Celgene Emerges as Biotech’s Shrewdest, Nimblest Dealmaker

Celgene is best known for taking a notoriously dangerous compound, thalidomide, and turning a derivative into a hugely successful cancer drug. But what fewer people may realize is that it is fast building the biotech industry’s best network of partnerships with innovators.

This feels odd to say, even though Celgene (NASDAQ: [[ticker:CELG]]) has been a big success for a long time, and now has a market valuation of more than $60 billion. Celgene has just never been considered a hothouse of innovation, like Genentech or Genzyme. It doesn’t do much to blow its own horn. If you look at its quarterly reports, they’re boring. Celgene spent $1.8 billion on share buybacks in just the first half of this year—normally a sign of a company that has money to burn, and doesn’t have enough good R&D projects to invest in.

But appearances can be deceiving. While most major biotech and pharma companies have been sitting around in committees, debating what R&D projects to cut and which little companies to partner with, Celgene has been on its toes, stringing together deals with some of the most innovative small biotechs out there. And these strategic deals go way beyond its acquisitions of Pharmion, Abraxis Bioscience, Gloucester Pharmaceuticals, and Avila Therapeutics.

Take a look at some of the biggest biotech IPOs that have surfaced this year. They have Celgene’s fingerprints all over them. Epizyme (NASDAQ: [[ticker:EPZM]]), Agios Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: [[ticker:AGIO]]), and Bluebird Bio (NASDAQ: [[ticker:BLUE]]) are a few of its partners that have gone public this year after they struck deals with the big cancer drugmaker in Summit, NJ.

Most of those Celgene deals, and more, were inked when the smaller company in question had technology still in preclinical testing (see chart below). That’s where the risk is high, but the prices tend to be low for a company like Celgene. Dig deeper, and you’ll see that for these modestly priced deals, Celgene has gotten its hooks into some of the best venture-backed companies in the hottest areas of biomedicine. These young companies are leaders in epigenetic-based drug development, cancer metabolism, antibody drugs, gene therapy, immunotherapy, and regenerative medicine. If even one-fourth or one-fifth of these companies do what they say they are aspiring to do, Celgene will win big.

Company Location Date of deal Scientific niche Size of Upfront Payment
GlobeImmune Louisville, CO May, 2009 Cancer immunotherapy $40m
Agios Pharmaceuticals Cambridge, MA April, 2010 Cancer metabolism $130m
Foundation Medicine Cambridge, MA May, 2011 Cancer diagnostics, patient stratification undisclosed
Acceleron Pharma Cambridge, MA Aug., 2011 Anemia drug development $25m
Quanticel Pharmaceuticals San Francisco Nov., 2011 Identifies biomarkers for drug discovery $45m over three years
Epizyme Cambridge, MA April, 2012 Epigenetics $90m
AnaptysBio San Diego April, 2012 Antibodies for cancer & inflammation undisclosed
Inhibrx San Diego June, 2012 Undisclosed antibody drug candidate undisclosed
VentiRx Pharmaceuticals Seattle Oct., 2012 Immunotherapy $35m
PharmAria San Diego Oct., 2012 Small molecules for cancer, fibrotic disease undisclosed
Sutro Biopharma South San Francisco Dec., 2012 Antibody-drug conjugates, bispecific antibodies undisclosed
Bluebird Bio Cambridge, MA Mar., 2013 Gene Therapy $75m
Presage Biosciences Seattle Mar., 2013 Cancer drug discovery technology $13m
Forma Therapeutics Watertown, MA April, 2013 Small-molecule drug discovery $200m (includes research payments)
Concert Pharmaceuticals Lexington, MA May, 2013 Deuterium-modified drug candidates undisclosed
Morphosys Germany June, 2013 Antibodies for myeloma, leukemia $92m
Tengion Winston-Salem, NC July, 2013 Regenerative medicine for kidney disease $15m equity investment
Acetylon Pharmaceuticals Boston July, 2013 Histone deacetylase inhibitors $100m
Array Biopharma Boulder, CO July, 2013 Inflammation drug discovery $11m
–Company reports, Celgene regulatory filings

 

There are a few reasons why Celgene has been able to string together such an impressive run in business development. It makes billions of dollars off lenalidomide (Revlimid), for multiple myeloma, which makes it easy to write big upfront checks that little cash-starved companies crave. Celgene also has a clinical development team that’s proven it knows how to run late-stage clinical trials that can satisfy the FDA. But that’s nothing special—most every Big Pharma can brag about its prowess in those areas.

More than that, the entrepreneurs and venture investors I’ve spoken to over the past year say it’s about

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.