Vertex Buys Spine Drug on the QT As Part of Its Post-Hep C Makeover

Vertex Pharmaceuticals is a pillar of Boston biotech. A pioneer of treatments for hepatitis C and more recently, cystic fibrosis, the Boston-based company today is worth more than $27 billion. It’s also going through a transformation—one that may leave the company with a completely different identity a few years from now.

Most attention on Vertex (NASDAQ: [[ticker:VRTX]]) focuses on cystic fibrosis (CF), and for good reason. The firm developed the first drug to treat underlying genetic abnormalities present in about four percent of all CF patients (just over 3,000 worldwide). For those patients, at least, there is now hope of a normal life instead of a steady buildup of thick mucus in the lungs that can lead to various health problems and often, an early death.

Behind that drug, called ivacaftor (Kalydeco), Vertex has two others that might bring the same transformation to thousands more CF patients.

A couple years ago, Vertex thought it had a second major business, in hepatitis C, to build upon. It disappeared quickly, and now, to help rebuild around its CF franchise, Vertex is betting on a drug that has been brought back from the dead—and that Vertex has kept under wraps since it bought the rights last October.

The drug in question, a treatment to repair spinal cord injury, is now Vertex’s most advanced drug outside of CF. It comes from BioAxone Biosciences, a tiny biotech that Vertex quietly obtained an option to buy late last year. Originally called Cethrin and now VX-210, it’s a roughly 15-year-old drug that was kicked to the curb during the financial crisis and later resuscitated by the neuroscientist who helped discover it.

Vertex first made mention of it in its annual report released last week.

Vertex only paid Cambridge-based BioAxone $10 million up front and could pay $90 million in the future as it moves VX-210 into Phase 2b testing later this year. But there are also triggers to allow Vertex to buy BioAxone outright.

Vertex had almost $1.4 billion in cash on hand at the end of 2014, thanks in large part to ivacaftor, which generated $463 million in sales last year. So the layout for VX-210 is peanuts, a low financial risk on what Vertex spokesman Zach Barber called a “high-risk” yet “potentially transformative” treatment for people with “very few, if any, other treatment options.”

A spinal cord injury drug might seem out of left field; RBC Capital Markets analyst Michael Yee called it an “off-the-radar” deal in a recent research note. But Barber said it fits with development work Vertex has been doing in-house “across multiple neurological diseases.”

Indeed, as noted in its regulatory filings the past several years, Vertex has worked on programs in neurology, autoimmune diseases, and oncology, among other fields. Some of those efforts: a rheumatoid arthritis drug, VX-509, that Barber says the company is no longer actively developing; a flu treatment, VX-787, licensed to Janssen Pharmaceuticals last year; and work in multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, and Huntington’s disease. In its latest earnings release, Vertex revealed two cancer drugs in Phase 1 testing.

But nothing has matched the scale of its hepatitis C program. In the blink of an eye, Vertex went from king of the hill in hep C to an afterthought. The FDA approved its protease inhibitor telaprevir (Incivek) in 2011, and the drug skyrocketed to $951 million in sales in six months, one of the most lucrative drug launches ever. But by 2013, Vertex began waving the white flag as it became clear a new wave of oral treatments, led by Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: [[ticker:GILD]]) and its sofosbuvir (Sovaldi), were the future. Vertex said it would get out of the hep C business entirely in 2014.

Discussing 2014 results on a conference call recently, CEO Jeff Leiden (pictured above) sidestepped questions about specialties and simply called Vertex a “transformational medicines” company. At the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in January, Leiden said he expected “multiple new compounds” in cancer and neurodegenerative disease in trials this year.

There was no mention in either instance of the spinal cord injury treatment.

Several therapies for spinal cord injury were in development a decade ago, from RNA interference-based approaches (Alnylam Pharmaceuticals) to blocking specific proteins with drugs (Biogen Idec, Novartis), to refashioning cancer drugs (Genentech) to cell-based methods (Geron). None have led to a product as of yet.

According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center at the University of Alabama in Birmingham, about 12,500 people in the U.S. suffer from acute spinal cord injuries each year, from things like car or sports accidents, falls, and gunshot wounds.

VX-210 came out of the research of Lisa McKerracher, who worked in the 1990s as a postdoc at McGill University in Montreal with neurologist Albert Aguayo. Aguayo discovered that

Author: Ben Fidler

Ben is former Xconomy Deputy Editor, Biotechnology. He is a seasoned business journalist that comes to Xconomy after a nine-year stint at The Deal, where he covered corporate transactions in industries ranging from biotech to auto parts and gaming. Most recently, Ben was The Deal’s senior healthcare writer, focusing on acquisitions, venture financings, IPOs, partnerships and industry trends in the pharmaceutical, biotech, diagnostics and med tech spaces. Ben wrote features on creative biotech financing models, analyses of middle market and large cap buyouts, spin-offs and restructurings, and enterprise pieces on legal issues such as pay-for-delay agreements and the Affordable Care Act. Before switching to the healthcare beat, Ben was The Deal's senior bankruptcy reporter, covering the restructurings of the Texas Rangers, Phoenix Coyotes, GM, Delphi, Trump Entertainment Resorts and Blockbuster, among others. Ben has a bachelor’s degree in English from Binghamton University.