Pharma industry-backed fund invests in two biotech companies to treat
'superbugs'
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[April 04, 2022]
By Manas Mishra
(Reuters) - A $1 billion fund backed by
over 20 drugmakers made its first set of investments on Monday in two
biotechnology startups, nearly two years after it was launched to help
struggling antibiotic makers tackle the threat of antibiotic-resistant
bacteria.
The AMR Action fund invested $20 million in Adaptive Phage Therapeutics
as part of an ongoing series B round and spent an undisclosed amount in
a series C round for Venatorx Pharmaceuticals. The fund plans to invest
over $100 million by the end of the year.
Public health authorities such as the World Health Organization and
industry experts have raised an alarm over the "thin" pipeline of new
treatments to tackle antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which they say is
not enough to combat the so-called superbugs.
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"The space (antibiotic) tends to go
in these cycles of heavy resistance, and need for new products. Then
the new products become generic, and then they're cheap, and the
revenue falls down," said Chris Burns, Chief Executive Officer of
Venatorx.
Adaptive Phage is not working on antibiotics but
instead uses bacteriophages, which are naturally-occurring viruses
that infect and kill bacteria
Venatorx is developing antibiotics to treat certain types of
pneumonia and urinary tract infections. The company said the funding
should help in efforts to seek approval of its treatment
cefepime-taniborbactam later this year, and advance the development
of its other experimental drugs.
Investors in the fund include Eli Lilly and Co, Amgen Inc and Bayer.
(Reporting by Manas Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra
Eluri)
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