Drug Discovery and Biotechnolgy in Germany
Drug Discovery and Biotechnolgy in Germany
Drug Discovery and Biotechnolgy in Germany
Drug Discovery and Biotechnology in Germany Published by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Council of German BioRegions By Dr Ernst-Dieter Jarasch, Dr Albrecht Lufer, and Dr Claudia Ulbrich Coordination by Dr Jens Katzek and Dr Kathrin Adlkofer All rights reserved. Reproduction, microlming, as well as recording, storing and/or processing onto electronic media are not permitted without the express consent of the editor. The results of the study and expert contributions are intended as information for our clients. For the resolution of relevant problems, please refer to the sources indicated. Parts of this publication may only be reproduced or duplicated with the express prior written permission of the publisher. Statements of opinion reect the views of the individual authors. Printed in Germany
Preface
Dr Peter Heinrich
Dr Viola Bronsema
Mai 2009 PricewaterhouseCoopers refers to the German rm PricewaterhouseCoopers AG Wirtschaftsprfungsgesellschaft and the other member rms of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each of which is a separate and independent legal entity.
Commission of Experts for Research and Innovation (EFI) (Ed.). Report on Research, Innovation and Technological Performance 2009. Berlin: EFI, 2009. 3
Preface
Preface
Dr Volker Fitzner
Dr Jens A. Katzek
Dr Kai Uwe Bindseil Managing Director BioTOP and Chairman of the Council of German BioRegions
Dr Jens A. Katzek Managing Director BIO Mitteldeutschland and Project Coordinator of the Council of German BioRegions
Table of contents
Table of contents
Table of contents
Preface of BIO Deutschland e.V. .................................................................. 3 Preface of the German BioRegions . ............................................................ 4 Preface of PricewaterhouseCoopers Germany . .......................................... 5 Section A . .................................................................................................... 7 Executive summary and introduction ............................................. 8 1 Germany more than 350 years of successful drug development ........................................................................ 10 2 The largest pharma market in Europe .......................................... 13 Sales of pharmaceuticals . .................................................. Industry structure ................................................................ Platform companies/service providers ............................... Regulations ......................................................................... Business models and private funding . ............................... 13 14 16 17 18
Section A
BioRegions playing a driving role ................................................. 20 Universities. .......................................................................... Max Planck Institutes . ........................................................ Research centres of the Helmholtz Association ................. Research centres of the Leibniz Association ...................... Fraunhofer Institutes ........................................................... European Molecular Biology Laboratory EMBL ............... Technology transfer . ........................................................... 24 26 28 31 32 33 33 35 38 41 42 43 45 47
5.1 Major therapeutic areas and development pipeline ............... 5.2 Process development and manufacturing ............................. 5.3 Preclinical and clinical development ...................................... 5.4 Other services ........................................................................ 5.5 Collaboration schemes and public funding . .......................... 5.6 Success factors . .................................................................... 5.7 Quintessence of interviews conducted (chart) ....................... 6
Vision ............................................................................................ 48
Section B . .................................................................................................. 52 1 Selected company proles by BioRegions . ................................. 53 2 Interview partners ....................................................................... 145 3 Sources . ..................................................................................... 147
along with the BioPharma competition. More than one billion euros have been spent through these dedicated federal programmes in the past ten years; the overall federal and state funding of biotechnology is far higher. In a nutshell, the present study Drug Discovery and Biotechnology in Germany presents a business environment that is highly attractive for international partners, comprising creative academic research, innovative business models and clusters linking science and industry, intelligent government support, as well as innovative and dedicated medium and large pharmaceutical companies and, last but not least, an attractive pipeline of new drugs targeting major unmet medical needs. This study adopts the unique approach of analysing the situation in drug discovery not only from the viewpoint of the industry but also from the viewpoint of small and medium enterprises and the academic world. It has been initiated jointly by PwC Germany and the Council of German BioRegions, an association of 30 life science clusters supporting emerging biotech companies and networking between industry and academia all over Germany. All 30 BioRegions have been requested to supply short proles of their beacons companies or research institutions leading the way in the elds of drug discovery and biotechnology. Most BioRegions have responded. A total of 92 beacons have been reported by the BioRegions and are listed in Section B of this study. More than 30 interviews were conducted simultaneously with leaders from industry and academia. Many of their key messages have been quoted directly in the text. Based on material supplied by the BioRegions as well as on the results of the interviews and their own research, the authors of Section A provide a comprehensive picture of the current situation in Germany at the beginning of 2009 regarding drug discovery, biotechnology, research, and business. We hope our readers will enjoy discovering new information and new potential partners while browsing through this study. For more information, PwC and the BioRegions will be happy to assist you.
Dr Claudia Ulbrich
Dr Albrecht Lufer CEO of Corvay GmbH and Head of Life Science Initiative Niedersachsen BioRegion
facility worldwide using state-of-the-art equipment for biotech engineering processes. All in all, about 20 different compounds are being produced in their facilities based in Germany which are exported to 40 countries around the world. In 1863, Friedrich Bayer and Johann Friedrich Weskott also founded the dyestuff company Friedrich Bayer et comp, which again marked the beginnings of a major chemical and pharmaceutical group, Bayer AG. As a salesman, Friedrich Bayer took care of the business side while Weskott provided the chemical input. The chemist Carl Duisberg joined the company in 1883 and proved a major force in Bayers rise to its status as a chemical giant. Gerhard Domagk, Nobel Prize winner in 1939, discovered the cell toxic activity of some dyes on microbial pathogens, thus paving the way for the use of sulphonamides as antibacterial drugs. Much earlier in 1897, Felix Hoffmann had achieved the breakthrough in synthesising acetylsalicylic acid, the compound in Aspirin, in a chemically pure and stable form. Despite the debilitating effect of the World Wars, Bayer managed subsequently to maintain its activities and went on to expand and strengthen its operations in pharmaceutical and pesticide research. Since then, brilliant scientists have contributed to the creation of excellent innovation power in Germany. In the late 1960s, Karl Heinz Bchel discovered an azole derivative, clotrimazole, which facilitated the treatment of many fungal infections. In 2006, Bayer acquired Schering, Berlin, itself a big pharmaceutical company with a 135-year old success story, today known as Bayer Schering Pharma with major activities in biopharmaceuticals (factor VIII, interferon-beta). Schering can be traced back to 1851 when pharmacist Ernst Schering founded his pharmacy in Berlin. This evolved into the chemical company Chemische Fabrik E. Schering, and the industrial manufacturing of pharmaceuticals started in 1890 with piperazine, a drug aimed at combating signs of ageing and gout. Boehringer is yet another chemical/pharmaceutical dynasty in Germany. As early as 1817, Christian Friedrich Boehringer established a pharmaceutical business as well as a chemical laboratory in Stuttgart, which became C. F. Boehringer in 1859 and was relocated to Mannheim in 1872. In 1885, Albert Boehringer founded a chemical factory in Ingelheim on the banks of the Rhine river west of Frankfurt. This company was renamed C. H. Boehringer Sohn in 1892. During the 1960s, the two Boehringer companies were renamed Boehringer Mannheim and Boehringer Ingelheim. While Boehringer Mannheim was sold to Roche in 1998, Boehringer Ingelheim is the worlds largest, privately owned pharmaceutical company today with sales of 10.9 billion euros in 2007. Boehringer Mannheims former manufacturing site at Penzberg, south of Munich has been developed by Roche into the worlds largest biopharmaceutical manufacturing site, while Boehringer Ingelheims site at Biberach, formerly Schmidt & Thomae, is the worlds second largest biopharmaceutical manufacturing site. One of the most outstanding leaders within Boehringer was Rolf Krebs who pushed the early acquisition of a 10percent stake in Genentech and campaigned for a united front to ght AIDS. Rentschler developed in a similar way. Founded in post-war Germany to make vaccines for animals, Rentschler had at that time already begun
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In order to turn excellent basic research in Germany into measurable economic benet, we need a social paradigm shift towards a more efcient support of entrepreneurship. This involves, both in Germany and elsewhere, promoting and reinforcing such virtues as courage, perseverance, and pride in success. Dr Bernhard Kirschbaum Executive Vice President, R&D, Member of the Merck Serono Executive Board, Merck KGaA
There is still a great need for innovative drugs to improve treatment options for patients. Germany has developed high scientic standards and a maturing biotechnology industry, a good basis to provide a new generation of pharmaceuticals. Dr Arndt Schottelius, MD PhD Chief Development Ofcer, MorphoSys AG
to focus its activities on products engineered with biotechnology. The management decision in 1974 to produce interferon biotechnologically was a further step in this trendsetting direction. Today, Rentschler Biotechnology has a long history of successful operations in the eld of biotechnological production of pharmaceuticals and chemicals. The year 1884 marks the rst successful technology transfer from academia to industry when Farbwerke Hoechst began commercially manufacturing a diphtheria serum which saved the lives of many children who would otherwise have died from this infectious disease. In 1890, Emil Adolf Behring together with Shibasaburo Kitasato discovered a serum therapy for diphtheria but it was only with the nancial support of Hoechst that a commercial drug could be developed. Behring was honoured with the rst Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1901 and acquired the name von Behring. In 1903, von Behring established the Behringwerke in Marburg together with pharmacist Carl Siebert, who was responsible for the commercial side of the enterprise. For nearly 100 years, the Behringwerke were a major producer of serum products and vaccines until 1996, when Chiron Behring was established as a joint venture, which was later fully taken over by Chiron and, in 2005, was acquired by Novartis to become Novartis Vaccines. The last 20 years have been shaped by a few serial founders like Karsten Henco and Axel Ullrich and by the many governmental and private activities described in Chapters 3 to 5 of this study. Henco founded Qiagen in 1984 together with Metin Colpan and Jrgen Schumacher, and was co-founder of Evotec, Direvo Biotech, and a Swiss biotech company. Ullrich, the inventor of the rst gene technology drug Humulin and of Herceptin founded several biotech companies, namely Sugen, Axxima, U3, and Kinaxo. Less prominent but also very successful is Herbert Stadler, founder of IBA, Biometra, Develogen, and Affectis amongst other companies.
In Germany, a highly innovative approach to drug discovery is taken both academically and at the level of production, in order to develop more efcient medication to ght serious diseases with fewer side effects. However, to pursue this path efciently with respect to international competition, we need much stronger networking among partners from academic research and industry. In Germany, this type of networking is currently being driven by various promising activities. Dr Peter Heinrich Chief Executive Ofcer, MediGene AG
Changes in the German health care sector are opening up new opportunities for the pharmaceutical industry going beyond the role of simply being a drug manufacturer. Dr Stefan Busch Vice President, Strategic Planning and Portfolio Management, Member of Management Board, AstraZeneca GmbH
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In 2007, 40 new drugs were approved in Germany, ten of which were biopharmaceuticals. In total, over 180 biopharmaceutical drugs have been approved in Germany to date. The largest group comprises other recombinant proteins, such as insulin, erythropoietin (EPO), hormones, interferons, and coagulation factors, and consists of 108 substances for miscellaneous indications. Of the drugs that have been approved, 50 are genetically and biotechnologically engineered vaccines against various infections and 19 of the biopharmaceuticals are monoclonal antibodies. Among the ten drugs approved in 2007 there is one vaccine against HPV, three antibodies for the treatment of colon cancer, macular degeneration and haemoglobinuria, and seven other recombinant proteins, e.g. for rheumatoid arthritis, a growth factor, one new EPO with prolonged action and two EPO biosimilars, as well as a compound against Hunter syndrome.
Many big pharma companies are conducting R&D to discover and create new drugs. To this end, they set up their own R&D units or use the expertise of much younger and extremely dynamic players operating in the sophisticated biotechnology landscape in Germany. In terms of the number of prescriptions, generics are dominating the market; in terms of revenue, innovator drugs have maintained their lead. Large generics companies like Ratiopharm, Hexal (via Sandoz, a part of the Novartis group since 2007), or Stada are not only strong in generics but have also managed to successfully register biosimilar drugs (erythropoietin, somatotropin). Europe and Germany have gained a leading edge internationally by revising regulations for biosimilar approvals, promising more business for CMOs and CROs. Generic producers are represented by the association of drug manufacturers BAH (Bund der Arzneimittelhersteller) and Pro Generika. Another important group of companies comprises medium-sized pharmaceutical companies, organised within the BPI (Bund der Pharmazeutischen Industrie). Most of these companies only operate in Germany or in just a few European markets and tend to have a rather traditional portfolio. Some, such as Rentschler, have started to invest in biotech drug discovery. Many biotech companies are represented by BIO Deutschland or DIB (Deutsche Industrievereinigung Biotechnologie). Only a few of these companies have managed to place products on the market so far, for example, MediGene. All these associations provide valuable information about the industry on their websites for their members and can thus be good points of contact. According to the BCG report Medical Biotechnology in Germany 2008, there are currently 371 companies in Germany specialising in medical biotechnology with revenues of about 5.0 billion euros in 2007. 97 of these companies are generating about 88 percent of the total turnover, by either developing biopharmaceuticals or already having products on the market. Sales have risen by 26percent in comparison to the previous year. Apart from product sales (4 billion euros), smaller biotechs are generating revenues through licence fees and milestone payments based on alliance agreements. Turnover from technology platforms and services experienced growth too, rising by 14percent. Almost 34,000 people were employed in the medical biotechnology sector in 2007. This corresponds to an increase of 4,000 employees or 14percent year-on-year. German biotech companies are attracting more and more potential buyers and cooperation partners. In April 2008 GANYMED Pharmaceuticals, a privately held cancer antibody rm, was able to close the third largest nancing deal nationwide, with a total of 65 million euros in capital. Another big deal (150 million euros) was accomplished by Martinsried-based biotech company U3, founded by Axel Ullrich, founder of a number of companies. U3 was acquired by the Japanese pharma group Daiichi Sankyo adding some 27 skilled employees to Germanys leading edge in research and development.
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Innovations in biotechnology create competitive products for an international market and good perspectives for long-term employment. Dr Wolfgang Plischke Member of the Management Board, Bayer AG
Germany is a top location for biomedical research and outstanding young biotech companies. We need to support these adequately and actively engage in removing any obstacles in order to create equal opportunities with respect to US biotech companies. Dr Rainer Wessel Executive Speaker, GANYMED Pharmaceuticals AG
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Again in 2008, Amaxa, a globally active leader in transfection technologies, chose the same exit strategy and was acquired by Lonza, which will keep the German location and its employees while expanding its cell discovery business. The takeover of the protein engineering company Direvo Biotech from Cologne by Bayer HealthCare for 210 million euros is another example of successful entrepreneurship in Germany. The biggest deal in 2008 was announced in the summer months and nalised later in the year: Shire agreed to pay about 350 million euros to acquire Berlin-based Jerini, a biotech rm which had just received EU market authorisation a few months earlier for Icatibant, its innovative drug for the treatment of hereditary angioedema, a rare genetic disorder. All these acquisitions were strategically conducted, adding and strengthening the portfolios of the buyers, namely, pharma companies, most of which had been involved in biopharmaceuticals prior to the takeovers. A fruitful, strategic alliance has been established between Trion Pharma and Fresenius Biotech, which, based on Trions research and development of Removab, co-developed the drug for the treatment of malignant ascites throughout the advanced development stages up to European Market Authorisation, granted by the European Commission on 23 April2009. Removab is the rst approved therapeutic bi-specic, tri-functional antibody, invented, developed, and produced in Germany.
GENEART provides fast track oligonucleotide synthesis, sequencing and manipulation/engineering services as well as antibody production through genetic immunisation. GENEART is said to be the world market leader in gene synthesis. Custom manufacturers (see also Chapter 5) all over Germany provide excellent service in process development and manufacturing of proteins and other products from bacterial, yeast, CHO, and other cell line systems. Examples are Rentschler, Probiogen, Richter-Helm, Rhein Biotech, Vibalogics, and EUFETS, a subsidiary of Fresenius Biotech. CROs like Covance and Parexel have subsidiaries in Germany; medium-sized CROs, such as Focus, Neuss, together with smaller companies like Aurigon, Tutzing, round off the picture. Last but not least, Germany is home to Sartorius, Gttingen, one of the largest providers of manufacturing equipment, as well as Werum, Lneburg, the world market leader in process control software for biopharmaceutical manufacturing and a leading bioinformatics company BIOBASE in Wolfenbttel. In sum, the annual revenues generated by these service providers are estimated to exceed 1 billion euros. Success through innovation must be visible. This provides Germany with a great opportunity to show that we can reach the top in the eld of active ingredient development. Dr Frank Morich Chief Executive Ofcer, Noxxon AG
Germany is a global leader in basic research and has a high potential for industrial success. This should be supported intensively. Prof Dr Jens Schneider-Mergener Former Chief Executive Ofcer, Jerini AG
2.4 Regulations
Regulations for market authorisation of drugs in the EU, North America, and in Japan are harmonised in accordance with the International Code of Harmonization (ICH). Medicinal products intended to be marketed in Germany or other European Economic Area (EEA) states require ofcial approval by either a national authority or authorisation from the European Commission. In Germany, two agencies are responsible for granting permission to launch medicinal products for human use on the market: the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut (PEI), Langen, and the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM), Berlin. The PEI is a federal agency of the Federal Republic of Germany. It reports directly to the Federal Ministry of Health (BMG, Bundesministerium fr Gesundheit) and is committed to the approval of clinical trials and the authorisation of medicinal products within the following groups: sera; vaccines; blood, tissue and bone marrow preparations; allergens; mABs; gene transfer medicinal products; somatic and xenogenic cell therapeutics and genetically modied blood components. The duties of PEI include the approval of clinical trials within the jurisdiction of PEI, participating in the approval of eld trials (veterinary), processing applications and subsequent reapplications, testing medicinal products, monitoring, collecting and evaluating adverse reactions, taking measures to improve the acceptability of drugs as well as conducting inspections, consultations, and research. Above all, the PEI is responsible for the market authorisation of these medicinal products.
