The New Zealand Herald

Cancer firm wound up as competitio­n intensifie­s

Richlister­s and taxpayers out of pocket as overseas breakthrou­ghs swamp Caldera

- Chris Keall

Taxpayer-backed Caldera Health, which was developing a urine test to detect prostate cancer, is being wound up after a decade-long slog. Some $16 million of shareholde­rs’ funds were spent on research and developmen­t in a 10-year effort to develop a non-invasive, low-cost test, chairman Alastair MacCormick told the Herald.

But although the R&D drive was successful in late-stage trials, companies in the US, Europe and Japan have recently made similar breakthrou­ghs and investors decided it was not financiall­y viable to compete.

Out-of-pocket backers include NBR Rich Listers Christophe­r Reeve, who held a 34 per cent stake, and Sir Stephen Tindall, whose K1W1 fund had an 18 per cent holding.

Two Crown agencies also chipped in: the NZ Venture Investment Fund, through taking a 7 per cent stake, and Callaghan Innovation, which awarded Caldera a three-year Growth Grant, with a possible two-year extension, in 2014.

Neither agency would immediatel­y say how much money it had lost (and nor would MacCormick), but Caldera’s Callaghan grant was part of a $41m round spread across 23 companies.

MacCormick said NZVIF did not put more than $500,000 into Caldera.

NZVIF chief executive Richard Dellabarca refused to put a figure on his agency's investment, citing a confidenti­ality clause but did say it made its first investment early in the startup's lifecycle, in 2010.

"The early-stage innovative high growth part of the capital markets carries a high degree of risk, and unfortunat­ely these outcomes occur," Dellabarca said.

Liquidator Peri Finnigan, of McDonald Vague, who was appointed Monday afternoon, said 75 per cent of investors had voted for a voluntary wind-down.

Finnigan said Caldera had recently completed successful stage three clinical trials. However, investors did not see scope for commercial­isation.

She said some money would be recouped for investors from selling specialise­d laboratory equipment.

But it was not clear that Caldera’s intellectu­al property was saleable.

The liquidator’s initial analysis was that there were “other products on the market of similar or equal standing”.

MacCormick agreed with that assessment. He told the Herald that after a nine-year programme of developmen­t, Caldera had developed a gene or molecular-based urine test that was better than the widely used PSA blood test, which produced a high number of false positives.

However, startups in the US, Europe and Japan had developed molecular-based blood and urine tests recently. Caldera’s performanc­e was better but only marginally.

Finnigan said total debt was still being assessed.

There were no secured creditors. “The major creditors in this liquidatio­n are the employees for current salaries, holiday pay and notice period and the consultant­s. There are also a small number of trade suppliers for laboratory consumable­s or services for clinical studies,” she said. Fifteen staff were on the payroll. Caldera initially developed a tissue-based test, then sought to transition to an affordable, non-invasive urine-based test.

The startup was co-founded by biotechnol­ogist Jim Watson, whose personal battle with prostate cancer let him to develop the firm’s genebased testing. Watson died in 2016.

Watson co-founded the company with Richard Forster, who had also been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer and died in January 2014.

The pair said they had been victims to flaws in the industryst­andard PSA blood, which throws up both false positives and negatives and doesn’t distinguis­h between aggressive cancers and benign strains, or a painful biopsy.

 ??  ?? Jim Watson
Jim Watson

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