Sloan-Kettering Spinoff Adjuvance Gains Traction For Vaccine Tech

previously worked in Sloan-Kettering’s molecular pharmacology and chemistry department. “QS-21 was the optimum adjuvant.” Agenus supplied QS-21 for some of Sloan-Kettering’s experimental vaccines, but the two entities couldn’t reach an agreement for moving forward on one of Livingston’s vaccines, Gardner says. So a group of scientists at the hospital synthesized QS-21 and used it in a clinical trial of a melanoma vaccine.

Gardner got involved in 2007, and along with Livingston and two other Sloan-Kettering scientists, decided to form a company to commercialize synthetic QS-21. They licensed the intellectual property from the hospital, hired a contract-research organization to manufacture the synthetic molecule, and began reaching out to Big Pharma companies that they knew were testing vaccines.

It’s been a long haul—one that Gardner and his co-founders have bootstrapped out of their own pockets—but Gardner says Adjuvance Technologies is now within a month of signing its first deal to supply synthetic QS-21. His goal is to win enough such contracts for the company to be able to sustain itself on fees and royalties from drug companies, rather than having to raise money from VCs. The company is also pursuing grants from the Department of Defense and the government’s Small Business Innovation Research program, Gardner says.

Adjuvance Technologies’ version of QS-21 is currently included an experimental melanoma vaccine being tested at Sloan-Kettering. In addition to making synthetic QS-21, the company is working on developing entirely new vaccine adjuvants that they hope will prove to boost the power of vaccines even further. Gardner, who operates the startup as a virtual company, says the adjuvants are designed for both purity and stability, so even if the vaccines are left sitting on shelves in a non-climate-controlled environments they won’t spoil.

When Agenus’ stock skyrocketed on the malaria news, Gardner watched with interest as Wall Street began to debate the true economic value of providing a vaccine component. TheStreet.com, for example, surmised that Glaxo would sell the vaccine for just $10 a dose, and that Agenus would get a single-digit royalty amounting to about 15 cents per dose, or a “mosquito-sized bite,” for QS-21. Gardner thinks those who are focusing on the bottom line are missing the point. “The World Health Organization is probably going to pay very little money for this product,” he says. “But the doubters of Agenus on the investor side may need to refocus their negativity and understand that this is a launching point for QS-21. Once you’ve got that approved vaccine adjuvant, your world opens up in many more ways.”

As far as Gardner is concerned, if the Glaxo malaria vaccine is approved, it will provide opportunities for every company that’s developing vaccine adjuvants, including his. “Best of luck to Agenus,” he says. “But I can guarantee you I’m going to be nipping at their heels. I have skin in the game. That’s how much I believe in this technology.”

Author: Arlene Weintraub

Arlene is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences and technology. She was previously a senior health writer based out of the New York City headquarters of BusinessWeek, where she wrote hundreds of articles that explored both the science and business of health. Her freelance pieces have been published in USA Today, US News & World Report, Technology Review, and other media outlets. Arlene has won awards from the New York Press Club, the Association of Health Care Journalists, the Foundation for Biomedical Research, and the American Society of Business Publication Editors. Her book about the anti-aging industry, Selling the Fountain of Youth, was published by Basic Books in September 2010.