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All other medicinal products are the responsibility of BfArM, which also operates under the auspices of the Federal Ministry of Health in Germany. As well as authorisation, it is accountable for general drug safety monitoring (pharmacovigilance) and drug safety improvement. Apart from the national authorisation procedure, to license a drug in more than one EU country, applications must comply with the Decentralised Procedure (DCP) or the Mutual Recognition Procedure (MRP) if the compound has already been approved in one European country. Science and research need funding and planning security, not declarations of intent. Prof Dr Klaus D. Dhler Managing Director, Curatis Pharma GmbH The Centralised Procedure results in EU-wide marketing authorisation. An approval for a medicinal product intended for use in all EEA countries (which may still mean that each country will add its own requests and stipulations) may be achieved by ling an application with the European Medicines Agency (EMEA), an equivalent to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in United States. The EMEA employs a system of so-called rapporteur countries; when following the Centralised Procedure, the wise selection of the rapporteur country is key to the market success of a pharmaceutical product. Pricing and reimbursement levels, the countrys position on innovative drugs, the experience of the countrys regulatory agency, and many other aspects have to be taken into account. In many respects Germany serves as a good starting point for registering and launching a new drug in Europe.
alliances with, for example, Novartis, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pzer, and Johnson and Johnson. In the end, successful drug development provides a far higher return on investment than even the most sophisticated contract research. Serial founders form the backbone of the industrys success. In this respect, Karsten Henco, Jrgen Schuhmacher, Herbert Stadler, Axel Ullrich have already been mentioned above. Until 2004, it was uncommon in Germany for private investors, apart from venture capital funds, to get involved in biotechnology. Since Dietmar Hopp, co-founder of the software company SAP, bought a majority stake in the cell therapy company Cytonet in 2004, he has invested more than 320 million euros in 15 biotech companies. His portfolio comprises drug developers such as Apogenix, Curacyte, CureVac, GPC Biotech, Heidelberg Pharma, immatics, and SYGNIS. More recently, the brothers Thomas and Andreas Strngmann, who sold their generics company Hexal to Novartis, have invested considerably in biotechnology and bought stakes in MediGene and Aicuris, the former research department of Bayer AG in Wuppertal, as well as in younger, innovative drug discovery and development companies like 4SC, GANYMED, Glycotope, Nexigen, and Suppremol. As diagnostics will play an ever more important role in drug discovery, especially with regard to personalised medicine, it is important to mention Mosaiques Diagnostics and Therapeutics in Hanover, a company driven by inventor Harald Mischak and business mind Joachim Conrads, one of the very rare examples of a private investor who also acts as managing director. These engagements provide proof of the positive opinions held by investors on the long-term perspectives of the German biotech industry. A current example is the strategic venture capital fund announced by Merck KGaA in March 2009. Merck Serono Ventures will invest in emerging biotech companies that are developing therapeutics in the areas of oncology, neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases, and inammation. Other examples of VC funds still active today are TVM Capital, Life Science Partners, Atlas Venture, 3i, and NGN Capital, the latter being another example of long-term visionary, family investment as some members of the Boehringer Ingelheim family initiated this fund in 2005. All these private investments have been complemented by a broad range of federal and state public funding programmes (see Chapters 3 and 4), which are particularly important, especially at the initial stages of an enterprise when up to 50percent of research and development expenses can be covered by public funds.
In the foreseeable future, classical biotech business models will have no access to capital markets. At the same time, strong alliances between research-oriented biotech and pharmaceutical companies with sufcient capital and good sales gures are becoming increasingly important. Dr Klaus Maleck Chief Financial Ofcer, Evotec AG
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were set up. The programme Business Investments Capital for New Technology-Based Firms was launched, providing funds as co-investor for private equity funds. BioRegio brought together all the players in the regions necessary for building a biotech industry: from academic institutions, big and small companies and industrial associations to local and regional politics and the nance sector. Activities were coordinated and promoted by BioRegio agencies established not only in the winning regions but in all regions which had participated in the competition and also in biotech areas which developed later. Under the umbrella of BIO Deutschland, the association of the German biotechnology industry, the German BioRegions Council, which serves as a platform to coordinate regional activities and international representation, presently comprises thirty members representing all biotech regions in Germany. At the end of the BioRegio initiative in 2001, Germany had more than 500 biotech companies with a combined staff of over 16,000, mostly highly qualied employees. Thirteen biotech companies were listed on the stock markets. By way of comparison, the United Kingdom, the European country with the most mature biotechnology market at that time, had 46 public and about 380 private biotech companies with approximately 23,000 employees. Besides the new biotech companies, the number of venture capital companies engaged in biotech also rose dramatically, from ve in 1997 to more than 150 in 2001. The late 1990s were boom years and high prots could be gained by listing companies on the stock market. Stock price quotations for biotech companies often rose by several hundred percent following an IPO. When, however, the nancial markets crashed at the end of 2001, stock prices for public biotech companies tumbled. Private companies dependent on venture funds felt the nancial squeeze as investors, in the absence of public equity nance and exit opportunities, were focusing on late-stage products only. Companies had to cut back on staff and other costs, and had to reassess their business models in order to generate cash quickly rather than relying on revenues and prots in 10 or 15 years time. Between 2001 and 2004, the German biotech industry lost about a hundred companies approximately 76 through insolvencies and the rest to mergers and acquisitions or removals. When the industry recovered, the numbers of new biotech ventures grew more slowly and organically than in the enthusiastic years preceding 2000 when many non-viable companies had found investors. Start-up companies were often not nanced by venture capital alone but by early cash generation through contract research or other services. By the year 2007, the number of biotech companies had reached 495, i.e. almost the peak level of summer 2001. The biotech crisis of the years 2001 to 2004 would have hit the industry harder if the supporting networks of the BioRegions had not been in place. The inception of start-up companies and spin-offs from academia supported by the funding programmes of the federal and state governments (e.g. BioChance, GoBio) was facilitated by technology transfer ofces and professional service companies, which also helped to acquire private investment. Laboratory space and other necessary
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Selective funding of universities and biotech companies to promote innovation and cooperation is both reasonable and necessary. This will foster a sustained development in Germany to become an attractive location for biotechnology innovation. Dr Ulrike Fiedler Managing Director, Scil Proteins GmbH
There are good funding opportunities in basic research. To give innovative companies time to create real added value the gap between academic and industrial funding must be bridged, e.g. by funding clinical research. ProfDr Hans-Ulrich Demuth Chief Exective Ofcer/Chief Scientic Ofcer, Probiodrug AG
infrastructure were provided by technology parks and business incubators established within the framework of BioRegions. Training programmes were established to teach managerial skills to scientists interested in setting up their own business. Most importantly, the cooperation between science and industry, the centrepiece of the BioRegio concept, was greatly enhanced and intensied. The outcome of the BioRegio competition is to some extent still reected in the geographical distribution of biotech companies: Munich, Heidelberg, and Cologne are hotspots of innovative biotech companies in Germany today. In addition, Berlin has become a geographical focus for German biotechnology and clusters of biotech companies have also sprung up in most of the BioRegions established after 1996.
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The Helmholtz Association, with 28,000 employees and an annual budget of approximately 2.5 billion euros, is Germanys largest scientic organisation, 90 percent are nanced by the federal government and 10 percent by the states. The 15 centres of the Helmholtz Association provide particularly expensive equipment and infrastructure for national and international collaborations on a large scale. Their mission is to perform cutting-edge research which contributes to solving the grand challenges of science, society, and industry. Four of these research centres are particularly important for drug discovery research. These are the German Cancer Research Centre, the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research, the Helmholtz Centre Munich, and the Max Delbrck Centre for Molecular Medicine. In addition, some departments of Forschungszentrum Jlich and Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe also work on aspects of biopharmaceutical development. The Fraunhofer Society has more than 80 institutes and research units focusing on applied research with a direct impact on private and public enterprises as well as on society in general. Two thirds of its annual research budget totalling 1.5 billion euros is generated through contract research for the industry, the service sector, and public administration. Only one third of the budget is contributed by the German federal (90 percent) and state (10 percent) governments by way of institutional funding. The Leibniz Association combines a great diversity of institutes all over Germany, focusing on interdisciplinary research of strategic needs and social relevance at the junction between basic and applied science. The total annual budget of the 86 Leibniz Institutes (27 in the life sciences), which employ more than 14,000 people, is about 1 billion euros, covered in equal shares by the federal and state governments.
However, considering biotech spin-off companies from universities as one aspect of technology transfer from science to industry, the correlation with external funding is minimal. Apparently, innovative start-ups are mainly the result of the creativity and entrepreneurial spirit of individuals combined with efcient technology transfer facilities, the quality of which varies widely between universities. A number of companies presented in this study are spin-offs from smaller universities such as Bielefeld, Halle, Magdeburg, Mnster, or Regensburg. In 2005, the government launched the Excellence Initiative to strengthen cutting-edge research and competitiveness in order to make German science and research more visible in the international scientic community. A total of 1.9 billion euros of extra funding was provided for selected projects. In two rounds of the competition, the University and the Technical University of Munich, the Universities of Heidelberg, Freiburg, Gttingen, Constance, the Free University of Berlin, and the Technical Universities of Karlsruhe and Aachen were elected Elite Universities. The Excellence Initiative also included funding for Clusters of Excellence concentrating research potential in specic elds. Some of these Clusters of Excellence have a focus on drug discovery and preclinical research, in particular: From Regenerative Biology to Reconstructive Therapy (Hanover Medical School); Regenerative Therapies (Technical University Dresden); Cellular Stress Responses in Aging-Associated Diseases (University of Cologne); NeuroCure Towards a Better Outcome of Neurological Disorders (Charit, Berlin). Many university hospitals and institutes have successful, long-standing collaborations with the pharmaceutical industry, most importantly in clinical trials. Supported by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, a network of coordinating centres for clinical trials (KKS Network) has been established at 15 universities (Berlin, Cologne, Dresden, Dsseldorf, Essen, Freiburg, Halle, Hanover, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Mainz, Marburg, Munich, Mnster, and Regensburg) providing a platform for transparent, patientoriented development of new drugs and therapeutic principles. Some of these universities have special modules for paediatric trials as well. There are many institutes associated with but not part of the universities, e.g. the NMI-Natural and Medical Sciences Institute in Reutlingen which has pioneered developments in array technologies which are used in the pharmaceutical and biotech industries.
To promote innovation, bridging the gap between academic research and industrial production is the key challenge, which can only be met by signicant public funding. Measures such as BioPharma address this particular problem and will therefore positively impact Germanys role as a biotechnology hub. Dr Jrn Erselius Managing Director, Max Planck Innovation, Munich
4.1 Universities
Germany has about 60 public universities conducting research in the life sciences. A useful indicator for ranking the research activities of universities is the amount of funding they are able to obtain from third-party sources. In 2005, such third-party funding for research in the life sciences amounted to about 1.8 billion euros, i.e. more than one third of the total nances from external sources. The majority of this (62 percent came from the German Science Foundation, DFG) was nanced jointly by the federal government and the federal states. About 26 percent were provided by direct funding from the federal government and most of the rest by the European Commission as part of the 6th research framework programme, according to the German research ministry (Bundesbericht Forschung und Innovation 2008). The universities of Berlin (including Charit, Germanys largest medical school, Free University and Humboldt University), Munich, and Heidelberg received the largest amount of external research funding in the life sciences sector followed by Freiburg, Wrzburg, Tbingen, Hanover, Frankfurt/Main, Gttingen, and Cologne. Not surprisingly, these locations largely coincide with major BioRegions in Germany.
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More than thirty Max Planck Institutes are working in the biomedical sector; those engaged in elds directly related to medical and pharmaceutical research are listed below:
Name Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry Max Planck Institute for Brain Research Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology Max Planck Institute for Medical Research Max Planck Institute of Molecular Biomedicine Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry Location Martinsried Gttingen Frankfurt/Main Potsdam Tbingen Gttingen Bad Nauheim Freiburg Berlin Heidelberg Mnster Dresden Berlin Dortmund Martinsried Munich
The Center of Advanced European Studies and Research (CAESAR) in Bonn is closely associated with Max Planck Society. Research projects at the centre focus on neurosciences aiming to be further developed into start-up companies.
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Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research The key scientic objective at the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI) in Braunschweig revolves around infectious diseases by studying fundamental principles such as the interaction between bacterial pathogens and their hosts on the one hand, and by developing strategies for the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment to combat dangerous infections on the other. The HZI with over 600 employees consists of ve departments: (i) Cell and Immunobiology, (ii) Microbiology, (iii) Structural Biology, (iv) Molecular Biotechnology, and (v) Experimental Mouse Genetics. The major questions addressed in these departments are: What are the fundamental mechanisms of an infection and of the immune systems reactions? What turns certain bacteria into pathogens? Why are some people particularly sensitive or particularly resistant to infections? How can we inuence infection processes to prevent or cure diseases? Answers to these questions will play a part in successfully combating infections caused by bacteria and viruses with new drugs and vaccines. For example, bacterial communities that are exceptionally well-suited to ght attacks by the immune system and antibiotics, often form aggregations of so-called biolms which are responsible for severe illnesses. Disturbing the signalling cascade in the microbial communication, which leads to the formation of biolms, opens up a novel route for the development of anti-infective therapeutics. Helmholtz Centre Munich German Research Centre for Environmental Health The Helmholtz Centre Munich (HZM) studies the complex interactions between environment and genetic predisposition. It is located in Neuherberg near Munich and employs a total of more than 1,500 staff members. Research at the HZM addresses questions such as how genes and the environment shape life, what factors contribute to our health and how we can develop strategies that prevent damage to both health and environment. With this approach, scientists at the HZM aim to identify health risks for humans and threats to ecosystems as early as possible in order to unravel the mechanisms that underlie the development of disease and to develop concepts leading to permanent prevention and cure. In pursuing these goals, a large epidemiological cohort study investigating the health status of 200,000 Germans over the period of the next twenty years has been initiated by the HZM. Genetics play a key role in understanding the interaction between genome and environment as a starting point for all research at the HZM because the genome is partly responsible for how sensitively organisms respond to drugs or harmful inuences. The Institute of Experimental Genetics (IEG) at the HZM studies, for example, the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation by steroids and the role of peroxisomes in sterol and steroid metabolism as well as Zellweger syndrome (a hereditary peroxisomal disease) and various cancers. The Genome Analysis Centre at the institute provides a platform for the application of methods in genome, proteome, and metabolome research. The institute is also a partner of the European Mouse Mutant Archive (EMMA), the largest collection of relevant mouse mutant strains for basic biomedical research in the world. EMMA is a
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non-prot partnership of institutes all over Europe, supported by the European Commission, directed by Martin Hrab de Angelis, also director of the IEG and Speaker of the National Genome Research Network (NGFN). Max Delbrck Centre for Molecular Medicine (MDC) The Max Delbrck Centre for Molecular Medicine (MDC), Berlin, combines molecular-biological basic research with clinical research in order to develop new diagnosis and treatment methods for serious diseases. Researchers at MDC cooperate closely with Robert Rssle Cancer Clinic, also on the Berlin campus, and Franz Volhard Cardiovascular Clinic at the Charit, the university medical school of both Humboldt University and Free University of Berlin. Since 2007, Charit and MDC have jointly operated the Experimental and Clinical Research Centre (ECRC), a translational institution to merge research and clinical application from bench to bedside. Research at MDC with its 740 staff members is centred around three large programmes, each combining basic science such as molecular genetics and cell biology of the diseases with clinical research: Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases. This includes heart disease, hypertension vascular disease, and kidney failure. In studying the causes of metabolic diseases the focus is on computational and molecular modelling, the role of miRNA, the function and dysfunction of ion transport, and systems biology of gene regulatory elements. Cancer. With a focus on signal transduction and growth control, structural genome research, and tumour immunology. The objectives are to utilise the knowledge gained from basic research at the molecular level for the development of improved diagnostics and new treatments of cancer. Function and Dysfunction of the Nervous System. By studying the molecular and cellular bases of the healthy and pathological nervous system, new approaches for treatment of CNS diseases are pursued. Collaborations include projects with the Max Planck Institutes for Infection Biology and Molecular Genetics in Berlin as well as many other scientic institutions in Germany and abroad. The MDC also closely collaborates in pharmacological research with the Leibniz Institute for Molecular Pharmacology (FMP, see Chapters 4 to 5), which moved to the MDC-Campus in Berlin. The former director of the FMP, Walter Rosenthal, became Scientic Director of the MDC in 2009. Research Centre Jlich Two institutes of the Research Centre Jlich (Forschungszentrum Jlich, FZJ) have to be presented in the context of this study. The Institute of Neurosciences and Medicine (INM) is devoted to interdisciplinary research on signal processing in and between individual nerve cells, in neural circuits, and in the complex networks of the human brain. Ion channels, which are essential for the transmission of signals between cells, are examined using sensitive biophysical technologies. The Institute of Biotechnology (IBT) focuses on the development of biotechnological processes for manufacturing pharmaceutical and chemical products. Together with the Institutes of Molecular Enzyme Technology and Bioorganic Chemistry of the University of Dsseldorf, the IBT forms a biotechnology centre at the FZJ which has established new chemical and enzymatic processes for the synthesis of small molecules. Thanks to its former head Christian Wandrey from the University of Bonn, the IBT has
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played an outstanding role in developing and improving fermentation technology and technical biocatalysis as a basis for biopharmaceutical manufacturing in Germany.
