AstraZeneca boosts heart, kidney business with $1.8 billion CinCor deal
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[January 09, 2023]
By Natalie Grover
(Reuters) -AstraZeneca said on Monday it had struck a deal to buy
U.S.-based drug developer CinCor Pharma Inc for up to $1.8 billion to
increase its stock of heart and kidney drugs.
Core to the deal is CinCor's experimental therapy baxdrostat, which is
in development to treat conditions including high blood pressure and
chronic kidney disease.
AstraZeneca aims to combine baxdrostat with its own Farxiga, a diabetes
drug whose sales ballooned after it was also shown to benefit patients
with heart failure and kidney disease.
Farxiga, whose sales jumped by almost 50% during the first nine months
of 2022 to reach $3.2 billion, belongs to a highly competitive class of
drugs that includes rivals such as Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly's
Jardiance.
AstraZeneca gets about a third of its revenue from cancer drugs, but its
heart, kidney and diabetes medicines are its second most lucrative
business by sales, generating roughly $6.9 billion of the drugmaker's
total revenue of more than $33 billion in the first three quarters of
2022.
Farxiga and the oncology drugs Lynparza and Calquence could face generic
competition as early as 2024, BMO Capital Market analysts said in a note
last week, citing their own assumptions and company filings.
In theory, a combination of baxdrostat with Farxiga could enable
AstraZeneca to prolong its Farxiga franchise, Mene Pangalos, executive
vice president of bioPharmaceuticals R&D at AstraZeneca, said.
DEAL AT NEARLY 121% PREMIUM
The Anglo-Swedish drugmaker on Monday agreed to pay $26 per CinCor share
in cash, or $1.3 billion in total, a premium of nearly 121% to the
U.S.-based company's closing price on Friday.
The offer also includes a non-tradable contingent value right of $10 per
share in cash payable upon a specified regulatory baxdrostat submission.
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The logo for AstraZeneca is seen outside
its North America headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., March
22, 2021. REUTERS/Rachel Wisniewski
CinCor's shares closed at $11.78 on
Friday, well below its initial public offering price of $16 per
share in January 2022.
"Obviously, there's been a devaluation of biotech
companies over the past year," said Pangalos. "I think we're very
happy with what we've managed to achieve here in terms of the cost."
The value of the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index fell around 20% by
mid-December from its peak in August 2021, giving large drugmakers
impetus to seek deals to replenish their pipelines as their big
sellers approach the end of their patent life.
CinCor's baxdrostat has a mixed track record in treating
hypertension.
Although it succeeded in a phase II treatment-resistent hypertension
trial, the drug failed to outperform a placebo in another mid-stage
study involving patients with uncontrolled high blood pressure.
In mid-session trading on Monday, AstraZeneca's stock slipped about
1%.
Before joining CinCor, CEO Marc de Garidel led AstraZeneca- spinoff
Corvidia Therapeutics, which Novo Nordisk took over in 2020 for $2.1
billion.
Garidel is also chairman (and former CEO) of French drugmaker Ipsen,
which separately on Monday agreed to buy U.S-based drugmaker Albireo
for just under $1 billion to enrich its rare disease pipeline.
(Additional reporting by Radhika Anilkumar in Bengaluru and Ludwig
Burger in Frankfurt; editing by Susan Fenton, Jason Neely and
Barbara Lewis)
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