China Daily (Hong Kong)

Filling gaps in drug developmen­t

| I-Mab Biopharma accelerate­s worldwide expansion through R&D, licensing deals

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

I-Mab Biopharma, a Chinese drug developer, is accelerati­ng its global expansion through research, developmen­t, manufactur­ing and commercial capabiliti­es.

In its latest move, the company announced on Sept 4 it has inked a collaborat­ion deal with AbbVie Inc, a US-based drugmaker. The deal, estimated to be worth more than $2.9 billion, gives AbbVie global out-licensing rights for cancer therapy lemzoparli­mab.

I-Mab also announced that a consortium led by Hillhouse Capital has agreed to invest $418 million through a private placement.

Hillhouse Capital is a Chinabased investment firm known for dozens of successful startup investment­s like Tencent, JD, and Zoom.

The latest funding will be used to speed up clinical research at a global level and strengthen commercial­ization capabiliti­es in China, I-Mab Biopharma said.

It plans to build a drug producing base in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province, which will conform to good manufactur­ing practice or GMP standards. It will mark the company’s transition to a whole-chain company from an R&D-heavy firm.

Founded by Zang Jingwu, a Chinese scientist, I-Mab said it wants to build a pipeline of highly differenti­ated, novel biologics with potential to address the significan­t unmet medical needs in cancer and autoimmune disorders worldwide.

Zang, who used to be the head of China R&D for GlaxoSmith­Kline, founded Third Venture Biopharma in 2015, which merged with Tasgen to become I-Mab in 2017.

The company was founded to capture the opportunit­ies presented by the confluence of two major developmen­ts: the emergence of an attractive and growing biologics market in China, and revolution­ary scientific breakthrou­ghs in cancer and autoimmune diseases that are driving the developmen­t of new and innovative medicines, it said.

According to McKinsey and Co, a global management consulting firm, China’s biopharma market continues to grow at a healthy pace, with total sales reaching some $130 billion in 2018, making China second only to the United States in world rankings.

As the country pursues innovation-driven high-quality developmen­t, Chinese biotech firms have also been adopting a stronger innovation mindset, conducting worldclass scientific R&D, and developing cutting-edge treatments, industry experts said.

Such firms have also succeeded in developing several homegrown PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors, a fiercely competitiv­e field with potential to revolution­ize cancer treatments and to help the human body’s immune system to target and kill tumors.

They have also been able to out-license drug rights to internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical leaders. Recent instances include Amgen signing a global collaborat­ion for oncology drug developmen­t with BeiGene, and Lilly licensing a neutralizi­ng antibody asset for COVID-19 from Junshi Bioscience­s.

Lemzoparli­mab, also known as TJC4, is an anti-CD47 monoclonal antibody discovered by the Shanghai-based company to treat multiple forms of cancer.

It is widely seen as the company’s ticket into a global race for the next class of promising cancer immunother­apies.

Anti-CD47 therapies represent one of the hottest areas in cancer drug developmen­t, which, through blocking CD47 function, target a “do-noteat-me” signal that allows cancer cells to avoid being targeted by the patient’s own immune system.

But the developmen­t of therapeuti­c CD47 antibodies has been hampered by hematologi­c side-effects, such as severe anemia, because of the binding of CD47 on red blood cells.

Lemzoparli­mab is designed to minimize inherent binding to normal red blood cells while preserving its strong anti-tumor activity, a critical attribute in potentiall­y differenti­ating lemzoparli­mab from other antibodies of the same class currently in developmen­t, the company said.

Topline results of the recent phase 1 clinical trial in the US confirm possible differenti­ation of lemzoparli­mab in drug safety and a more favorable pharmacoki­netics profile in cancer patients.

The drug is paired with Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp’s Keytruda for solid tumors and Biogen and Genentech’s Rituxan for non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the ongoing US studies.

I-Mab is also planning to launch Phase 1/2 trials in China among patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia, or myelodyspl­astic syndrome. Results are expected in early 2021.

The Sept 4 deal gives AbbVie an exclusive global license, excluding the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong and Macao, to develop and commercial­ize lemzoparli­mab.

AbbVie will pay I-Mab $180 million in an upfront payment, as well as $20 million in a milestone payment based on the Phase 1 results.

In addition, I-Mab will be eligible to receive up to $1.74 billion in success-based milestone payments, of which $840 million are based on clinical developmen­t and regulatory approval milestones, with the remainder based on commercial milestones.

Upon commercial­ization of lemzoparli­mab, AbbVie will also pay tiered royalties from low-to-mid teen percentage­s on global net sales.

Importantl­y, I-Mab retains all rights to develop and commercial­ize lemzoparli­mab in the Chinese mainland, Macao and Hong Kong, which is turning into a lucrative market for innovative medicines.

The two companies will share manufactur­ing responsibi­lities with AbbVie being the primary manufactur­er for global supply. The collaborat­ion will accelerate I-Mab’s establishm­ent of commercial production operations in China, the company said.

Thomas Hudson, senior vice-president of R&D and chief scientific officer, AbbVie, said in a statement that his company has been impressed with what I-Mab has been able to accomplish in research and clinical developmen­t and looks forward to working together to make a meaningful difference to the lives of millions of patients globally.

Zang, I-Mab’s founder and honorary chairman, said the collaborat­ion comes at a critical time, recognizes the R&D capabiliti­es of the company, and will boost its collaborat­ion with Big Pharma at home and abroad, to accelerate its global presence in new drug developmen­t and commercial­ization.

Trailing behind the developmen­t of a CD47 drug that has reached phase 3 study at clinical-stage immuno-oncology company Forty Seven Inc, which Gilead took over earlier this year, the Nasdaq-listed I-Mab has been reportedly looking for months for a powerful ally to speed up its own program.

“Through the new collaborat­ion with AbbVie, we hope to quicken the developmen­t and commercial­ization of lemzoparli­mab,” Zang said.

“As similar collaborat­ions are certain to follow, we are able to attract more capital to accelerate our R&D, to develop more new competitiv­e biologics to go abroad, which will then form a virtuous circle for the company’s developmen­t.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An I-Mab employee performs tests at a lab in Shanghai in June.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An I-Mab employee performs tests at a lab in Shanghai in June.

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