Especially in times of crisis, education and research become increasingly important. In the future, developing new active ingredients should be focused on disease prevention. ProfDr Walter Rosenthal Scientic Director, Max Delbrck Centre for Molecular Medicine, MDC (Max-Delbrck-Centrum fr Molekulare Medizin), Berlin
DDZ
Dsseldorf
DIfE
BergholzRehbrcke (Potsdam)
DPZ
Gttingen
FMP
Berlin
FZB
Borstel
Hans Knll Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology Heinrich Pette Institute for Experimental Virology and Immunology Institute for Neurobiology
HKI
Jena
HPI
Hamburg
Virus-host interactions and cellular dysregulation by pathogenic viruses Mechanisms of learning and memory Cytokines, chemokines and enzymes in atherosclerotic plaque formation
IFN
Magdeburg
LIFA
Mnster
The Hans Knll Institute (HKI), Jena, has developed a novel drug against tuberculosis which has recently been licensed to the US company Inverness and its subsidiary CLONDIAG in Jena, a spin-off of the HKI. The Leibniz Institute for Molecular Pharmacology (FMP), Berlin, focuses on the
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development of new concepts for interfering pharmacologically with protein functions. At the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology (IfN), Magdeburg, the composition and dynamics of synapses and the interaction of their proteins are a special research focus with the objective of nding new drug targets in neurons. Other aspects are the communication mechanisms at both the cellular and the circuit level in behaviour and learning processes.
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Nowadays, multiple initiatives are being instigated in the area of academic drug discovery to create research driven drug discovery networks and to build links between academia and industry. The European ScreeningPort located in Hamburg, Germany, is a recent addition to the ranks of drug discovery service providers for the academic sector within Germany and Europe. The aim is to ll up industrial pipelines with the innovative science taking place in academic laboratories. One success story for technology transfer by Max Planck Institutes has been Sutent, a cancer drug which acts by blocking several molecular targets simultaneously. Its medical application was developed by the US biotech company Sugen. After the company was bought by Pharmacia (now Pzer), Sutent was developed into a marketable drug approved for the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumours and renal cell carcinoma by the FDA and the EMEA in 2006. The technology transfer company Ascenion was set up by the Life Science Foundation formed by life science research centres of the Helmholtz Association together with some institutes of the Leibniz Association. Ascenion is the exclusive partner of twelve life science institutes of the Helmholtz and Leibniz Associations as well as of the Hanover Medical School. It also coordinates technology transfer from the German National Genome Research Network. Since its inception in 2001, Ascenion has negotiated close to 300 agreements between research and industry and has promoted and accompanied 18 spin-offs through their foundation and early growth. Ascenion holds equity in twelve of these companies and is responsible for the asset management and commercialisation of the intellectual property generated by all Helmholtz centres in the life science area, with the exception of the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ). The greatest success of the DKFZ Ofce of Technology Transfer in the biopharmaceutical sector has been the licensing of the Human Papilloma Virus vaccine for the prevention of cervical carcinoma to Merck & Co. and GlaxoSmithKline. Together with EMBLEM, an afliate and the commercial arm of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), the DKFZ is also responsible for technology transfer at the University of Heidelbergs Clinics & Medical Faculty. EMBLEM (EMBL Enterprise Management Technology Transfer) was established in 1999 to identify, protect, and commercialise the intellectual property developed in the EMBL world, from EMBL alumni, and from third parties. EMBLEM facilitates and accelerates the transfer of innovative technology from basic research to industry by working closely with industrial partners to develop new diagnostics, drugs, therapies, and machinery and equipment. EMBLEM has also been involved in the foundation of spin-off companies from EMBL such as Cellzome in Heidelberg and Cenix Bioscience in Dresden. The ipal (innovations, patents, licences) is nanced jointly by the three universities and technical universities of applied science in Berlin as well as the Investitionsbank Berlin, the subsidy institution of the Federal Land of Berlin. It works as a patent usage agency exclusively for Charit University of Medicine, as well as Robert Koch Institute and Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, two central institutions for health protection and pharmacovigilance of the German government.
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5 Indication areas, novel drug candidates, key players 5.1 Major therapeutic areas and development pipeline
In Germany, like in most Western countries, the major causes of disease and death are cardiovascular diseases and cancer, followed by diseases of the respiratory tract, metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders. The incidence of these illnesses correlates to a large extent with age. In view of our rapidly ageing population, their frequency will increase further unless effective treatments are made available. The average life expectancy of German females is presently 82 years and that of males 76 years. By 2050 it will be close to 90 years for both genders. Half of the children born in 2050 are expected to live up to one hundred years. The greatest challenges facing present-day medical research and industry are to nd cures for major threats such as cardiovascular disease, all principal kinds of cancer, pulmonary, neurological, or endocrine disorders as well as other unmet medical needs including treatments for most rare diseases. Both pharmaceutical industry and biotech companies have taken on these challenges. Major research and development activities focus on the indication areas of cardiac infarction, strokes, and thromboses, all principal kinds of cancer, COPD and asthma, diabetes and obesity, and Alzheimers and Parkinsons disease. There is also a strong focus on the development of new drugs against HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C infections. However, other kinds of infectious diseases, such as malaria, the most important cause of death in developing countries, are only areas of intense research in academic institutions rather than in commercial enterprises. Big pharmaceutical companies are active in most of these areas, although with different focal points. They usually concentrate their efforts on indications affecting large populations, aiming for blockbuster products. Biotech companies, on the other hand, often conduct research in niche indications, taking advantage of or aiming for Orphan Drug Designation for the treatment of rare diseases. Boehringer Ingelheim has drugs on the market or in the pipeline in all major indication areas: respiratory and metabolic diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and diseases of the CNS as well as oncology and virology (HIV/ AIDS), immunology and inammation. Examples in advanced clinical studies are new developments for the treatment of type II diabetes (DPP-IV inhibitors and sodium-dependent glucose transport inhibitors), and an epidermal growth factor inhibitor against lung cancer and an inhibitor of tumour angiogenesis as well as a new therapy against COPD. The company has a strong focus on Parkinsons as well as major depressive disorder, strokes, and hypertension. Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, which has intensied its biotechnological research and development after the acquisition of Serono, provides drugs as Merck Serono in the areas of cancer, multiple sclerosis, infertility, metabolic and cardiometabolic diseases as well as psoriasis. Research and development is mainly in the areas of neurology (Parkinsons, multiple sclerosis) and
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Excellence in the eld of basic research is a key to groundbreaking innovation. Thus, it makes no sense to support research activities solely for the purpose of practical implemenation. Rather, we need to establish more effective tools to recognise promising basic research at an early stage as well as to safeguard and develop the results effectively. In these respects, I see a weakness in Germany while, at the same time, the main task for us and our partners is technology transfer. Dr Christian A. Stein Managing Director, Ascenion GmbH
To generate growth, the big pharmaceutical companies no longer exclusively rely on the productivity of their own research pipelines. On one hand, this explains the latest wave of mergers. On the other hand, there is an increasing trend toward in-licensing product candidates and various types of cooperation with innovative biotech companies. Hence, the competitive advantage goes to those who are successful in nding new ways of cooperation between Big Pharma and biotechnology. ProfDr Torsten Strohmeyer VP Medical & Regulatory Affairs, GlaxoSmithKline GmbH & Co. KG
oncology, but the company is also interested in autoimmune diseases (systemic lupus erythematodes and rheumatoid arthritis) and inammation. There are 28 projects undergoing clinical trials at present, for example studies to expand the application of Erbitux, the companys best-selling drug for the treatment of lung and gastric cancer. Also in advanced stages of clinical development are a vaccine (Stimuvax) for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCPC), and a small-molecule integrin inhibitor for treatment of glioblastoma. Bayer Schering Pharma presently has 20 projects in Phase III clinical trials, six of which are new medical entities (NME). There are 19 more NMEs in Phases I and II, mostly in the areas of COPD, acute cardiac infarction, pulmonary inammation, stroke, thrombosis, and multiple sclerosis. In the oncology sector, Bayer has a small molecule multikinase inhibitor Sorafenib, which has orphan drug status for the treatment of advanced liver and kidney carcinomas, and clinical studies are on the way for the treatment of NSCPC and metastatic melanoma. Bayer is also developing a tracer methodology for the early diagnosis of Alzheimers disease. Cancer is by far the most important indication area for innovative drug development by German biotechnology companies. MediGene, which was the rst German biotech company to place drugs on the market (Eligard, a hormone preparation for the treatment of prostate cancer, and polyphenon against genital warts) is developing a novel drug (EndoTAG) in Phase II for pancreatic cancer and Phase I for breast cancer. Also in Phase II are oncolytic viruses for the treatment of metastases of colon carcinoma. Immatics has product developments against colorectal carcinoma and renal cell carcinoma (both in Phase II) and CureVac against prostate cancer and NSCPC carcinoma. Wilex is developing small molecule drugs for the treatment as well as early diagnosis of various types of cancer. The company is also pursuing the development of a therapeutic antibody in the indication renal cell carcinoma. Recently, the company has taken over the oncology portfolio of UCB for further development. Antisense Pharma has developed a DNA-based antisense drug candidate presently in Phase IIb against malignant brain tumours. Silence Therapeutics has developed novel proprietary siRNA, which has been chemically modied to result in a blunt-ended, chemically stabilised molecule, which contains only naturally-occurring RNA. The company has preclinical programs for pancreatic cancer, lung cancer, prostate cancer, and liver cancer. The medium-sized pharma company biosyn has developed compounds based on haemocyanins for use in bladder cancer and as carriers for therapeutic vaccines. Recombinant antibodies have become an important substance class in the search for effective new drugs against cancer. MorphoSys is presently transforming from a platform company into a drug developer, and, on the basis of its HuCAL patent family, is building a strong therapeutic antibody pipeline, mainly through partnerships, but also increasingly on its own. The focus is on antibody-based drugs against cancer and other life-threatening diseases. TRION Pharma has developed Removab, a novel trifunctional antibody against malignant ascites, which is developed for the market by Fresenius Biotech. The Marketing Authorisation has been granted by the European
The UCB-WILEX alliance represents a new kind of exible and innovative approach to biopharmaceutical product development. Prof Dr Olaf Wilhelm Chief Executive Ofcer, Wilex AG
Commission in April, following the EMEA recommendation in February 2009. It has also developed an antibody against gastrointestinal cancer. GANYMED Pharmaceuticals has developed strict tumour-specic ideal antibodies (iMABs) for the treatment of solid tumours, one of which is about to enter clinical trial for metastatic gastro-esophageal carcinoma. Micromet has two antibodies in clinical trials against Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia, Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma, and metastatic breast carcinoma. Afmed Therapeutics is developing novel antibody formats for the treatment of Non-Hodgkins and Hodgkins Lymphoma which are about to enter clinical studies. Glycotope also develops second-generation glyco-optimised antibodies for the treatment of cancer. Apogenix is developing protein therapeutics targeting modulators of the apoptosis pathway (programmed cell death). Currently the company focuses on the treatment of glioblastoma and on the immunological orphan indication acute graft-versus-host disease. The immunological company Vakzine Projekt Management is developing vaccines for the treatment of prostate cancer; it is also active in the indication areas of multiple sclerosis and infectious diseases, namely tuberculosis and human cytomegalovirus. Novel immunological therapeutics for the treatment of insect venom allergy and inammation are being developed by PLS-Design. Treatment of neurodegenerative diseases and neurological disorders are also important indications for drug development by the biotech industry. SYGNIS Pharma, a company formed in 2007 by fusion of Axaron and LION in 2007, has a drug candidate, AX200, which successfully completed Phase II studies for the treatment of stroke and has received Orphan Drug Designation for the treatment of amylotrophic lateral scleroses and spinal cord injury. PAION, after its initial set-back for its drug Desmoteplase against acute ischemic stroke, is now entering another Phase III study for its drug in a restricted indication of stroke. Axxonis Pharma has identied new compounds which protect neurons against ageing and degeneration for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. Affectis Pharmaceuticals, a spin-off from the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, has developed a drug candidate against depression, targeting a newly discovered ion channel in the brain. Alzheimers disease has been the major indication for research and development of small molecule drugs by Merz Pharma, a medium-sized pharma company and by Probiodrug, a company in Halle (Saale) which has in vivo data supporting a potentially causative new treatment of neurodegeneration in Alzheimers. The treatment options available today can only temporarily slow down the progression of the disease. Schwarz Pharma, which was bought by the Belgian biopharmaceutical company UCB in 2006, is dedicated to research and development of central nervous system disorders such as epilepsy, as well as multiple sclerosis, allergies, respiratory diseases, and inammation. Revotar develops innovative drugs for inammatory indications such as psoriasis, asthma, COPD, and acute lung injury. In January 2009, the company started a Phase II study to evaluate the safety and efcacy of Bimosiamose 5percent Cream for the treatment of patients with chronic plaque-type psoriasis. IDEA has developed a non-steroidal, anti-inammatory drug currently in the registration process.
Real innovations are rare, but they are very important for Germany as a location for business. However, they must also make an impact on the market. Dr Dirk Pelster Chief Operating Ofcer, TRION Pharma GmbH
In Germany, the drive toward innovation in active ingredient development is strong. Targetoriented thinking will further improve both practical implementation and medical benets effectively. Dr Bernd Eisele Chief Executive Ofcer, Vakzine Projekt Management GmbH
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We are convinced to have promising clinical candidates at advanced stages of development in our pipeline, enabling us to contribute to the effective development of active ingredients in Germany. Dr Frank Striggow Chief Executive Ofcer, Keyneurotek Pharmaceuticals AG
Jerini has successfully registered a peptide drug against hereditary angioedema. The company was recently bought by Shire, also an important developer of treatments against metabolic diseases caused by genetic defects. Cytonet, a cell therapy company, has developed therapeutic liver cell preparations for treatment of genetically induced metabolic diseases of the liver as well as acute liver failure. This cell-based medication is now going through Phase III clinical trials. Phenex Pharmaceuticals focuses on the development of small molecules targeting nuclear receptors for the therapy of metabolic syndrome and type II diabetes. Curatis Pharma also develops small molecules for the treatment of metabolic diseases. Treatment of metabolic and endocrine disorders, particularly diabetes, is the focus of Develogen. The company develops small molecule anti-diabetic drug candidates as well as a novel somatostatin analoga to ght acromegaly and diabetic retinopathy.
