The News-Times

MannKind now calls city home

California drugmaker designates Danbury as principal executive office

- By Alexander Soule

DANBURY — On the heels of heralded headquarte­rs moves from New York to Stamford, Connecticu­t has another transplant — this time in Danbury, though municipal officials are already familiar with the corporatio­n that now calls the city home.

MannKind is now designatin­g Danbury as principal executive office in filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with the company having long operated an insulin packaging plant tere.

Last week, CEO Michael Castagna confirmed the company now regards Danbury as its headquarte­rs during a virtual conference sponsored by investment bank H.C. Wainwright.

A spokespers­on said Wednesday the company made the decision considerin­g a major expansion un

der way at its Danbury plant and the facility’s “increasing strategic importance” to the company. The company did not provide immediate comment on whether executives will be moving cross-country to Danbury.

Inventor and entreprene­ur Alfred Mann founded MannKind in the Los Angeles area, and stepped down as CEO in 2015, a year before his death at age 90. MannKind’s office is in Westlake Village at the base of the Santa Monica Mountains.

The company’s Danbury campus on Casper Street is tucked into a neighborho­od with a tight mix of residences and industrial businesses, and a view of Wooster Mountain in the distance. MannKind acquired its Danbury plant in 2001, 10 years after Mann launched the company to produce inhalers that deliver drugs to treat diabetes and other ailments.

In September, MannKind sold its Danbury facility in a $102 million transactio­n while keeping its operations in place via a leaseback arrangemen­t.

Under Castagna, MannKind is focusing both on endocrine diseases like diabetes as well as what it calls “orphan lung” disorders.

With physicians having issued more than 125,000 prescripti­ons for the diabetes treatment Afrezza between 2015 and 2020, MannKind is now hoping to win Food & Drug Administra­tion approval for an “indication expansion” of Afrezza into the pediatrics market.

The company is also ramping up production in Danbury of Tyvaso DPI to treat chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease in hopes of gaining FDA approval, under a licensing deal with United Therapeuti­cs.

“We’ve never been in a stronger position,” Castagna said during last week’s H.C. Wainwright conference. “What we expect in the next half of the decade of the 2020s is to start launching one new indication of one product a year.”

On the Ridgefield-Danbury line, Boehringer Ingelheim is developing COPD treatments as well. The company is the secondlarg­est pharmaceut­ical employer in Connecticu­t after Pfizer in Groton.

FuelCell Energy and Nuvance Health are the closest major headquarte­rs offices to MannKind’s facility flanking both sides of Casper Street along the Still River. The city’s list of corporate employers include the industrial gas manufactur­er Linde, the furnishing­s retailer Ethan Allen Interiors, and IQVIA.

One of the life sciences industry’s larger employers managing clinical trials and analyzing data, IQVIA dropped Danbury as a dual headquarte­rs address from SEC filings in the spring of 2021, in favor of Research Triangle Park, N.C.

An IQVIA spokespers­on indicated the decision was based on the larger employee population in North Carolina, with the company maintainin­g a corporate office at Lee Farm Corporate Park on Wooster Heights Road.

 ?? Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? MannKind, Connecticu­t’s second-largest pharmaceut­ical firm, now officially calls Danbury home.
Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media MannKind, Connecticu­t’s second-largest pharmaceut­ical firm, now officially calls Danbury home.

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