Ottawa Citizen

Pfizer shells out $2.3B for Trillium, Canadian firm developing cancer drug

- FIONA RUTHERFORD

Pfizer Inc., maker of a top-selling COVID vaccine, will buy all the shares of Trillium Therapeuti­cs Inc. it doesn't own, gaining the immune cancer drugmaker for an equity value of US$2.26 billion.

Pfizer will pay US$18.50 a share for Canadian drug developer Trillium, the companies said Monday in a statement. The price represents a 118-per-cent premium to the stock's 60-day weighted average price.

Pfizer invested US$25 million in Trillium in September as part of its Breakthrou­gh Growth Initiative, when Jeff Settleman, senior vice-president of Pfizer's oncology research and developmen­t group, was named to Trillium's scientific advisory board.

Trillium's two lead molecules, TTI-622 and TTI-621, block signalling proteins involved in blood cancers, and are both in human trials across several types of disease. They target CD47, a protein found on some cancer cells that cloaks them from the normal immune response, and sends a signal activating the response.

Early clinical data for both molecules is encouragin­g and they're expected to become another important backbone immunother­apy for multiple types of cancer, especially those of the blood, Chris Boshoff, Pfizer's chief developmen­t officer for oncology, said in the statement.

Blood cancers represent six per cent of all tumour diagnoses across the world, according to the statement. Last year, more than one million people worldwide were diagnosed with a form of blood cancer and more than 700,000 people died from the disease.

The move follows Pfizer's July deal with Arvinas Inc. to develop and commercial­ize ARV-471, a drug for breast cancer that degrades the hormone estrogen. Pfizer agreed to pay Arvinas US$650 million upfront as well as US$1.4 billion in potential milestone payments, along with a US$350-million equity investment in the biotech.

Pfizer's oncology portfolio includes 24 approved drugs that yielded about US$10.9 billion in revenue last year, up 21 per cent operationa­lly from 2019.

During the first half of 2021, global oncology revenues were US$6 billion, up 16 per cent operationa­lly from the period a year earlier, the company said.

 ?? EYEPIX/WENN ?? Ontario-based Trillium has seen encouragin­g clinical data for its immunother­apy targeting cancer, especially those of the blood.
EYEPIX/WENN Ontario-based Trillium has seen encouragin­g clinical data for its immunother­apy targeting cancer, especially those of the blood.

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