derived APIs. In addition, Roche Diagnostics has invested about 1.5 billion euros over the last ten years in its site at Mannheim, expanding its research and production capacities and creating new jobs. Another big player in Germany and globally is Boehringer Ingelheim. Founded almost 135 years ago, it is still exclusively family-owned. This fact, along with many others, accounts for the numerous acknowledgements it has received as one of the best employers in Germany and abroad. Boehringer employs almost 40,000 people worldwide, about 10,000 of whom work in Germany. The company currently has about 135 afliated rms in and outside of Germany and its headquarters are based in the geographically attractive Ingelheim, situated on the left bank of the Rhine, near Frankfurt. Boehringer researches, develops, and manufactures pharmaceuticals as well as biopharmaceuticals, focussing on human and animal health. In fact, it is one of the worlds largest suppliers of biopharmaceuticals to industrial customers. In the past ten years, Boehringer has made huge investments to expand its production and research facilities. The German sites in Dortmund, Biberach, and Ingelheim accounted for 44 percent of the investments made in 2007 (654 million euros in total). Boehringer invests a large part of its revenues in R&D activities (16 percent in 2007). In October 2007, Boehringer decided to continue its expansion strategy and invested a further 35 million euros in a new research centre for animal vaccines in the northern part of Germany (Hanover), which is set to become the fourth largest site in Germany. Based in the southern part of Germany is the cutting-edge manufacturer Rentschler Biotechnology. It was Rentschler who obtained the worlds rst approval for an interferon-derived drug. On the strength of its former success, Rentschler still offers a rst-class full service for developing, producing, and approving (bio)pharmaceuticals in accordance with the strict GMP guidelines. The same high manufacturing standards are adopted by many other manufacturers in Germany. Examples in the west include Rhein Biotech (Dynavax Europe) in Dsseldorf, BIBITEC (co-founded by Jrgen Schumacher) and PlasmidFactory, both in Bielefeld. Each of them produces active pharmaceutical ingredients derived either from cell lines or prokaryotes for use in clinical trials on humans. Rhein Biotech and BIBITEC have strong expertise in cell culture techniques for the expression of recombinant proteins and in purication, whereas PlasmidFactory focuses on the production of plasmid DNA for research and industry, for example, for vaccination or drug delivery. On top of that, Rhein Biotech combines process development with unique product development skills and became the rst company worldwide to develop a generic hepatitis B vaccine from bench to market in 1999. Northern Germany is home to Richter Helm Biotec, for example, which supplies (bio)pharmaceutical industries with products developed and manufactured to high standards. Essex Animal Health in Lower Saxony is a subsidiary of Essex Pharma in Munich and focuses on developing and producing veterinary vaccines. Riemser began in 1992 as a spin-off from the Friedrich Lfer Institut, Riems/Greifswald, the oldest virus research institute in the world. Starting with the development and production of veterinary drugs, the company now focuses on human pharmaceuticals (Antiinfectiva, Dermatica,
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Oncologica) and has successfully developed into the most dynamic mid-sized pharmaceutical company in Germany (86 million euros turnover and 640 employees in 2008). Miltenyi Bioprocess, the contract manufacturing division of Miltenyi Biotec based in Teterow near Rostock since 2002 with 165 employees, provides services for the production of biopharmaceuticals like recombinant proteins and monoclonal antibodies and the production of conjugates of biomolecules. Nycomed has a manufacturing site for pharmaceuticals in Oranienburg near Berlin. Similarly, Bavarian Nordic has a GMP site for contract production in Berlin. Again in the eastern part of Germany, established pharmaceuticals suppliers and new biotech companies conduct stateof-the-art contract development and manufacturing. IDT Biologika, one of the prize winners of the Interphex award, provides services throughout the whole development chain of an API for clinical testing or even commercialisation from formulation and large-scale production to packaging and quality assurance. GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, formerly Schsisches Serumwerk (SSK), Dresden has been a specialist in the development and manufacture of u vaccines for about 100 years. Each year, some 30 million vaccine doses leave GSK Biologicals production line, accounting for 10 percent of u vaccines worldwide. Moreover, GSK Biologicals was the rst company to gain authorisation for pre-pandemic and pandemic H5N1 vaccine and, in the case of a bird u pandemic, has the capacity for the large-scale production of a pandemic vaccine within a short period of time. SCIL Proteins, a relatively small but highly dynamic company, offers a wide range of expression services for recombinant proteins using microbial systems. The proteins can be produced under GMP and non-GMP conditions, depending on the clients purposes. The company carries out pre-fermentation development, such as cell line design and up-scale process planning through process control and validation to refolding extracted proteins and analysing quality. BIOMEVA produces biopharmaceuticals in recombinant microbial systems under GMP conditions using up to 1,000 fermenters. The Heidelberg-based companys roots go back to the early 1980s. A point worth noting is that all of these companies have proven excellence in process development and optimisation. One more institution deserves mentioning here, even though it is not commercial. The Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems, Magdeburg (MPI Magdeburg), is hugely involved in the optimisation of chemical and biotechnological processes. Experts from different scientic disciplines network with the objective of improving the performance and efciency of processes employed by chemical and biotech engineers. MPI Magdeburg interacts closely with different pharmaceutical and biotech companies to ensure the exchange of knowledge and know-how.
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custom-made recombinant, yeast-based expression systems. Additionally, the company is able to design and implement the whole fermentation process. A number of young biotech companies in Rostock have developed validated, cell-based, pre-screening test systems for drug candidates, reducing the number of animal tests, for example Cytocentrics, bionas, Neuroproof.
Germany has very strong basic research and manufacturing expertise. Looking into the future, we need to leverage these key sources and enhance our competitive advantage. The industry needs to embrace innovative computational modeling as a key element in making signicant progress in R&D. Sion Balass Chief Executive Ofcer, Matrix Advanced Solutions Ltd.
Comprehensive alliances, signicant takeovers, and successful clinical studies, particularly in the past 18 months, testify to the great potential for drug discovery made in Germany. Now, we have to follow up on this success and build beacons of excellence to establish Germany as an acknowledged industry leader. Dr Thomas Hger Chief Executive Ofcer/Chief Financial Ofcer, Apogenix GmbH
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Pharma/UCB group), biotech companies (Protagen, Priaxon, Life&Brain) and regulatory authorities along the entire added value chain. The twelve partners aim to facilitate the transfer of therapeutic and diagnostic approaches for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases from the research stage to the market. The consortium New materials against neurological diseases (Neu2) targets the transfer of therapeutic and diagnostic approaches for the treatment of multiple sclerosis patients from basic research to the market. The consortium consists of the University Medical School, Hamburg, the pharma company Merck, Darmstadt, the large biotech company Evotec and several start-ups from Hamburg and Kiel. The partnership is nanced mainly from private sources through a fund. One partner in the multiple sclerosis consortium Neu2 is the European ScreeningPort, a publicprivate partnership (University of Hamburg, Evotec) providing modern drug research capabilities such as automated molecular screening platforms, bioinformatics, and professional pharmaceutical experience for the academic community. ChemBioNet is an interdisciplinary, open access, screening platform set up by biologists and chemists from two Helmholtz Centres (MDC and HZI), the Leibniz Institute FMP, and the University of Oslo, Norway in order to provide a link between scientists, required for high throughput process automation, data documentation and analysis in Europe to explore biological functions. The European Commission has recently set up an Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) which also consists of publicprivate partnerships between academic research institutions, small biotech and large pharmaceutical companies. The structure of these European consortia has not yet been nalised. Whereas the principal concern of small biotech companies is to protect their IP, big pharmaceutical companies which provide 50 percent of the nancing in order to attain the leadership in the consortium are more concerned with inexible bureaucracy in the case of unforeseen developments. Within the framework of the High-Tech Strategy of the German Government a Top Cluster Competition was launched in 2007. This competition was designed to strengthen the innovation power of the most efcient geographical clusters in Germany aiming to accelerate the process from scientic ideas and concepts to products, processes, and services in various areas of high technology. So far the only cluster in the life science sector to receive an award has been BioRN cell-based and molecular medicine in the metropolitan region Rhine-Neckar, i.e. the Heidelberg BioRegion. Coordinated by a new cluster management company, biotech, pharmaceutical, and service companies joined forces with partners from academic institutions to develop promising drug discovery projects for industrial application. One of the core projects in the BioRN cluster has been the Heidelberg Institute for Stem Cell Technology and Experimental Medicine (HI-STEM), a public-private partnership founded in 2008 between the DKFZ, the University Hospital Heidelberg, and the private Dietmar Hopp Foundation. HI-STEM, under its Scientic Director Professor Andreas Trumpp, aims to apply basic research on stem cells, particularly cancer stem cells, for developing effective drugs, for example against cancer cells that are resistant to existing medicines.
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We are at the beginning of a positive development. Provided that conditions for research and development are further improved, we will be able to play an even more signicant role in the future. Dr Daniel Vitt Chairman of the Management Board, Chief Science Ofcer, 4SC AG
parks which have been created in all BioRegions throughout Germany. Indeed, a number of these parks and incubators (Heidelberg, Hanover, Berlin, Halle, Martinsried, and Weihenstephan) were founded before the BioRegio Competition of 1996 and played important roles in the formation of these clusters. That German biotech has gained recognition and has become a respected international partner is perhaps best exemplied by the fact that BioEurope, the largest stand-alone partnering conference in the biotech-pharma world, has always taken place in German cities since 1998; the names of the conference cities read like a list of major BioRegions: Berlin, Munich, Stuttgart, Frankfurt, Cologne, Dresden, Dsseldorf, Hamburg, Mannheim/ Heidelberg. In addition BIOTECHNICA, Europes leading event for the biotech industry, takes place in Hanover and offers a platform, now annually, for innovation and knowledge transfer and networking. Last but not least, the success of German biotechnology relies on the excellence of its scientic research. Universities and research centres have established exchange programmes and networks with academic institutions throughout the world. International conferences on topics at the cutting edge of research are attended by leading experts from other countries. Grants for graduate and post-graduate students are available at the best universities and research institutions. The most valuable prize in German research, the Leibniz Professorship (even higher prize money than the Nobel Prize), is awarded annually to a number of outstanding scientists from abroad who will pursue their research to the highest standards in Germany.
6. G ermany is an attractive location for the production of biopharmaceuticals 7. I n the long run, Germany holds a competitive position in the production of biopharmaceuticals 8. O verall, the steps taken by the Grand Coalition have improved Germanys attractiveness as a research location 9. T he formation of clusters of excellence is receiving adequate funding 10. In future, the number of specialised staff available for R&D will continue to be sufcient 11. The research location Germany is an attractive place to live for international scientists and their families 12. The effectiveness of research and development is signicantly inuenced by effective modes of cooperation between academy and industry 13. In future, mathematical models will help to reduce the time needed for research and development Big Pharma Questionnaire evaluation Research institutions Biotech
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Vision
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6 Vision
Biotechnology is not only an international business it is also a fast developing business that is inuenced by different factors and has a deep impact on one of our greatest interests our health. Moderated by Dr Jens Katzek (CEO of BIO Mitteldeutschland), the following high-level panel of experts was asked to discuss the fundamental question of the future of drug discovery and biotechnology: Dr Viola Bronsema (Managing Director of BIO Deutschland e.V.), the authors of the rst part of this study, Dr Ernst-Dieter Jarasch (Managing Director of BioRegion Rhein-NeckarDreieck e.V.), Dr Albrecht Lufer (CEO of Corvay GmbH) and Dr Claudia Ulbrich (Senior Advisor for Pharma/Life Science of PwC), and nally Dr Volker Fitzner (Partner Chemical and Pharma of PwC). Katzek: Ms Ulbrich, with a view to 2020, what will the future R&D model in the pharmaceutical industry look like? Ulbrich: The demand for medicines in general will grow strongly, since populations are growing older and healthier and people fall ill regardless of the economic environment. PwC estimates a doubling of the worldwide pharma market until 2020 to 1.3 trillion US dollars. In 2020, we will still see 50 percent of new drugs based on small molecules accompanied by novel compounds like cell therapy, RNA derived drugs, vaccines. The blockbuster sales model will co-lead the market with personalised medicines, a trend which strongly favours smaller innovative companies. New business models will be developed to serve the specic needs of personalised medicine. Lufer: Especially human or humanised monoclonal antibodies will play a major role in the treatment of cancer and immunological disorders. In addition, vaccines, both preventive and therapeutic, will increasingly come from German biotech companies. The rst vaccines for prevention of cervical cancer are already on the market. There is hope that metastases, chemotherapy-resistant cancer relapses, and currently untreatable metabolic (genetic) diseases can be treated with new biotechnological medicines and cell therapeutic approaches. Bronsema: Innovations will still come from academic institutions. With further improvements in the transfer of technology to the industry, we can efciently generate new innovations within the biotech sector, which is still dominated by small and medium enterprises. But strong SMEs will strengthen Europe as a whole and provide us with the appropriate position for the future. Katzek: Regarding the current unmet medical need, especially in the elds of cancer, neurodegenerative, cardiovascular, and infectious diseases, we expect to see a much stronger output of new drugs and vaccines. Which site-related factors in Germany are contributing to such a continuous pipeline? Jarasch: There are several factors coming together. Without any doubt, we have an excellent academic infrastructure, a good scientic and technical education system for highly qualied staff, and a large scientic and medical expertise accumulated at German universities, especially medical faculties as well as academic research institutes. Considering the various
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academic associations that focus on four different areas, Max Planck on basic science and discovery, Helmholtz and Leibniz on applied science, and Fraunhofer on applied research and development in collaboration with industrial partners, we can be proud of our excellent basic and applied research. For the latter, the strong pipeline of over 300 existing and emerging biotech companies speaks for itself. Lufer: Of course, not every Phase I project is going to make it to the market, but the establishment of different, highly interactive collaboration schemes, for example, the BioPharma competition or the Vakzine Projekt Management model will support the extension of collaborations between Big Pharma and small biotech companies, e.g. Novartis-Cellzome, Boehringer-Ablynx, Boehringer-Morphosys, or Novartis-Morphosys. Katzek: Mr Fitzner, you mentioned once, that the innovation decit in Big Pharma has enormous strategic implications for the industry as a whole. What do you mean by this? Fitzner: Many pharmaceutical companies will need to decide what they want to concentrate on doing and to identify the core competencies they will require, a process which may involve exiting from some parts of research and development. But even those that regard research and development as a core element of their business will have to make fundamental alterations in the way they work. They may, for example, have to focus more heavily on speciality therapies, since most of the diseases for which there are currently no effective medications or cures are not amenable to mass-market treatments. In addition, the pharmaceutical companies need to reduce the time and costs involved in researching and developing such medicines to ensure that society can afford them. Katzek: So, you believe, that if the industry is to become more innovative, it has to change its R&D model to a closer collaboration with the biotech industry, academia, the regulators, governments, and health care providers? Fitzner: Essential for the future and for the evolving model between pharma and biotech is to get a comprehensive understanding of how the human body works at the molecular level and a much better grasp of the pathophysiology of disease (by which we mean the functional changes associated with, or arising from, disease or injury). A greater use of new technologies to virtualise the research process and accelerate clinical development will assume a major role. This is a huge undertaking and one that the industry cannot complete alone. It will require the support of biotech, academia, governments, technology vendors, health care providers, and regulators. Katzek: Ms Bronsema, does the current global nancial crisis affect the pharmaceutical market as strongly as the consumer and automotive sectors? Bronsema: The pharmaceutical industry itself is actually not affected as strongly as the consumer and automotive sector by the credit crunch due to the consistent medical need for drugs in our society. Facing the expiration of patents with a signicant loss of revenues within the next two to four years, the pharmaceutical industry is now striving to complete their pipelines with innovative drug candidates by acquiring biotech
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companies. With the capital markets drained and the limited ability and/or willingness of Venture Capital to invest at this stage, biotechs are without any doubt seriously affected by the nancial crisis, resulting in limited funding options with a focus on partnering with Big Pharma. Nonetheless, we believe that independent from the nancial crisis both partners with their complementary needs are calling for new business models regarding R&D. Increasing costs of R&D and less market approvals are making the outsourcing of drug discovery or parts of the development to mature biotechs a necessity, as recently seen with UCB and Wilex. Independency and exibility of the biotech partner will be of utmost importance for successful collaborations. Katzek: Talking about the future of drug discovery without talking about the regulatory environment is like skiing without skis. So, what about the regulatory environment in Europe and Germany? Jarasch: We are condent that the regulatory environment will continue to improve with IP regulations as the basis for long-term investments into innovative drug development. Hopefully, a European patent system will emerge, and the fragmentised regulation with one central EMEA agency and 27 national bylaws will also slowly converge into one proper European system in order to decrease the tremendous costs for translations. Ulbrich: The industry has often argued that the regulatory process is an impediment to innovation. However, the leading agencies have clearly signalled that they are willing to consider new ways of developing and regulating medicines (EMEA Road Map to 2010, in 2006 the FDA published its Critical Path Opportunities List). We believe that we will see a fundamental change in the approval process by 2020, in the direction of a live licence. The industry will have to work much more closely with the regulators than it has done in the past. Some companies have already recognised this. By 2020, we think that every company will have to operate in the same fashion and that working with the regulators will be built into the remuneration packages of development. Patients must play their part, too; without access to medical data and volunteers for clinical studies, the industry will be unable either to make theoretical advances or to translate those advances into practice. Considering future pay for performance requirements the industry will have to adapt their clinical trial design to much more predictive planning with a selective patient population that can show efcacy of new drugs. Only this will allow drugs to be brought to the market much more quickly, generating revenues much earlier as a basis for further research activities in innovative medicine. This will be our global challenge to serve the needs of a demographic shift in our society. Katzek: Do you, Ms Bronsema, as Managing Director of BIO Deutschland, a political lobby organisation, agree? What do you think the German biotech industry is aiming for? Bronsema: Every country has its own strengths but also its own challenges. A successful economy does not work just by continuously
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supporting areas of strength but also by looking at potential weak points, for example, in the regulatory or economic environment. I am therefore glad that our Chancellor Ms Dr Angela Merkel said that she, together with our nance minister, will adapt the tax system according to the new needs. If we improve the legal environment for innovative companies, this will of course give us a competitive advantage as well, which will make cooperation with us more attractive for international investors. We may be reluctant to accept it, but we do have a reputation to lose: insulin, RNAi, angiogenesis blocker, cancer vaccination, intelligent toothpaste, ecological washing powder, the starch potato, or stem cell research you name any one of these recent developments and I will name a German scientist or company who is a major player in this eld. We are the worlds leading location for the production of biopharmaceuticals second only to the US. And we are the strongest advocate for white biotech in Europe. Therefore, I think we have the potential to become the biotech engineers of the world.
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Section B
Dr Kathrin Adlkofer Managing Director Norgenta North German Life Science Agency
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4SC AG
Founded 1997 Employees 64 Bettina von Klitzing Am Klopferspitz 19 A 82152 Martinsried/Munich Germany Tel.: +49 89 700763-0 Fax: +49 89 700763-29 Bettina.von.Klitzing@4sc.com www.4sc.com Area of research and development 4SC is a drug discovery and development company that uses its cheminformatics-based technology platform to discover and develop new drugs to treat patients suffering from diseases with high medical needs. The company has been generating a risk-balanced and continuously advancing pipeline of projects using its own technology platform, 4SCan, which transfers traditional high throughput screening from the laboratory to the computer screen. 4SCs therapeutic focus centres on cancer and inammatory diseases since these indications combine signicant market potential and high medical needs with reasonable development time and cost in the early clinical stages. 4SC has been listed in the Prime Standard segment (regulated market) of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange since 15 December 2005. In addition, 4SC AG expanded its project portfolio considerably with the acquisition of eight drug projects from the Nycomeds oncology pipeline in July 2008. The drug candidates acquired exhibit distinctive synergies with the project pipeline developed by 4SC. Three drug substances derived from these projects have already been integrated into the companys advanced development pipeline. Other candidates may follow in future. So far there is one product in a Phase II trial and the others are in late Phase I.
