10.12.2019 • NewsDede WillamsSanofi

Sanofi to Buy Synthorx for $2.5 Billion

Sanofi is boosting once again its immunology portfolio with an agreement to buy...
Sanofi is boosting once again its immunology portfolio with an agreement to buy Dutch biotech Kiadis for €308 million. Kiadis is developing “off-the-shelf” natural killer cell-based medicines for treating life-threatening diseases. The deal is expected to close in H1 2021. (c) Sanofi

French drugmaker Sanofi has signed a definitive agreement to buy Synthorx, a US clinical-stage US biotech focused on cancer and autoimmune disorders, for $68 per share. The cash offer is worth about $2.5 billion.

The California company’s lead immuno-oncology product candidate, THOR-707, is in clinical development in multiple solid tumor types as a single agent and in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

The transaction unanimously approved by both companies’ board, is subject to customary closing conditions, including the tender of at least a majority of the outstanding shares of Synthorx common stock and the expiration or termination of the waiting period under the US Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Act.

Sanofi said the acquisition of the La Jolla-based biotech fits perfectly with its strategy to build a portfolio of high-quality assets and to lead with innovation. “Additionally,” said CEO Paul Hudson, the purchase reflects the drugmaker’s goal to build its oncology franchise with potentially practice-changing medicines and novel combinations.

Synthorx’s lead immuno-oncology product candidate, THOR-707, a variant of interleukin-2 (IL-2), is in clinical development in multiple solid tumor types as a single agent and in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors.

Sanofi see this drug as having potential to become the best-in-class IL-2 therapeutic for this treatment of solid tumors as it demonstrates improved pharmacology and less frequent dosing and therapeutic superiority when compared to other IL-2 compounds.

Adding THOR-707 and Synthorx’s other earlier-stage cytokine programs to the Paris drugmaker’s platform will enhance its position in oncology and in immuno-oncology, Sanofi said.

“By selectively expanding the numbers of effector T-cells and natural killer cells in the body, THOR-707 can be combined with our current oncology medicines and our emerging pipeline of immuno-modulatory agents for treating cancer,” John Reed, global head of research & development at Sanofi commented.

Alone or in combination with other existing company platforms, including the Paris company’s Nanobody technology, Sanofi expects Synthorx’s Genetic Alphabet platform to facilitate development of a wide range of novel biologics, including drug conjugates, protein fusions and multi-specific biologics, with applications beyond oncology and extending to other therapeutic areas.

 

 

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