The deal, announced by Oxford BioMedica on Thursday, could help put
the veteran biotech firm on a path to sustainable profitability.
The contract is for the supply of lentiviral vectors used to
generate CTL019, a new kind of treatment for hard-to-treat leukemia
that is expected to reach the market this year.
A U.S. advisory panel will discuss the case for approving CTL019 at
a meeting on July 12 and Novartis has already designated the
treatment as a potential blockbuster.
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Oxford BioMedica will received $10 million from Novartis upfront, as
well as payments for various performance incentives and
bioprocessing and development services.
It will also get a royalty on future sales of CTL-019. Jefferies
analysts said this could earn Oxford BioMedica between 65 million
and 75 million pounds ($84-97 million) a year, assuming CTL019 peak
sales of at least $1 billion.
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The agreement also covers the supply of vectors for other
undisclosed Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cell (CART) products.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Keith Weir)
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