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Afmed Therapeutics AG
Founded 2000 Employees 26 Im Neuenheimer Feld 582 Technologiepark 69120 Heidelberg Germany Tel.: +49 6221 65307-0 Fax: +49 6221 65307-77 info@afmed.com www.afmed.com Funding Afmed has raised a total of around 43 million euros from grants and venture capital fundraisings. The most recent fundraising was completed in February 2008 and raised a total of 30 million euros from a consortium of top-tier European and US life science investors. Area of research and development Afmed is a private biopharmaceutical company specialising in the discovery and development of next-generation antibodies. With a powerful research engine based on three distinct human antibody libraries and proprietary antibody formats, Afmed is developing a broad portfolio of antibodies to target cancer and other life-threatening diseases with unmet medical demand. The high diversity of the companys three completely different antibody libraries allows Afmed to identify antibodies against even the most difcult of targets. Afmed has developed an array of antibody formats, including proprietary TandAbs and Flexibodies, unique tetravalent antibodies providing broad therapeutic applications, for example, for the recruitment of cytotoxic immune cells to generate a number of highly potent reagents for the main indications of cancer. Further features comprise bispecic inhibition of signalling pathways or antagonising multiple antigens or epitopes with a single molecule. Afmeds TandAbs have demonstrated superior potency and efcacy compared to conventional monoclonal antibodies in in vivo and in vitro preclinical studies. Afmeds product pipeline includes candidates with a high market potential in the indications of oncology, autoimmune diseases and thrombosis. Afmeds lead programs are TandAbs for the treatment of Non-Hodgkins (AFM11/AFM12) and Hodgkins Lymphoma (AFM13), which is entering into clinical study in 2009. Both programmes will be developed until clinical proof-of-concept. Additional preclinical programs include AFM 20, a TandAb targeting a broad spectrum of solid tumours, AFM15 for autoimmune diseases and AFM14 for thrombosis. Furthermore, Afmed has discovery programmes in leukaemia, myeloma, lymphomas and solid tumours, as well as non-cancer indications such as autoimmune diseases.
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AplaGen GmbH
Founded AplaGen is a biopharmaceutical company, located in the suburban areas of Aachen (Germany), founded in 2001 by a team of scientists from Aachen University of Technology and local entrepreneurs. Employees Currently, AplaGen employs 20 individuals, mostly with natural science qualications and PhD degrees, with activities in the following elds: Drug design, molecular modelling Synthesis and analysis of peptides Cell biology and biochemistry Biopolymer chemistry and biopolymer analysis; aggregation analysis For the four above-mentioned R&D specialties, AplaGen provides own lab space and facilities. Area of research and development AplaGen is a biopharmaceutical company with broad expertise in peptide design, synthesis and analysis. AplaGen has successfully created a portfolio of own products with patent protection for the development in major indications and markets, including the anaemia market (Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent [ESA] market) and the thrombocytopenia market. In parallel to developing its own pipeline products, the company engages in Innovation Partnerships, collaborations with pharmaceutical and biotech companies, which aim at signicant long-term value generation by unique strategic proling of the drug(s) under investigation. The platform technologies include both HES conjugation and peptide development capabilities. AplaGens Innovation Partnership provides new solutions for product differentiation and for enabling superior pharmacological proles and life-cycle management opportunities. The Innovation Partnership seeks co-development alliances with leading pharmaceutical and biotechnological companies. Indication Haematology, oncology Stage of research and development With its pipeline products Hemomer and Thrombomer, AplaGen is in the preclinical stage, Hemomer being more advanced than Thrombomer. Collaboration Cooperation with Bayer Health Care and Animal Health for peptide modication Cooperation with a major European pharma company as exclusive provider of HES-conjugation solutions for their whole protein pipeline Arnold-Sommerfeld-Ring 2 52499 Baesweiler Germany Tel.: +49 2401 805570 Fax: +49 2401 805574 info@aplagen.com www.aplagen.com
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Apogenix GmbH
Founded 2005 Employees 26 Im Neuenheimer Feld 584 69120 Heidelberg Germany Tel.: +49 6221 58608-0 Fax: +49 6221 58608-10 contact@apogenix.com www.apogenix.com Area of research and development Apogenix is a biopharmaceutical company developing innovative protein therapeutics which exert their therapeutic effect by targeted modulation of signal pathways. The rst focus lies on the CD95 system, which primarily regulates apoptosis and the invasive growth of cancer cells. The second focus lies on the IL-4 system that plays an essential role in the development of apoptosis resistance in cancer cells. These different approaches enable the company to pursue a variety of larger indications such as HIV infection or cancer as well as orphan indications, such as acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD). The company is currently concentrating on two projects APG101 and IL-4 blocker which, respectively, are in clinical Phase I and advanced preclinical development. The therapeutic potential of Apogenixs protein therapeutics has been demonstrated in a variety of animal models e.g. for acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) and cancer (glioblastoma). Apogenix was founded as a spin-off of the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and is located in Heidelberg, Germany. Since its inception in autumn 2005, the company has raised 15 million euros in the rst nancing round and 28 million euros in the second nancing round in April 2008 and has been awarded 3 million euros in public grants.
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BIBITEC GmbH
Founded 2001 as a spin-off from the Institute of Cell Culture Technology, University of Bielefeld Employees 9 Area of research and development BIBITEC Gesellschaft fr Prozessentwicklung mbH is located at the University of Bielefeld, Germany, and specialises in the production of proteins derived from mammalian cells. BIBITEC was founded as a spin-off from the Institute of Cell Culture Technology, University of Bielefeld, in 2001 by Dr J. Lehmann, Dr D. Ltkemeyer, Dr H. M. Schulte and Dr J. Schumacher. Today, BIIBTEC employs 9 persons. A ve-year erythropoietin (EPO) project was recently completed. This project involved the process development as well as the GMP-compliant production of EPO for use in Phase III clinical trials. The entire production and purication process was successfully transferred to a third party for large-scale production and market supply. Our core competences include: mammalian cell culture techniques, upstream and downstream process development, GMP-compliant production of protein APIs for use in clinical tests (Phases IIII), process optimisation, validation studies and GMP consulting. Furthermore, we offer monoclonal antibodies for diagnostics, growth factors for cell culture and oligosaccharide reference standards for R&D. Collaboration BIBITEC gained long-lasting collaboration with NewLab BioQuality GmbH and Nordmark Arzneimittel GmbH & Co. KG. Meisenstrae 96 33607 Bielefeld Germany www.bibitec.de
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BIOBASE GmbH
Founded 1997 Employees 130 Michael Tysiak Halchtersche Strae 33 38304 Wolfenbttel Germany Tel.: +49 533 18584-11 michael.tysiak@ biobase-international.com www.biobase-international.com Funding Procured investments Area of research and development BIOBASE is a content and solutions provider for the life science industry. The companys products and services help to identify potential drug targets or biomarkers and increase understanding of potential side effects of drug candidates. All work is done in silico (on computer) and is therefore both faster and less expensive than the traditional approach of animal testing or lab experiments. BIOBASE provides content via standard databases and corresponding analysis tools (software), as well as custom solutions, including knowledge process outsourcing/custom curation and biomarker services. These products and services are mainly applied to the interpretation of high throughput data sets from micro array expression, the analysis of gene regulation, the development of systems biology disease models, drug safety/risk screening, the identication of disease-related mutations for personalised medicine, and to the prediction of targets for the optimisation of plant resilience and yield. Indication Platform technologies Stage of research and development Ongoing. BIOBASE is an active member of a number of national and European research consortia. Collaboration Eighteen out of the twenty largest pharmaceutical companies are customers of BIOBASE. Many of them are not only buyers of BIOBASE products, but actively cooperate in a variety of customised curation and data analysis projects.
Biofrontera AG
Founded 1997 Employees 28 Area of research and development Biofrontera is a specialty pharma company in late-stage development focused on therapeutic products for dermatological diseases. The company has its headquarters in Leverkusen, Germany, and a staff of 28 employees. Biofrontera was founded in 1997 by Prof Lbbert, who is currently the CEO of Biofrontera. The company has a well diversied, late-stage pipeline with a combined peak sales potential in excess of 1 billion euros. Biofrontera aims for rapid growth by concentrating on the following corporate strategies: Focusing on the rapidly growing dermatology market Vertically integrating distribution channels in Europe Adopting a risk-optimised drug development strategy that includes topical versions of approved products and/or improved formulations of the existing drugs through superior efcacy or better side-effect proles Sustaining growth through acquisition of a broad portfolio of products Since October 2006, the Biofrontera shares are listed on several German Stock Exchanges. Indication Dermatology Stage of research and development Reliva crme (market introduction in H2/09 as a cosmeceutical product line) for psoriasis, atopic dermatitis and itching BF-200 ALA (Phase III) for actinic keratosis BF-derm 1 (Phase II) for chronic, antihistamine-refractory urticaria BF-37 (Phase II) for psoriasis BF-1 (Phase I) for migraine prophylaxis Collaboration Collaboration with Grnenthal Pharma AG on the production and marketing of Biofronteras products BF-200 ALA and Reliva Hemmelrather Weg 201 51377 Leverkusen Germany Tel.: +49 214 87632-0 Fax: +49 214 87632-90 info@biofrontera.com www.biofrontera.com
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Bionorica AG
Founded 1933 Employees 409 Kerschensteinerstrae 1115 92318 Neumarkt Germany Tel.: +49 9181 231-90 Fax: +49 9181 231-265 info@bionorica.de www.bionorica.de Area of research and development Business strategies Bionorica AG is one of the most successful manufacturers of phytotherapeutics in Germany. The product range focuses on diseases of the respiratory tract, gynaecological disorders and medications for the treatment of pain. The know-how of Bionorica in phytotherapy has grown over 75 years and the company develops rational herbal medicinal drugs under similar standards as chemically synthesised drugs. More than 30 patents have resulted from the continuous development and exchange of ideas, as well as the successful cooperation with about 70 scientic institutions in Germany and abroad. One of the subsidiaries, Bionorica Ethics GmbH (formerly Delta 9 Pharma GmbH), develops new active substances and medicines in the eld of pain relief. Bionorica is Marketing Authorisation Holder in more than 50 countries all over the world. Marketing and sales in foreign countries are carried out by subsidiaries or contractual partners.
BioPlanta GmbH
Founded 1992 Employees 12 Area of research and development BioPlanta is one of the leading companies in applying bioengineered approaches for discovery, development and commercialisation of ne chemicals and pharmaceutical compounds using its proprietary bioreactor technology. This technology the BioPlant System is particularly suitable for manipulating plant metabolism to generate active compounds with higher value than eld plants. The system is adaptable to the special requirements of different plant species and culture types, such as shoots, roots and micro-tubers. The control and variation of cultivation conditions enables customised content and spectra of the specic compounds. This innovative platform technology was installed to manufacture plant derived chemical compounds for pharmaceutical-, avour- and food-related industries. It allows an efcient screening of new active compounds, the design of innovative drugs and the production of high-quality drugs following the European GMP guidelines. Indication The main focus of our research is on plant active substances for the treatment of cancer, lipometabolic disorders and inammations. Stage of research and development The current status of our work in the area of drug discovery and development is preclinical research. Collaboration Yes, BioPlanta currently cooperates with pharmaceutical companies. Further information At the moment there are two products in the preclinical research stage. Deutscher Platz 5 04103 Leipzig Germany Tel.: +49 341 224583-0 Fax: +49 341 224583-1 info@bioplanta-leipzig.de www.bioplanta-leipzig.de
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BIOTECTID GmbH
Founded 1999 Employees 17 Area of research and development The company undertakes research in the eld of immunology and develops biopharmaceuticals for molecular imaging with the aim of making visible chronic sources of inammation by means of imaging procedures and localising them objectively. Its own laboratories were initially set up in Leipzig. Biotectid, which has now moved to the Leipzig BioCity, has its own certied GMP facility, as well as laboratories with highly modern equipment. The company is integrated into a powerful network of renowned partners from the elds of research and development, science and business, and has built up a fast-growing patent portfolio. In 2008, Biotectid successfully performed the rst clinical trial with its lead-product EP1645, a fragment of a monoclonal antibody which binds selectively to the CD4 molecule on the surface of specic inammatory cells. Indication Inammatory autoimmune disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, vulnerable (high risk) arteriosclerosis plaques Stage of research and development Rheumatoid arthritis: rst clinical trial (phase I/II) successfully completed. Arteriosclerosis plaques: preclinic completed, 1st ex vivo clinical trial nished Collaboration Yes Further information Biotectid has a unique coupling platform under development as a fundamental basis for further imaging products. Deutscher Platz 5 C 04103 Leipzig Germany Tel.: +49 341 256673-30 Fax: +49 341 256673-40 info@biotectid.de www.biotectid.de
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Cellzome AG
Employees 90 Area of research and development Cellzome is a privately owned drug discovery company which is identifying a new generation of kinase-targeted drugs to treat inammatory diseases. Its pipeline of small-molecule therapeutics is driven by Kinobeads, a proprietary technology for the screening and proling of kinases in relevant cells and tissues. Cellzome is applying its distinctive Kinobeads technology to the discovery and development of innovative, selective, kinase inhibitors targeting key inammatory mediators in immune receptor signalling and chemotaxis, including PI3K and Zap-70. Cellzomes business strategy is to generate shareholder value by: Developing a pipeline of small molecule pharmaceuticals, initially for inammatory diseases Collaborating with leading pharma companies in return for research payments, milestone payments and royalties on sales. The management team has strong scientic and commercial credentials, and is backed by some of the biotech industrys most experienced investors. Cellzome is intent on developing both organically and through merger or acquisition, whilst maintaining its values of transparency, commitment and mutual respect. Cellzomes holding company is headquartered in the United States and employs about 90 people at its two operating subsidiaries in Cambridge, UK, and Heidelberg, Germany.
Meyerhofstrae 1 69117 Heidelberg Germany Tel.: +49 6221 13757-0 Fax: +49 6221 13757-201 info@cellzome.com www.cellzome.com
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Celonic GmbH
Founded 1998 Employees Germany: 17 Worldwide: more than 50 Funding Company is protable Area of research and development Starting at cell-line development, Celonic is able to guide its customers up to the production of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) according to GMP. Celonic is readily equipped to produce biopharmaceuticals to market demands. As a spin-off from the Research Center Jlich, the initial idea to found a company was based on the invention of a uidised bed bioreactor that allows an unsurpassed biomass/volume ratio. Consequently following the business model of organic growth, Celonic has become a reliable partner offering a one-stop-shop for mammalian cell culture technology. In order to be ready for preclinical and clinical analytics, Celonic was certied for GLP in 2007. Ten years after the foundation of the small Juelich based start-up, Celonics success factors are the focus on one exclusive recombination system and its timing. The companys technologies are marketed at a moment when all experts foresee a bottleneck in capacity for the production of protein biopharmaceuticals. Stage of research and development Celonic offers cutting-edge technologies to produce protein biopharmaceuticals that are regulation compliant in an extremely short time frame.
Karl-Heinz-Beckurts-Strae 13 52428 Jlich Germany Tel.: +49 2461 69057-6 Fax: +49 2461 69057-9 info@celonic.com www.celonic.com
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CureVac GmbH
Founded 2000 Employees 59 Paul-Ehrlich-Strae 15 72076 Tbingen Germany Tel.: +49 7071 92053-61 Fax: +49 7071 92053-11 info@curevac.com www.curevac.com Funding In 2003 CureVac closed a 2.6-million euro series A nancing round with Leonardo Venture as lead investor, to facilitate the establishment of a GMP production unit. Since 2006, CureVac has raised an additional 35 million euros in a second venture round, enabling the company to advance the research, development and production of mRNA-based therapeutics. Lead investor in this series is the dievini Hopp BioTech holding GmbH&Co. KG which is a venture capital rm owned by the Hopp family. Area of research and development CureVac is a biopharmaceutical company pioneering the direct therapeutic application of messenger RNA (mRNA), the biomolecule that physically transfers genetic information from the nucleus to the cellular protein production machinery. By making mRNA available for therapeutic purposes, CureVac seeks to introduce an innovative class of drugs into todays medicine. Building on a unique body of knowledge in RNA research, design and cGMP production, the company has established a range of proprietary technologies. These include: RNActive for the design of modied and formulated mRNA targeting a broad range of therapeutic applications, RNAdjuvant for the use of RNA as an immune stimulant, PUREmessenger for the GMP-production of long-chain mRNA up to 15,000 nt. Based on these technologies, the company is building a growing pipeline of innovative product candidates. CureVac clinically develops RNActive-derived vaccines for the treatment of prostate cancer and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Indication Immunology, main focus to date: cancer Stage of research and development Clinical Phase I study for the treatment of prostate cancer in Europe FDA approval for a Phase I/IIa study to treat prostate cancer patients in USA Planned clinical Phase I for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer Research work on adjuvants and messenger mRNA based therapeutics in general Collaboration Yes (undisclosed)
Albert-Ludwig-Grimm-Strae 20 69469 Weinheim Germany Tel.: +49 6201 2598-0 Fax: +49 6201 2598-28 holding@cytonet.de www.cytonet.de
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ElexoPharm GmbH
Founded 2005 Employees 6 (Senior Scientists, Chemists/Pharmacists, Technical Assistants) Im Stadtwald, Gebude A 1 66123 Saarbrcken Germany Tel.: +49 681 302-68320 Fax: +49 681 910-2894 info@elexopharm.de www.elexopharm.de Area of research and development ElexoPharm is focused on the discovery and optimisation of new drugs. In order to obtain highly active and selective compounds with a convenient pharmacokinetic prole we are able to identify and to optimise the rst biologically active hit compounds faster and more efciently than others due to our long experience in rational drug design. This ensures a quick development of new lead compounds. Our team responsible for synthetic and analytical chemistry consists of highly qualied organic chemists with broad expertise in modern synthetic methods and the latest purication and analytical techniques. We can perform retro-synthetic analysis and synthesis of small molecules, natural products and peptides. Thanks to the access to a broad range of spectroscopy and spectrometry techniques, we succeed in elucidating the structure of unknown substances efciently and quickly. Our own research projects focus on cardiovascular and oestrogendependent diseases. Indication Oestrogen-dependent diseases, cardiovascular diseases Stage of research and development Preclinical phase Collaboration ElexoPharm has existing collaborations with pharmaceutical companies, i.e. Bayer HealthCare, Pharmacelsus. Pipeline ElexoPharm has developed nonsteroidal 17beta-hydroxy steroid dehydrogenase inhibitors for the treatment of breast cancer showing IC50 values in the low nanomolar range. The compounds are in advanced preclinical stage.ElexoPharm has developed selective CYP11B2 inhibitors as lead compounds for the therapy of congestive heart failure, myocardial brosis and hyperaldosteronism and regard this novel therapeutic strategy as superior to the existing ones. The compounds are in advanced preclinical stage.
