To Amanda Wagner, the past two years or so she’s spent at Immunitas feels like a microcosm of her entire career up to now.
Trained in neuroscience and equipped with an MBA, Wagner’s 16-year biopharma career could be split into a first half in R&D and a second in corporate finance and business development. She was consulting for the Longwood Fund in 2019 when the VC firm pulled her aside to talk about a new immuno-oncology company it was incubating. ‘I was like, we can do I/O, but it has to be really highly differentiated,’ she recalled.
She was invited to check out the data for herself. In a paper that would eventually be published in Cell, co-founder Kai Wucherpfennig and his lab showed how, using a single-cell sequencing and analysis platform, they identified a new I/O target — CD161 — that can restore the cancer-killing power of both effector memory T cells and NK cells.
And now that’s got her hooked for the long haul. After two years as chief business officer, Wagner will be taking over the wheels as CEO.
‘I’ve played multiple hats with the company, as you do at most startups,’ she said. ‘When I first came on board, my primary role was to look at clinical indication strategy, and to think about where the best fit would be for the biology. And I’m a big believer, in general, of best fit biology. And so I worked on the indication prioritization and built out the development team, and then transitioned into looking at business development and partnering and the Series B financing.’ Her promotion, which follows the recent close of a $58 million round, comes as a natural transition upon the resignation of Jeffrey Goldberg, her predecessor and former COO at Akcea. Over the course of growing the biotech, Wagner said, Goldberg came to realize he was much more interested in things like patient access, market access reimbursement and commercial positioning. Immunitas was too early.
With Immunitas being her fourth startup (the last was an Atlas-backed, autoimmune focused company that’s yet to emerge from stealth), Wagner’s marching orders are pushing as hard as the biotech’s 25 staffers can get to put the lead CD161 compound into the clinic while scaling out the platform and expanding the pipeline in the background — the kind of translational work that’s exactly in her wheelhouse.
‘I find that the priorities for early stage biotech tend to be very similar in the first few years,’ she said.
With an IND for the lead program planned for the first half of 2022, Wagner said she’s taking over at an ‘exciting growth moment.’ Immunitas is already interviewing for her replacement in BD, scouting partners on everything from the CD161 drug — which it thinks has much broader applications than glioma, where it was initially shown to have an effect — to follow-up candidates and discovery projects.
‘We’re the strongest we’ve ever been,’ she said.
For years, paper-based processes and individual point solutions dominated the clinical research landscape, and patient participation in clinical trials was largely an in-person engagement. But when the COVID-19 pandemic took a stronghold, traditional clinical trial methods emerged as inadequate, putting clinical trials and the life sciences industry at a crossroads. Practically overnight, the industry had to rapidly shift to decentralized clinical trial methods, while maintaining data quality and regulatory compliance.
Al Sandrock (Biogen via Youtube)
Two years after Al Sandrock jumped from CMO to the top post in R&D — and just months after the hyper-controversial approval of the experimental Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab (Aduhelm) — Sandrock is planning to step out of his long career at Biogen.
Late Monday evening the big biotech put out word that Sandrock, a longtime fixture in the company after a 23-year stint, is hitting the exit.
Unlock this story instantly and join 123,300+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.
Glen de Vries (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images)
Glen de Vries, the co-founder of the clinical IT software giant Medidata Solutions, died in a plane crash last week.
Emergency crews found the wreckage of a Cessna 172 in a wooded area in northern New Jersey on Thursday. De Vries was an instrument-rated private pilot, though authorities have not yet said who was piloting the plane. He was with his flight instructor Thomas Fischer, 54, and the plane was headed to Sussex Airport from Essex County Airport in Caldwell. He had started his private pilot training with Fischer in February 2016. Fischer opened the flight school with his wife Jodi in March 2012.
Steve Pearson, ICER president (Jeff Rumans for Endpoints News)
The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review on Tuesday morning released its latest on ‘unsupported’ drug price increases for seven top treatments, and how even after rebates and other concessions, these increases cost the US health system an additional $1.67 billion, including almost $1.4 billion from AbbVie’s Humira alone.
The authors of the report winnowed down a list of the top 250 drugs with the largest US net sales revenue in 2020 to just 10 drugs and assessed whether there was even the potential for evidentiary support to back the price increases.
Shao-Lee Lin, Acelyrin CEO
When Acelyrin closed its Series A late last year, it was met with little fanfare. The biotech had only two employees, the former R&D chief and CBO of Horizon Therapeutics, and didn’t even disclose the size of the raise. Westlake Village BioPartners, an LA-based VC firm and lead investor, proved the most noteworthy aspect of the announcement, having spawned from ex-Amgen R&D head Sean Harper and ex-Kleiner Perkins life sciences director Beth Seidenberg.
Unlock this story instantly and join 123,300+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.
Demand for life science real estate is surging in China — and one of Asia’s largest investment groups is rising to the call.
CBC Group — the startup engine that recently lured in Merck’s former R&D chief Roger Perlmutter — is joining forces with Netherlands Pension provider APG Asset Management to launch a new Asia-Pacific healthcare platform and China-focused life science venture.
The fund, dubbed CBC China Life Science Infrastructure Venture (CLSIV), completed a first close of $500 million to provide ‘best-in-class facilities’ for research in China. CBC describes it as the vehicle by which the platform, CBC Healthcare Infrastructure Platform (CBC HIP), will operate.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure (Photo by Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call via AP Images)
Although sales of Biogen’s expensive new Alzheimer’s drug have been anemic since the approval in June, the prospect of CMS eventually paying for it opens up a billion-dollar can of worms, and already has the agency defending some premium and deductible increases for seniors.
CMS explained late Friday that Medicare Part B will have to increase its standard monthly premium — from $148.50 in 2021 to $170.10 in 2022 — in part because of the massive spending that could occur should the agency sign off on a national coverage decision for the drug, known as Aduhelm, and its $56,000 annual price tag next year.
Unlock this story instantly and join 123,300+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.
Can injecting messenger RNA directly into the heart of patients who’ve experienced heart failure help repair the organ? More than three years after AstraZeneca and Moderna launched a first-of-its-kind Phase II trial to test the idea, the pair has now shown the procedure is at least safe.
In a Phase II trial dubbed EPICCURE, seven were treated with AZD8601 — mRNA-encoding vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF-A) — while four were given placebo. After six months of follow-up, investigators concluded the drug met the primary endpoints on safety and tolerability, while the exploratory efficacy analyses support further clinical evaluation.
Unlock this story instantly and join 123,300+ biopharma pros reading Endpoints daily — and it’s free.
Uğur Şahin, BioNTech CEO (ddp images/Sipa USA/Sipa via AP Images)
For the first time since the pandemic began, BioNTech CEO Uğur Şahin made his way to the US, this time for a cancer drug conference in Washington, DC, last week. Prior to presenting his company’s poster on early, promising data for its CLDN6-targeted CAR-T, Şahin sat down with a small group of reporters and discussed his company’s blockbuster Covid-19 vaccine, and what’s to be expected from the pandemic moving forward.
Unlock this article along with other benefits by subscribing to one of our paid plans.
https://endpts.com/out-to-prove-the-next-big-i-o-target-immunitas-chief-dealmaker-steps-up-to-ceo-role/