company registered in England and Wales with company number 13787459 whose registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. The Pharma Intelligence group is owned by Caerus Topco S.à r.l. and all copyright resides with the group.

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use. For high-quality copies or electronic reprints for distribution to colleagues or customers, please call +44 (0) 20 3377 3183

Printed By

UsernamePublicRestriction

R&D IN BRIEF

This article was originally published in Pharmaceutical Approvals Monthly

Executive Summary

Portola marries Factor Xa clot buster off to Merck: Portola Pharmaceuticals licensed development and commercialization rights to its Phase II Factor Xa inhibitor betrixaban to Merck, granting Portola freedom to develop the rest of its pipeline while nurturing hopes for a public offering down the line. Announced July 9, the deal - for which Merck will pay $50 million upfront and another $420 million in milestone payments and double-digit royalties - is the second major collaboration this year for Portola, which sold rights for the anti-thrombotic elinogrel to Novartis for $75 million upfront plus another $500 million in milestones and undisclosed royalties (1"The Pink Sheet" DAILY, Feb. 12, 2009). Betrixaban could be the fourth direct thrombin inhibitor to reach the market, after Johnson & Johnson/Bayer's Xarelto, Boehringer Ingelheim's Pradaxa and Pfizer/Bristol-Myers Squibb's apixaban - though Portola has extolled it as a possible best-in-class anticoagulant option (2Pharmaceutical Approvals Monthly November 2008, p. 17). The deal also gives Merck a foothold in the race to develop an alternative to warfarin and Lovenox; the anti-thombotic field has become an active area for Big Pharmas seeking primary care assets (3Pharmauceutical Approvals Monthly October 2008, p. 3)

You may also be interested in...



AstraZeneca's MedImmune Comes Closer To Motavizumab Approval, And A Tight Grip On RSV Market

AstraZeneca's biologics unit MedImmune is continuing to solidify its domination of the market for products to prevent serious respiratory syncytial virus disease in high-risk infants with a formal reply to FDA's "complete response" letter for its investigational product motavizumab

AstraZeneca's MedImmune Comes Closer To Motavizumab Approval, And A Tight Grip On RSV Market

AstraZeneca's biologics unit MedImmune is continuing to solidify its domination of the market for products to prevent serious respiratory syncytial virus disease in high-risk infants with a formal reply to FDA's "complete response" letter for its investigational product motavizumab

Portola Marries Factor Xa Clot Buster Off To Merck

Deal is "strikingly similar" to a collaboration forged with Novartis for an anti-thrombotic earlier this year.

Topics

Latest Headlines
See All
UsernamePublicRestriction

Register

PS004199

Ask The Analyst

Ask the Analyst is free for subscribers.  Submit your question and one of our analysts will be in touch.

Your question has been successfully sent to the email address below and we will get back as soon as possible. my@email.address.

All fields are required.

Please make sure all fields are completed.

Please make sure you have filled out all fields

Please make sure you have filled out all fields

Please enter a valid e-mail address

Please enter a valid Phone Number

Ask your question to our analysts

Cancel