Encepharm GmbH
Founded 2004 Employees 6 Area of research and development: Encepharm was founded in September 2004 as a spin-off from the German Primate Center (DPZ). On a fee-for-service basis, Encepharm offers tailored research services and preclinical studies in the eld of depression and neurodegenerative disorders. Encepharms team has extensive expertise in the relevant disciplines and exclusive access to specic animal models for the investigation of depression, Parkinsons disease and multiple sclerosis. Through cooperation agreements with the DPZ, the University of Gttingen and local Max Planck Institutes, Encepharm is able to offer the full range of services including sophisticated techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging. In this way Encepharm is ideally positioned to meet the strong and increasing demand of the pharma and biotech industry for research services that produce meaningful results in the eld of CNS disorders and support the selection of innovative therapeutic targets and drug candidates, as well as their preclinical development. Indication CNS Collaboration Yes Prof Dr Eberhard Fuchs Hans-Adolf-Krebs-Weg 1 37077 Gttingen Germany Tel.: +49 551 307241-70 fuchs@encepharm.de www.encepharm.de
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Schnackenburgallee 114 22525 Hamburg Germany Tel.: +49 405 60814-70 Fax: +49 405 60814-53 contact@screeningport.de www.screeningport.com
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Evotec AG
Founded 1993 Employees 386 Schnackenburgallee 114 22525 Hamburg Germany Tel.: +49 40 56081-0 Fax: +49 40 56081-222 info@evotec.com www.evotec.com Area of research and development Evotec is a leader in the discovery and development of innovative small molecule drugs. The company has established a powerful platform that is applicable to targets across all therapeutic areas and has specic expertise in the area of central nervous system (CNS) related diseases where it is currently building a pipeline of drug candidates for partnering. Through research collaborations and proprietary projects, Evotec is providing the highest quality research results to its partners in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Evotecs proprietary projects specialise in nding new treatments for diseases of the Central Nervous System (CNS). The focus of research is on major CNS related conditions, including sleep disorders, Alzheimers disease, pain management and smoking cessation fast growing therapeutic areas with large unmet medical needs. Evotec has a diverse product pipeline with candidates at various stages of development. Indication CNS Collaboration Boehringer Ingelheim Roche
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Forckenbeckstrae 6 52074 Aachen Germany Tel.: +49 241 6085-0 Fax: +49 241 6085-10000 www.ime.fraunhofer.de
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Geneart AG
Founded 1999 Employees 190 Area of research and development GENEART with headquarters in the BioPark Regensburg has developed into the worlds leading manufacturer of synthetic genes since entering the market in the year 2000. Today, GENEART AG is one of the foremost global specialists in the area of synthetic biology. The company contributes the key technologies necessary to develop and produce new therapeutics and vaccines. Furthermore, GENEART customers rely on the company to improve enzymes, such as the ones used as additives in detergents, and to construct genetically altered bacteria, which produce complex biopolymers or degrade polymers like plastic or petroleum. In its R&D program, GENEART AG collaborates with several well-known international universities and research institutes. Among these are the Universities of Regensburg, Oxford and Helsinki as well as NIH, Harvard, Yale, the EuroVacc Foundation and the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative. The EU, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Bavarian Research Foundation (Bayerische Forschungsstiftung) support several GENEART research projects. The GENEART AG has also granted research-related Indication Vaccination Stage of research and development Phase II HIV vaccine Josef-Engert-Strae 11 93053 Regensburg Germany Tel.: +49 941 94276-0 Fax: +49 941 94276-711 info@geneart.com www.geneart.com
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GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals
Founded The Dresden site was founded as Saechsisches Serumwerk and Institute of Bacteriotherapy in 1911. About 80 years later the British pharmaceutical company SmithKline Beecham acquired the company. In 2000, when SmithKline Beecham merged with Glaxo Wellcome, the site became a part of the new global corporation GlaxoSmithKline. Employees More than 600 employees Area of research and development GSK Biologicals Dresden has specialised in the development and manufacturing of u vaccines for many years. The core product seasonal u vaccine has been produced, egg-based, in Dresden since 1975. Presently, GSK Biologicals is developing a novel seasonal u vaccine for elderly people targeting greater vaccine efcacy. The company also holds the worlds rst registrations for a pre-pandemic and pandemic H5N1 inuenza vaccine, approved by the European authorities since May 2008. In case of a u pandemic the Dresden GSK site is prepared to produce pandemic vaccine. GSK is involved in the research and development of a cell-culture-based inuenza vaccine in North America. Because of its experience in inuenza vaccines the Dresden site is a key candidate for the establishment of future large-scale production. Indication Vaccines Stage of research and development The clinical trial for the new seasonal u vaccine is currently ongoing. Market entry of this new vaccine shall be in 2011/2012. Collaboration GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Dresden, is closely integrated within the worldwide GSK-Biologicals network, and thus any cross-cooperation is done via GSK Biologicals, Belgium.
Glycotope GmbH
Founded 2001 Employees Approximately 55 in Berlin and 45 in Heidelberg Funding More than 50 million euros Area of research and development GLYCOTOPE GmbH, a worldwide leading Biotech Company in the eld of glycomics, has developed new technologies for lead optimisation of antibodies and other biopharmaceuticals. The glycooptimisation technology is based on a toolbox of innovative glycoengineered human cell lines (GlycoExpressTM) which are perfectly suited to the production of glycooptimised products with a new patent protection. GLYCOTOPE currently develops two unique proprietary and two secondgeneration antibodies all of which are glycooptimised and conducive to cancer therapy as well as one glycooptimised second-generation protein hormone. The rst clinical trial will begin in 2009. GLYCOTOPE operates in two locations: Berlin and Heidelberg (cGMP facility with four suites, max. 2 x 300 L mammalian cell fermentations and a track record of over 25 years). Finally, as a one-stop service shop, GLYCOTOPE offers the development of biopharmaceuticals from early preclinical stage to the production under cGMP, adding value through humanisation and glycooptimisation technologies. Indication Therapeutic indication: cancer, immunology, infertility Stage of research and development Five therapeutic products are currently in preclinical development. The rst clinical phase I trial (therapeutic antibody) will begin in 2009. Collaboration Yes, with around 15 companies overall from Biotech and Pharma Robert-Rssle-Strae 10 13125 Berlin Germany Tel.: +49 30 9489260-4 Fax: +49 30 9489260-9 info@glycotope.com www.glycotope.com
Niederlassung der SmithKline Beecham Pharma GmbH & Co. KG Zirkusstrae 40 01069 Dresden Germany Tel.: + 49 351 4561-0 Fax: + 49 351 4561-211 ssw.info@gsk.com www.glaxosmithkline.de/html/ untemehmen/dresden.html
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Heidelberg Pharma AG
Area of research and development Preclinical services Heidelberg Pharma AG is a drug development company that focuses on cancer. The company has also provided services for the preclinical development of anti-cancer and anti-inammatory drugs since 2008. Heidelberg Pharma is situated near Heidelberg in Ladenburg, Germany. Heidelberg Pharma AG offers services in the eld of lead optimisation and preclinical drug proling. During this phase, the companys expertise in bioanalytical analysis and in vitro and in vivo pharmacology capabilities go hand in hand to assure optimal results in form of creative solutions, accurate reporting and qualied data, referenced against clinical standards. Discovery and development Despite more and more specic antibodies having been developed successfully for the treatment of cancer, there still is a need to increase their anti-tumour efcacy. The discovery of a highly potent yet targeted therapy may be achieved by coupling a highly potent toxin to an antibody with high afnity and specicity for a tumour cell associated target. Heidelberg Pharma is currently exploring a number of linker and toxin technologies to build an optimal antibodytoxin candidate. HDP 15.0022 is an enhanced prodrug of clofarabine. This new patentprotected chemical entity was derived from the nucleoside clofarabine using the companys proprietary EPD Technology. Preclinically, HDP 15.0022 is signicantly more effective than clofarabine and lacks its severe myelosuppression. Heidelberg Pharma expects EPD-clofarabine to provide a new potent anti-cancer drug to be taken orally once a day.
Schriesheimer Strae 101 68526 Ladenburg Germany Tel.: +49 6203 1009-13 Fax: +49 6203 1009-19 info@heidelberg-pharma.com www.heidelberg-pharma.com
Hannes Schlender, Press Spokesman/Head of Public Relations Department Inhoffenstrae 7 38124 Braunschweig Germany Tel.: +49 531 618114-02 or -00 hannes.schlender@helmholtz-hzi.de www.helmholtz-hzi.de
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IMTM GmbH
Founded 1996 Employees 40 Leipziger Strae 44 39120 Magdeburg Germany Tel.: +49 391 611735-0 Fax: +49 391 611735-1 info@imtm.de www.imtm.de Area of research and development IMTM is dedicated to the development of new therapeutic options for inammatory diseases and fulls unmet needs through preclinical services for special immune toxicology including large animal facilities. IMTM has developed a new therapeutic concept, PETIR Drug Design (peptidase targeted immunoregulation), which represents an effective approach to inhibiting chronic inammation. This unique PETIR technology promises a breakthrough in the treatment of a large number of inammatory and autoimmune diseases. PETIR drugs act on central pathological inammatory processes including the activation of natural T regulatory cells (Treg) and the direct suppression of activated inammatory T cells, as well as other concomitant cells through one combined mode of action. The targeted diseases include autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis or inammatory bowel diseases, allergies like bronchial asthma, dermal diseases like acne or psoriasis, as well as transplant rejection and atherosclerosis. Indication Autoimmunity, chronic inammation Stage of research and development IP10.C8 First-in-Class topical PETIR drug: Phase II psoriasis, Phase II acne IP10.C9 First-in-Class oral PETIR drug: Phase I inammatory bowel diseases (Crohns disease and ulcerative colitis) Collaboration Yes
ImVisioN GmbH
Founded 2005 Employees 4 Funding ImVisioN has raised in excess of 8 million euros to date. Area of research and development ImVisioN is a clinical stage immunotherapy company developing innovative treatments to cure allergies. Safe, fast acting, efcient and convenient curative immunotherapy can transform the current standards of allergy treatment and address a large patient population. Lead products target patients suffering from allergies against cat dander, birch pollen or house dust mites. ImVisioNs innovative allergen immunotherapy combines intralymphatic immunotherapy (ILIT) with Modular-Antigen-Transportation (MAT) proteins. ILIT involves the injection of immunotherapeutics directly into the lymph node. Lymph nodes contain high amounts of antigen presenting cells (APCs) together with their corresponding immune cells, which are necessary for a curative immune response. MAT proteins are tailor-made recombinant allergens for ILIT that are rapidly taken up by APCs and improve the introduction of the allergen to the immune system. ILIT with MAT molecules is expected to be safer and more efcacious in inducing the desired immune response than conventional allergens. Indication Allergies Stage of research and development Lead product in Phase I/II clinical studies Further information Cat-MAT (IVN201) immunotherapy to treat cat dander allergies in Phase I/II Birch-MAT immunotherapy to treat birch pollen allergies in preclinical Mite-MAT immunotherapy to treat house dust mite allergies in research Dr Martin Steiner Feodor-Lynen-Strae 5 30625 Hanover Germany Tel.: +49 511 538896-76 Fax: +49 511 538896-74 m.steiner@imvision-therapeutics.com www.imvision-therapeutics.com
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KeyNeurotek Pharmaceuticals AG
Founded 2000 Employees 27 Leipziger Strae 44 39120 Magdeburg Germany Tel.: +49 391 611722-0 Fax:+49 391 611722-1 frank.striggow@keyneurotek.de www.keyneurotek.de Area of research and development KeyNeurotek Pharmaceuticals, a privately held biotechnology company, is focused on the development and marketing of innovative drugs against autoimmune diseases and degenerative disorders of the central nervous system (CNS). The company has unique functional, tissue-based high-throughput screening platforms for compatible ex vivo and in vivo studies (TELOMICS). Based on this, KeyNeurotek Pharmaceuticals pursues a number of drug candidates in various pre-clinical and clinical stages. The most advanced compound, KN38-7271, a CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonist, is currently in Phase IIa with 97 comatose patients with traumatic brain injury and has been granted the orphan drug designation by the EMEA. Study results are expected in H2/2009. At present, there is no targeted therapy for these patients. The companys second clinical lead candidate is KN203, a -opioid receptor agonist with superior effects on bladder muscle regulation. KN203 is in Phase IIa/proof-of-concept investigation with patients with urge urinary incontinence/overactive bladder. Indication CNS, autoimmune diseases, urology Stage of research and development Two lead projects in Phase IIa/proof-of-concept studies Collaboration Bayer Grnenthal Others Further information KN38-7271, traumatic brain injury (TBI), Phase IIa KN203, urinary incontinence/overactive bladder, Phase IIa
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Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems Magdeburg (MPI Magdeburg)
Founded 1996 Employees 216 (as of 31 July 2008) Area of research and development: The Max Planck Institute Magdeburg is dedicated to the engineering sciences and bridges the gap between basic research and industrial applications. The main research activities are focused on the analysis and synthesis, the design and control of processes in chemical and bioengineering. Scientists from different disciplines such as engineering, chemistry, biology, mathematics and computer sciences add their specic knowledge to the research work, thereby developing new methods and tools for designing modern, efcient processes for both current and future industrial applications. Examples of research The research group Bioprocess Engineering focuses on establishing highly developed cell culture technologies and sophisticated product recovery steps aiming to achieve the full potential of biotechnological production methods. The Systems Biology group develops and uses new mathematical models to describe cellular processes such as signal transduction and regulation. This knowledge has great impact on the development of novel therapeutics by computer simulation (in silico) studies. A main topic of the research group Physical and Chemical Foundations of Process Engineering is the design of processes capable of isolating and purifying ne chemicals. A particularly difcult task in this area is the separation of chiral compounds which are essential in pharmaceutical industry. Indication Cell culture technologies, signal transduction, cell metabolism, in silico studies, separation of chiral compounds Collaboration The research group Bioprocess Process Engineering is collaborating with the following pharmaceutical companies: Bavarian Nordic EMC microcollections GmbH, Tbingen Biologika GmbH, Dessau-Rolau Merckle Biotec GmbH, Ulm ProBioGen AG, Berlin Sartorius AG, Gttingen The Max Planck Institute Magdeburg also maintains relations with Bayer Schering Pharma AG and Astra Zeneca GmbH.
