06.10.2016 • News

Genentech Buys Rights to Hanmi’s Cancer Drug

US biotechnology group Genentech has agreed with Hanmi Pharmaceutical to buy the exclusive global rights to the South Korean company’s experimental cancer drug HM95573. The California-headquartered firm, part of Swiss drugmaker Roche, will make an initial upfront payment of $80 million for the rights – excluding South Korea – to develop and commercialize the pan-RAF inhibitor, which is currently in Phase 1 clinical development.

Hanmi is also eligible to receive milestone payments of up to $830 million as well as tiered double-digit royalties on sales of certain products resulting from the license agreement. The transaction is expected to close during the fourth quarter of 2016, subject to the usual closing and antitrust conditions. Senior vice president and global head of Genentech Partnering, James Sabry, said the company is eager to leverage Hanmi’s scientific insights in developing novel therapies that target the MAPK pathway.

The MAPK pathway has been shown to be important in some cancers and RAF kinases – especially B-RAF and C-RAF – are known to be associated with various tumors. Companies, including Roche, are investigating ways to target MAPK signalling. In addition to oncology, the Seoul-headquartered company’s key R&D target areas are in diabetes and obesity, auto-immune diseases and fixed-dose combination programs.

Interview

The UK Chemical Supply Chain
Trade and Competitiveness

The UK Chemical Supply Chain

The CBA, led by CEO Tim Doggett, is steering the UK chemical supply chain through trade uncertainty, sustainability pressures and logistics challenges, as he explains in this interview with CHEManager.

Article

The State of the US Specialty Chemicals Industry
Reshaping Specialty Chemicals Manufacturing

The State of the US Specialty Chemicals Industry

SOCMA's Jenn Klein examines how specialty chemical manufacturers — the invisible backbone behind pharmaceuticals, electronics, agriculture, and energy — are navigating supply chain shifts, policy uncertainty, and constant change while remaining resilient, disciplined, and focused on execution.

most read