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Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems Sandtorstrae 1 39106 Magdeburg Germany Tel.: +49 391 6110-0 Fax: +49 391 6110-500 info@mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de www.mpi-magdeburg.mpg.de
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medac GmbH
Founded 1970 Employees 580 Funding 100% private company Area of research and development medac is a pharmaceutical company that has specialised in the treatment of malignant diseases. Many years of experience have made the company one of the leading manufacturers of oncology products in Germany and in international markets. medac also offers new and well-proven therapeutic options in the elds of urology, autoimmune diseases and brinolysis. Moreover, medac is one of the few companies also engaged in the eld of diagnostics. Besides special diagnostics to detect infectious diseases, medac combines therapeutic and diagnostic tools to establish the highest efcacy in treatment procedures. Indication Oncology, haematology, autoimmune diseases, diagnosis of infectious diseases, cancer diagnostic Stage of research and development Phase II: 1 product Phase III: 2 products Collaboration Yes, various European companies Theaterstrae 6 22880 Wedel Germany Tel.: +49 4103 8006-441 Fax: +49 4103 8006-399 contact@medac.de www.medac.de
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MediGene AG
Founded 1994 Employees 130 Gabriele Jegge Lochamer Strae 11 82152 Martinsried Germany Tel.: +49 89 856529-0 Fax: +49 89 856529-20 medigene@medigene.com www.medigene.com Area of research and development MediGene AG is a publicly quoted (Frankfurt: Prime Standard: MDG) biotechnology company located in Martinsried/Munich, Germany, with subsidiaries in Oxford, UK, and San Diego, USA. MediGene concentrates on researching, developing and commercialising new drugs in two therapeutic areas: cancer and autoimmune diseases. MediGene is the rst German biotech company to bring drugs onto the market. At the moment, our drugs are distributed by partner companies. Medium-term, we intend to start our own marketing activities. MediGene has several drug candidates in clinical development, some of which providing substantial sales potential. In addition, we possess innovative platform technologies, which enable the search for other therapeutic substances. Licensed products complement our proprietary drug portfolio. Indication MediGenes drug portfolio on the market: Eligard (prostate cancer); Veregen/Polyphenon (genital warts) Stage of research and development EndoTAGTM-1 (Phase II nalized for pancreatic cancer; Phase II started for breast cancer; Phase-I for various other solid tumour indications) RhuDex (Phase II started for rheumatoid arthritis) Oncolytic viruses (HSV) (Phase II started for colon tumour metastases)
Micromet AG
Founded 1993 Employees 100 Area of research and development Micromet AG, located in Munich and Bethesda (USA), puts novel concepts in immunotherapy to work. Using proprietary technologies, the company is building a strong pipeline of innovative drug candidates for the treatment of cancer, inammation and autoimmune disease. Two candidates are currently in clinical trials. The company has established a powerful drug development platform, BiTE (bi-specic T-cell engagers), a unique drug format that leverages the outstanding cytotoxic potential of T cells to precisely eliminate pathogenic cells. In addition, Micromet is exploiting the potential of SCAs (single-chain antibodies) for the development of novel drug candidates. The company has attracted both top-tier life science investors and corporate partners such as MedImmune/AstraZeneca, Inc., Enzon Pharmaceuticals Inc., Bayer Schering and Merck Serono. Indication and stage of research and development Micromets drug portfolio and indications: Blinatumomab (MT103/MEDI-538) Phase II: acute lymphoblastic leukaemia Blinatumomab (MT103/MEDI-538) Phase I: non-Hodgkins lymphoma Adecatumumab (MT201) Phase II/I: metastatic breast cancer Collaboration In May 2006, Micromet AG merged with CancerVax Corporation (formerly NASDAQ: CNVX) to form Micromet, Inc. (NASDAQ: MITI). Further information Latest nance news from 2008: Micromet closed a 40-million US dollar private equity placement and Micromet expanded their committed equity nancing facility to 75 million US dollars. Angela Lucks Staffelseestrae 2 81477 Munich Germany Tel.: +49 89 895277-0 Fax: +49 89 895277-105 info@micromet.de www.micromet.de
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MOLOGEN AG
Founded 1998 Employees 44 Fabeckstrae 30 14195 Berlin Germany Tel.: +49 30 841788-0 Fax: +49 30 841788-50 info@mologen.com www.mologen.com Area of research and development MOLOGEN AG is a German biotechnology company located in Berlin, specialising in the development of innovative DNA-based therapeutics and vaccines against diseases with a high medical demand. The proprietary platform technologies MIDGE (Minimalistic Immunogenically Dened Gene Expression) and dSLIM (double Stem Loop Immunomodulator) build the foundation for the companys business activities. MOLOGEN AG focuses on cancer treatment and combating infectious diseases in humans and domestic animals. Founded in 1998, MOLOGEN AG was one of the rst German biotechnology companies to go public. Shares are listed on the General Standard segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (ISIN DE 0006637200). Indication Cancer, infectious diseases, immunology, gene therapy, vaccines Stage of research and development Cancer therapy with dSLIM (MGN1703): clinical phase Ib/IIa Cell-based gene therapy against cancer (MGN1601), orphan drug status: preclinical DNA vaccine against human leishmaniasis (MGN1331), funded by EU: preclinical DNA vaccine against FeLV (MGN1225): preclinical Collaboration Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich, Switzerland Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin University of Veterinary Medicine, Hanover Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI), Seattle, USA
MorphoSys AG
Founded 1992 Employees 350 Area of research and development MorphoSys AG (listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange: MOR) is one of the worlds leading biotechnology companies focusing on fully human antibodies. MorphoSys is developing the next generation of antibodies with its proprietary technologies, not only for research and diagnostics purposes, but also as highly effective and precise therapeutics. HuCAL (Human Combinatorial Antibody Library) is a very powerful technology for the rapid and automated production of specic antibodies. The most distinctive feature of the library is its unique capability to optimise fully human antibodies to predened specications, allowing MorphoSys researchers and their partners to Engineer the Medicines of Tomorrow. MorphoSyss goal is to establish HuCAL as the technology of choice for antibody generation in all market sectors. Sectors of indication are cancer, immunology and CNS, for example. MorphoSys is a protable high-growth company, building a strong therapeutic antibody pipeline with more than 50 projects in development mainly with its 13 partnerships, but also increasingly on its own. Notably, the cooperation with Novartis will account for 40 million euros per year until 2018. With total operating revenues of 62 million euros in 2007 an organic increase of 17 percent over 2006 MorphoSys will prot from the successful drug development of its partners through milestone and future royalty payments for marketed HuCAL-based drugs. Mario Brkulj Investor Relations Lena-Christ-Strae 48 82152 Martinsried Tel.: +49 89 89927-0 Fax: +49 89 89927-222 Mario.Brkulj@morphosys.com www.morphosys.com
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Nexigen GmbH
Founded 2007 Employees 10 Ludwig-Erhard-Allee 2 53175 Bonn Germany Tel.: +49 228 536856-0 Fax: +49 228 536856-29 info@nexigen.de www.nexigen.de Area of research and development Nexigen GmbH develops new drugs with fewer unwanted side effects and innovative modes of action. Nexigens proprietary drugs target disease mechanisms, which common technology is unable to address. Nexigens technology is able to close the gap between small molecule drugs and therapeutic antibodies. Nexigen developed a technology which allows the discovery and optimisation of peptide-derived drugs to target intracellular proteins. Its technology platform is broadly applicable to various indications. The companys own drug discovery pipeline focuses on anti-viral and cancer indications. Indication Anti-infectives (HIV, HCV), cancer Stage of research and development Drug discovery Collaboration Yes, with a top-10 pharma company
Novosom AG
Founded 1999 Employees 20 Area of research and development By enabling the development and commercialisation of innovative oligonucleotide therapeutics, Novosom AG is a biopharmaceutical company that is working towards clinic therapies. The company has taken a major step towards functional oligonucleotide therapeutics with the discovery of the Smarticles technology: The adaptation of the therapeutic principle to the cells interior. As such, Smarticles is establishing itself as an enabling technology for oligonucleotide systemic therapies. Novosom and its partners develop unique oligonucleotide therapeutics for inammation, autoimmune, oncology and liver diseases. Oligonucleotide therapies comprise antisense, decoy and RNAi drugs that inhibit the production of targeted proteins with absolute specicity. They are the next major product generating engine of the pharmaceutical industry and are able to work around a number of unsolved issues which other therapeutics face. Indication Inammation, autoimmune, oncology Stage of research and development marticles have received IND (Phase I clearance) from the FDA for a DNAi S candidate in oncology (collaboration with ProNAi Therapeutics). ovosom is developing an anti-CD40 product candidate based on an N exclusive licence from Isis Pharmaceuticals for the use of CD40 antisense inhibitors. CD40 is a well established target for both inammatory and autoimmune diseases, for indications such as Crohns disease, organ transplant or rheumatoid arthritis. Collaboration es. Multiple undisclosed collaborations with international pharmaceutical Y and biotech companies. Public collaborations include BoehringerIngelheim, Isis Pharmaceuticals and ProNAi Therapeutics. ovosom is participating as a consortium member in two research projects N funded by the European Community. Research focuses are oncology (FP6 Apotherapy project) and atherosclerosis (FP7 AtheroRemo project), both funded by the European Community. Additional activities include academic collaborations with several universities and other research institutions. Weinbergweg 22 06120 Halle (Saale) Germany Tel.: +49 345 55568-36 Fax: +49 345 55568-46 info@novosom.com www.novosom.com
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NOXXON Pharma AG
Founded 1997 Employees 41 Max-Dohrn-Strae 810 10589 Berlin Germany Tel.: +49 30 726247-0 Fax: +49 30 726247-225 noxxon@noxxon.net www.noxxon.net Funding NOXXON raised 37 million euros in a Series C nancing round in May 2007 Area of research and development NOXXON Pharma AG is a privately owned biopharmaceutical company focusing on the development of innovative therapeutics based on its unique proprietary Spiegelmer Technology. Spiegelmers are highly specic oligonucleotide therapeutics, designed to deactivate their target protein through a direct molecular interaction, working on a similar concept to monoclonal antibodies. They are non-toxic and non-immunogenic. Furthermore, they are produced entirely by well established chemical processes. NOXXONs lead products are NOX-A12 an SDF-1 antagonist for stem cell mobilization and neovascular disorders and NOX-E36 an MCP-1 antagonist for the treatment of lupus nephritis. Indication Oncology, immunology, ophthalmology Stage of research and development NOXXONs lead programmes will enter clinical development in 2009 Collaboration NOXXON cooperates with pharmaceutical companies in the discovery and development of novel therapeutics. Among its partners are: Pzer Inc. licensing and drug discovery partnership. Multiple targets. Hoffmann-La Roche licensing and drug discovery partnership. Multiple targets in inammation. Eli Lilly and Co. licensing and discovery collaboration in migraine.
Partec GmbH
Founded 2000 Employees 75 Area of research and development Since 2002, Partec is active in the development of dedicated diagnostic solutions for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, which are especially adapted to the requirements and infrastructural situation of developing and emerging countries. The key technologies used by Partec for the instrumentation are uorescence-based ow cytometry and uorescence-based microscopy. Partec introduced the rst mobile/portable and battery or solar panel operated device classes in ow cytometry and uorescence microscopy. Furthermore, Partec develops uniquely affordable and easy-to-use reagent kits which are partially designed based on lyophilized monoclonal antibodies uorochrome combinations. These dry kits are a breakthrough for treatment programmes because the use of this new class of reagents offers for the rst time in HIV monitoring, AIDS patient follow-up diagnostics and malaria testing to eliminate any needs for cooling chain and cool storage as is required for conventional kits. Indication Immune status diagnostics Stage of research and development CyFlow and CyScope, including reagent kits, have already been successfully introduced to the market. Collaboration Yes Am Flugplatz 13 02828 Grlitz Germany Tel.: +49 358 18746-0 Fax: +49 358 18746-70 info@partec-healthcare.com www.partec.com
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Phenex Pharmaceuticals AG
Founded 2002 Employees 18 Area of research and development Phenex Pharmaceuticals is a privately nanced biotechnology company focusing on innovative drug candidates that act on nuclear receptors (NR); a well-accepted pharmacological drug target class. Its lead project, FXR, focuses on the development of an innovative, small-moleculebased approach to oral antidiabetic and lipid lowering treatments. Phenexs proprietary FXR agonist Px-101 demonstrates potent triglyceride and cholesterol lowering capabilities in conjunction with an improvement in insulin sensitivity. This project is in preclinical development and a rst Phase I clinical trial is scheduled for late 2010. At the same time, Phenex is developing a different type of FXR agonist for innovative therapeutic approaches in hepatologic indications with unmet medical needs, such as liver regeneration, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and liver brosis. Phenex is offering its resources and capabilities in the eld of NR to customers within the pharmaceutical industry, through everything from contract services to integrated research collaborations. More than 50 international companies in Europe, Japan and North America are customers of Phenex. In October 2008, Phenex raised 8.2 million euros from a syndicate of institutional and private investors. Phenex is investing these proceeds into its proprietary drug discovery programmes targeting FXR and LXR, two key nuclear receptors involved in different disease physiologies. The companys value driver is its FXR project, which aims to develop a breakthrough therapy for metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes. Phenex is drawing together leading experts from the elds of nuclear receptor biology, medicinal chemistry, metabolic diseases, gastroenterology and hepatology to develop these innovative therapeutic concepts. Geb J542N, BASF Werksgelnde 67056 Ludwigshafen Germany Tel.: +49 621 671960-0 Fax: +49 621 671960-10 info@phenex-pharma.com www.phenex-pharma.com
Prof. Dr. Alexander Pfeifer Reuterstrae 2b 53115 Bonn Tel.: +49 228 735410 Fax: +49 228 735404 pharma@uni-bonn.de www.pharmazentrum.uni-bonn.de
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Pieris AG
Founded 2001 Employees 35 Rita Fischer Lise-Meitner-Strae 30 85354 Freising-Weihenstephan Germany Tel.: +49 8161 14114-00 Fax: +49 8161 14114-44 info@pieris-ag.com www.pieris-ag.com Area of research and development Pieris AG is a biopharmaceutical company engaged in the discovery and development of Anticalins for the diagnosis and treatment of life-threatening human disorders. Exploiting extensive know-how in protein engineering as part of a broad intellectual property portfolio, the company applies a balanced risk business model to the development of its Anticalin candidates. Recognising the enormous market potential of protein-based drugs, Pieris is committed to becoming an integrated drug discovery and development company. Anticalins are derived from lipocalins, a family of low molecular weight proteins that are naturally and abundantly expressed in human tissues and body uids. While the overall structure of hypervariable loops supported by a conserved -sheet framework is reminiscent of immunoglobulins, lipocalins differ considerably from antibodies in terms of size, being composed of a single polypeptide chain of 160180 amino acids which is marginally larger than a single immunoglobulin domain. In terms of therapeutic focus for its proprietary pipeline, Pieris is currently engaged in Anticalin programs with broad potential application in oncology. Partnered therapeutics programmes span a range of potential therapeutic areas.
PLANTON GmbH
Founded 2001 Employees 15 Area of research and development PLANTON focuses on the development of antimicrobial peptides as a therapeutic alternative for presently available antibiotics. The ongoing development of resistant microbes overcoming antibiotics that are present on the market is an increasing medical problem making the development of new innovative antibiotic drugs necessary. To target this yet unmet need, PLANTON has combined its comprehensive knowledge of antimicrobial peptides and its proprietary technology to work on recombinant protein production to advance the development of a new class of antibiotics. All peptides developed by PLANTON are human bio-molecules with a broad antibiotic efcacy and a special mechanism avoiding resistance of human pathogens. The molecules in development are protected by appropriate intellectual property rights. Currently preclinical development is ongoing and rst clinical trials are planned in the near future. Indication Anti-infective treatment Stage of research and development Preclinical status Am Kiel-Kanal 44 24106 Kiel Germany Tel.: +49 431 38015-0 Fax: +49 431 38015-11 info@planton.de www.planton.de
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PLS-Design GmbH
Founded 2004 Employees 12 Funding Privately nanced Area of research and development Diagnostics: Innovative diagnostics for Insect venom allergy tests based on patent-protected recombinant allergens. Allergen-specic chimeric IgE for allergy test standardization. High-afnity IgE quantication tool for monitoring anti-IgE therapies. Chimeric IgY-technology to reduce false signals in clinical relevant assays. Therapeutics: Novel therapeutics for insect venom allergy using recombinant allergens. Anti-inammatory drug based on enzymatic depletion on Complement. Drug development: Patent-protected proprietary selection system for PNA-aptamers. Indication Immunology, inammation, drug development Stage of research and development Clinical Phase I with partner: CompDepletin/HC3-1496 (Anti-inammatory drug). Preclinical, licensing opportunity: Allergy therapeutics. R&D, licensing opportunity: Allergy standardization, Chimeric IgY-technology, PNA-Aptamers. Product development with partner : Allergy diagnostics, IgE-AviQuant (Monitoring of anti-IgE therapies). Collaboration Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics, USA InCode Biopharmaceuticals, USA GenWay Inc, USA
PLS-Design
Eichenstrae 42 20255 Hamburg Germany Tel.: +49 40 40186-138 Fax: +49 40 40186-237 info@pls-design.com www.pls-design.com
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PomBioTech GmbH
Founded 2006 Employees 15 Starterzentrum der Universitt des Saarlandes Campus Gebude A1-1 66123 Saarbrcken Germany Tel.: +49 681 302-64901 Fax: +49 681 302-2578 info@pombiotech.de www.pombiotech.de Area of research and development PomBioTech offers custom made ssion yeast strains that are specically tailored to meet your need. When dealing with proteins that are difcult to express functionally in other microbes, ssion yeast has in many instances turned out to be a suited model system in our hands. At comparatively low cost the PomBioTech researchers will make a proof-of-concept study to check whether your protein of interest can be functionally produced by recombinant S. pombe. Later on, our ssion yeast specic fermentation facilities may be used for production; alternatively, the tailor-made strains may be utilized by the customer himself. Currently, we have a variety of recombinant ssion yeast strains at our disposal that express a set of different human cytochromes P450 and that can be directly used for the generation of P450 metabolite. Indication Phase 1 and Phase 2 metabolism, CRO Stage of research and development Different Cytochrome P450 expressing ssion yeast strains are available Collaboration Yes, e.g. Solvay Inc. Further information We at PomBioTech have a variety of recombinant ssion yeast strains at our disposal that express a set of different human cytochrome P450s. These include both liver P450s (like CYP3A4 or CYP2D6) that metabolize a large variety of xenobiotica and steroidogenic P450s (such as CYP11B1 or CYP11B2) that catalyse very specic steroid hydroxylation reactions. Using these P450 expressing strains, we are able to offer custom production of P450 metabolites up to technical scale. The list of human P450s that we have successfully expressed in ssion yeast is constantly growing. For more information please visit our homepage: www.pombiotech.com
Probiodrug AG
Founded 1997 Employees 75 Status of research and development Probiodrugs core competence is the elucidation of the structure, biochemistry, biology and pathophysiology of regulatory peptides and enzymes modifying the activity of specic proteins and pathways. Based on this expertise, the company is developing inhibitors and ligands targeting key enzymes such as proteases and kinases. The most promising compounds are then developed by Probiodrug as drug candidates for the treatment of major diseases such as Alzheimers disease or chronic inammatory disorders. The company aims to bring these compounds through preclinical and clinical development up to proof-of-concept trials to provide a strong basis for selectively out-licensing its drugs to the pharmaceutical industry or entering into co-development partnerships. Indication CNS, immunology Weinbergweg 22 06126 Halle (Saale) Germany Tel.: +49 345 555990-0 Fax: +49 345 555990-1 info@probiodrug.de www.probiodrug.de
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ProBioGen AG
Founded 1994 Employees 65 Goethestrae 54 13086 Berlin Germany Tel.: +49 30 924006-0 Fax: +49 30 924006-19 info@probiogen.de www.probiogen.de Area of research and development Contract cell line development, process development and manufacturing of mammalian cell-based drug candidates for Tox testing, Phase I and Phase II trials. Proprietary cutting-edge platform technologies for vaccine manufacturing and immunogenicity testing successfully introduced into the market place last year. Stage of research and development AGE1.cr a new duck-cell line platform for exible vaccine manufacturing fully established. First license deals closed in 2008. ALN articial human lymph node technology used for preclinical contract evaluation of customers new drug candidates. Collaboration Yes
Proteo Biotech AG
Founded 2000 Employees 6 Area of research and development The Proteo Biotech AG is located in Kiel, Germany and researches, develops and markets nature identical compounds for biological and medical research as well as for use as pharmaceuticals. The main focus is on anti-inammatory drugs, in particular on the Companys lead product, the human elastase inhibitor Elan. Elan is a highly potent down regulator of tissue destruction in the course of inammatory diseases, especially those affecting blood vessels, lungs or muscles. For the clinical development of Elan and the development of other product candidates, Proteo has established a network of world- renowned research institutes, physicians and hospitals all over Europe and the USA. Proteo intends to out-license selected indications and to establish international strategic alliances in order to open up new elds of application for marketing. Indication Inammatory diseases, reperfusion injury, transplantation, PAH Stage of research and development Elan: Phase I (i.v.), completed 2006 Orphan Drug Status (EU) for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension Phase II, Kiel (i.v.) started 11/2008 Phase II, Cairo (i.v.) granted Collaboration Minapharm Pharmaceuticals SAE, Cairo, Egypt Artes Biotechnology GmbH, Andernach HBT Hycult Biotechnology, Netherlands Eurogentec S.A., Belgium CRS GmbH, Kiel University of Alberta, Canada University of Stanford, USA University of Kiel Am Kiel-Kanal 44 24106 Kiel Germany Tel.: +49 431 8888-462 info@proteo.de www.proteo.de
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REVOTAR Biopharmaceuticals AG
Founded 2000 Employees 25 in Hennigsdorf/Berlin Funding Revotar raised 9 million euros in 2007/2008 and further commitments of another 3 million euros based on certain conditions to be met. Area of research and development Revotar develops innovative drugs for inammatory indications such as psoriasis, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and acute lung injury (ALI). Its lead candidate Bimosiamose, a pan-selectin antagonist, has already passed several clinical phase I and phase IIa trials in asthma, COPD and psoriasis with a good safety and efcacy prole in nearly 200 patients and volunteers. Revotar has built up a fully integrated drug discovery and development engine encompassing medicinal chemistry, analytics, molecular biology, pharmacology, ADMET, QA/QC, in vitro models and assays as well as cheminformatics in inammation on the one hand and preclinical/clinical development and CMC on the other hand. In summer 2006, Revotar announced a Start-Up Development Agreement with a US pharma company for the further development of Bimosiamose in one major disease area. Indication Revotar develops innovative drugs for inammatory indications such as psoriasis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma and acute lung injury (ALI). Stage of research and development In January 2009, Revotar announced the start of a Phase II study to evaluate the safety and efcacy of Bimosiamose 5percent Cream for the treatment of patients with chronic plaque-type psoriasis. The cream is a new topical formulation of the pan-selectin antagonist Bimosiamose. The Phase II study is designed as a randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled multi-centre study comprising 105 male patients aged 18 years or older, or postmenopausal or sterile female patients. Revotar will initiate further phase IIa studies in the respiratory area during 2009/2010. Furthermore, Revotar has one repositioning project of an already marketed drug in preclinical development and further preclinical backup compounds in inammatory diseases. Collaboration Revotar maintains scientic collaborations such as with the Charit and various other international institutes and universities Neuendorfstrae 24 A 16761 Hennigsdorf Germany Tel.: +49 3302 202501-0 Fax: +49 3302 202501-1 info@revotar-ag.de www.revotar.de
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RIEMSER Arzneimittel AG
Founded 1990 Employees 640 An der Wiek 7 17493 Greifswald Insel Riems Germany Tel.: +49 383 5176-0 Fax: +49 383 5176-48 info@riemser.com www.riemser.com Area of research and development RIEMSER is a mid-sized speciality pharmaceutical company that markets primarily branded speciality or niche products, mainly for the area of Human Rx Specialities. Business model: Currently, the Human Rx Specialities segment focuses primarily on therapeutic products for dermatology, anti-infectives and dental. The company is expanding its oncology business. The company is also active in other specialities in the area of OTC (mainly dermatology) and animal health. Riemser Arzneimittel AG incorporates pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities and business units, such as the Sanavita Pharmaceuticals GmbH in Werne, Fatol Arzneimittel in Schiffweiler, the well-established Leipziger Arzneimittel Werk, Rsch Medizintechnik in Berlin, Dr Herbrand KG in Gengenbach and facilities in Mnster and Kleinostheim. Stage of research and development RIEMSER AG owns more than 400 drug registrations in Germany as well as abroad. Furthermore, RIEMSER has more than 200 trademarks and 70 patents and patent applications, supporting the development of new products. In detail, these are: over 400 human medicine drug registrations in its home markets, over 200 trademarks and 70 patents, and over 30 animal health drug licences in both Germany and abroad. RIEMSER AG completed, or is in the process of the completion of: over 40 clinical re-registrations and 36 post-marketing studies (phase IV). Collaboration With commitment and in close co-operation with universities, academies, clinics and research institutes of international renown in Germany and Europe, the company carries out research on medical drugs for humans and animals.
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SILENCE Therapeutics AG
Founded The company was established in 1998 as a spin-off from Ribozyme Pharmaceuticals Inc. Colorado, USA and nanced by MPM Capital. Employees 38 in Berlin Funding Approximately 30 million euros from venture capital (Apax, MPM Capital, Novartis Venture Fund) until 2005 and approximately 20 million pounds sterling from institutional investors (Fidelity, Insight, Artemis, Oak, Garthmore and other funds) through its holding company Silence Therapeutics plc listed on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) of the London Stock Exchange after the reverse merger in 2005. Area of research and development SILENCE Therapeutics AG is the leading RNAi therapeutics company in Europe. The Company has developed innovative, proprietary shortinterfering RNA (siRNA) molecules called AtuRNAi and a proprietary systemic delivery system for siRNA called AtuPLEX. SILENCEs Freedom to Operate is based on strong patents issued in the USA, Europe and other territories. As of February 2009, SILENCE is one of two biotech companies worldwide which own issued patents in the eld of siRNA therapeutics. Indication Cancer (in-house) and a broad range of other therapeutic areas with SILENCEs partners. Stage of research and development Out of seven clinical siRNA programs worldwide, as of February 2009, there are 3 clinical programs (one in phase II, and two in phase I) with SILENCEs AtuRNAi molecules developed by SILENCEs partners Pzer and Quark which conrms SILENCEs leadership in the eld of siRNA therapeutics. SILENCE lead internal program Atu027 will enter in Q2/2009 a phase I clinical study with patients with GI, lung and other cancers. Collaboration The company has established validating partnerships with AstraZeneca (15 million US dollars upfront/equity, 400 million US dollars milestone payments), Pzer (95 million US dollars milestone payments) and Quark and academic collaborations with the Charit and various other universities in Europe and North America.
SYGNIS Pharma AG
Area of research and development SYGNIS Pharma AG, headquartered in Heidelberg, is a specialty biopharmaceutical company listed on the Prime Standard of the German stock exchange (Frankfurt: LIO; ISIN DE0005043509; Prime Standard). The company is focused on the research, development and marketing of innovative therapies to treat disorders of the central nervous system. These include strokes, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and neurological disorders resulting from injuries to the brain or spinal cord. All these disorders are characterised by the fact that, as the disease progresses, nerve cells are damaged and die. In this respect, SYGNIS takes a dual therapeutic approach that aims to effect both acute treatment and regeneration of the nervous system. SYGNISs product pipeline currently consists of three compounds, AX200, AX2001 and SY300, which are in clinical and preclinical development. AX200, the companys most advanced drug candidate, successfully completed Phase IIa of clinical development for the blockbuster indication acute ischemic stroke. The enrolment for a multinational Phase II efcacy study is planned to commence in spring 2009. Alongside its development in SYGNISs lead indication of acute stroke, AX200 received the orphan drug designation for ALS and spinal cord injury from the European Commission in 2008. In November 2007, SYGNIS agreed on a long-term manufacturing agreement with the Indian pharmaceutical company Dr Reddys that secures the supply of AX200 until 2020, thus providing a solid basis for the future marketing of the drug. In June 2008, SYGNIS acquired Amnestix Inc. of San Francisco, CA, a US pioneer in discovering disease mechanisms affecting the central nervous system, which also has an important business relationship with the world-renowned Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen). Through the addition of Amnestixs drug discovery capabilities to SYGNISs development expertise the company has created a discovery engine that will fuel SYGNISs pipeline in the future with innovative projects for neurodegenerative diseases.
Robert-Rssle-Strae 10 13125 Berlin Germany Tel.: +49 30 9489280-0 Fax: +49 30 9489280-1 info@silence-therapeutics.com www.silence-therapeutics.de
Im Neuenheimer Feld 515 69120 Heidelberg Germany Tel.: +49 6221 454-6 Fax: +49 6221 454-700 contact@sygnis.de www.sygnis.de
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Deutscher Platz 5 D 04103 Leipzig Germany Tel.: +49 341 215551-0 Fax: +49 341 215551-9 daniela.pohlmann@themedco.com www.themedicinescompany.com
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vasopharm GmbH
Founded 1998 Employees 8 Friedrich-Bergius-Ring 15 97076 Wrzburg Germany Tel.: +49 931 359099-0 Fax: +49 931 359099-12 ofce@vasopharm.com www.vasopharm.com Area of research and development vasopharm is a pharmaceutical company dedicated to the discovery and development of innovative therapeutics for the treatment of cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases and their consequences. The company is focused on the development of therapeutics, which permits steering the bioavailability of biological NO, and covering the entire NO/ cGMP signal cascade and its functional counterpart NOX. vasopharms drug candidate VAS203 represents a completely new class of NOS modulators targeting cerebral vessels and cerebral tissue, thus preventing life-threatening rises in intracranial pressure after a traumatic brain injury. Indication CNS, Cardiovascular Stage of research and development VAS203 in clinical Phase IIa in the indication traumatic brain injury
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Wilex AG
Founded 1997 Employees 64 Katja Arnold Investor Relations Grillparzerstrae 10 81675 Munich Germany Tel.: +49 89 413138-0 Fax: +49 89 413138-99 info@wilex.com www.wilex.com Area of research and development WILEX is a biopharmaceutical company based in Munich. The company was founded in 1997, has 64 employees and is listed on the regulated market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (Prime Standard). WILEXs mission is to develop drugs and diagnostic agents with low side-effect proles for the targeted treatment of different types of cancer, as well as for early detection of tumours. The product candidates are based on antibodies and small molecules. The substances RENCAREX and REDECTANE are currently undergoing a Phase III registration trial. The substance MESUPRON is currently in a Phase II programme for two indications. Rencarex is a chimeric monoclonal antibody in the indication renal cell cancer (RCC) and other solid tumours. Redectane is a labelled antibody for specic diagnosis of malignant kidney tumours. Mesupron is a small molecule targeting the urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) system of solid tumours. Collaboration In January 2009, WILEX and UCB Pharma S.A. agreed to enter a strategic partnership. WILEX acquired UCBs preclinical oncology portfolio of ve programmes (small molecules and antibodies).
2 Interview partners
Institution 4SC AG, Munich Name Dr Daniel Vitt Chairman of the Management Board, Chief Scientic Ofcer Dr Thomas Hger Chief Executive Ofcer/Chief Financial Ofcer Dr Stefan Busch Vice President Strategic Planning and Portfolio Management Member of Managing Board Dr Christian A. Stein Managing Director Dr Wolfgang Plischke Member of Management Board Dr Timm Jessen Managing Director Dr Christian Tidona Managing Director Dr Manfred Reiffen CDept R&D Coordination Dr Stefan Walke CDept R&D Coordination Curatis Pharma GmbH, Hanover Ganymed Pharmaceuticals AG, Mainz Deutsches Krebsforschungs zentrum (German Cancer Research Centre), Heidelberg Evotec AG, Hamburg GlaxoSmithKline GmbH & Co. KG, Munich IMTM GmbH, Magdeburg Prof Dr Klaus D. Dhler Managing Director Dr Rainer Wessel Executive Speaker, Chief Business Ofcer Dr Ruth Herzog Director Staff Unit Technology Transfer/T010 Dr Klaus Maleck Chief Financial Ofcer Prof Dr Torsten Strohmeyer VP Medical & Regulatory Affairs Dr Michael Trger Chief Executive Ofcer Prof Dr Jens Schneider-Mergener Former Chief Executive Ofcer, Jerini AG, Berlin Keyneurotek Pharmaceuticals AG, Halle Matrix Advanced Solutions Ltd., Gttingen Max-Delbrck-Centrum fr Molekulare Medizin (Max Delbrck Centre for Molecular Medicine, MDC), Berlin Max Planck Innovation, Munich Dr Frank Striggow Chief Executive Ofcer Sion Balass Chief Executive Ofcer Prof Dr Walter Rosenthal Scientic Director
Ascenion GmbH, Munich Bayer AG, Leverkusen Bionamics GmbH, Kiel BioRN Cluster Management GmbH, Heidelberg Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, Ingelheim
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Sources
Name Dr Peter Heinrich Chief Executive Ofcer Dr Bernhard Kirschbaum Executive Vice President, R&D Member of the Merck Serono Executive Board Dr Ulrich Betz Department Head Strategic Innovation and Research Portfolio Management of Merck Serono Dr Christoph Hls Vice President Operational Excellence R&D of Merck Serono
3 Sources
Association of German Research-Based Pharmaceutical Companies (Verband Forschender Arzneimittelhersteller, VFA) Statistics 2008. Die Arzneimittelindustrie in Deutschland (2008) Bundesministerium fr Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) Bundesbericht Forschung und Innovation 2008 (2008) European Commission The 2008 EU industrial R&D Investment SCOREBOARD (2008) European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) Annual Report 20062007 (2007) Ernst & Young Auf gutem Kurs. Deutscher Biotechnologie-Report 2008 (2008) German Cancer Research Centre Current Cancer Research 2006 (2006) Hamburgisches WeltWirtschaftsInstitut (HWWI) & PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) HWWI Policy Report No. 7, Politik-Check Pharmastandort Deutschland: Potenziale erkennen Chancen nutzen (2008) Mietzsch, Andreas BioTechnologie Das Jahr- und Adressbuch 2008, BioCom (2008) PricewaterhouseCoopers Pharma 2020; The vision Which path will you take (2007) PricewaterhouseCoopers Pharma 2020; Virtual R&D Which path will you take (2008) PricewaterhouseCoopers Pharma 2020; Marketing the future Which path will you take (2009) The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) Medizinische Biotechnologie 2009 (2009) www.Biotechnologie.de The German Biotechnology Sector 2008. Facts & Figures (2008)
Dr Arndt Schottelius, MD PhD Chief Development Ofcer Dr Claudia Gutjahr-Lser Head of Corporate Communications & IR
Novosom AG, Halle Noxxon AG, Berlin Probiodrug AG, Halle Scil Proteins GmbH, Halle TRION Pharma GmbH, Munich Vakzine Projekt Management GmbH, Hanover Wilex AG, Munich
Sebastian Kehres Finance Director Dr Frank Morich Chief Executive Ofcer Prof Dr Hans-Ulrich Demuth Chief Executive Ofcer/Chief Scientic Ofcer Dr Ulrike Fiedler Managing Director Dr Dirk Pelster Chief Operating Ofcer Dr Bernd Eisele Chief Executive Ofcer Prof Dr Olaf Wilhelm Chief Executive Ofcer
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www.pwc.de/de/biotechnologie