TauRx Pharmaceuticals receives $111.8m commitment from Genting to
prepare for Market Leadership in Alzheimer's
SINGAPORE and KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Nov. 20, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- TauRx
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. ("TauRx") announced today the receipt of a
further equity investment of US$31.5m
from Genting Management (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. ("GMS"), a wholly
owned subsidiary of Genting Berhad. The amount represents the first
tranche of a total investment of US$111.8m by GMS in TauRx in exchange for a 20%
equity stake in the pioneering pharmaceutical company. The
completion of the remaining US$80.3m
investment by GMS is expected before the year end. TauRx also
announced today the appointment to its Board of Directors of
Tan Sri Lim Kok Thay, Chairman &
Chief Executive Officer of Genting Berhad and Mr Tan Kong Han, President & Chief Operating
Officer of Genting Berhad.
Professor Claude Wischik,
Executive Chairman and Co-Founder of TauRx, said: "This investment
by GMS affirms Genting's confidence in TauRx and will be directed
to the conduct of our pivotal global Phase 3 clinical trials in
mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease with LMTX™, TauRx's Tau
Aggregation Inhibitor (TAI)." The drug is the first TAI to be
tested in late stage clinical trials. The Phase 2 trial in over 300
patients with an earlier version of the drug showed a 90% reduction
in the rate of disease progression over two years, a result also
supported by functional brain imaging.
According to Professor Wischik, "These Phase 3 studies, which
have already started enrolling in the US, are aimed at confirming
the disease-modifying effects seen in the Phase 2 trial in mild to
moderate patients." The first study in the Phase 3 program will
involve 833 people with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease over
12 months, while the second study will include 500 people with mild
Alzheimer's disease over 18 months. A third smaller study
will aim to confirm treatment benefit in FrontoTemporal Dementia in
180 subjects over 12 months. The clinical trials will be conducted
in parallel and on a global basis including sites in Australia, Belgium, Canada, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, Spain, Netherlands, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, US and UK. Professor Wischik points
out: "These landmark studies could provide the first
definitive data on a Tau-based approach to disease-modifying and
preventive treatment of Alzheimer's and FTD, with no Tau-based
alternatives generating such data for at least the next 5-7
years."
As for the new investment by GMS, Professor Wischik adds: "This
is the most significant fund-raising event in TauRx's history; it
brings the total equity raised by the group to almost US$300m since the initial company was formed in
2002." Prof Wischik also points out that the Genting
relationship brings substantial operational support to TauRx's
global clinical development program. As part of the share
subscription by GMS, which will see GMS becoming the largest
shareholder of TauRx, TauRx and GMS will form a joint venture which
will leverage on the Genting Group's network and presence in
Asia and which will focus on
redefining healthcare delivery for Alzheimer's and early cognitive
impairment in Asia.
Professor Wischik elaborates: "The joint venture's business
model would redefine healthcare delivery for one of the most costly
medical conditions of our time – Alzheimer's Disease, as it
integrates each step in the continuum of healthcare delivery from
the development of clinics specializing in early detection, through
the management of cognitive impairment with innovative diagnostic
tools to the early intervention with LMTX™". LMTX™ is a
second-generation TAI that targets the Tau tangles and their
precursors, dissolving them in order to halt harmful effects on
memory. The joint venture would have the potential to create a
clinic-based assessment and treatment capability that does not
impact on TauRx's ability to offer distribution and marketing
rights to conventional pharmaceutical partners active in
Asia. "Such an innovative and
practical approach to partnering and to addressing a major societal
concern is typical of the fresh commercial thinking to be found
within South East Asia," says
Professor Wischik.
About TauRx Therapeutics:
TauRx Therapeutics Ltd was established in Singapore in 2002 with the aim of developing
new treatments and diagnostics for a range of neurodegenerative
diseases based on an entirely new approach which targets aggregates
of abnormal fibres of Tau protein that form inside nerve cells in
the brain. The TauRx team have since discovered that LMTX™ could
also have beneficial effects in several other neurodegenerative
diseases associated with Tau pathology, as well as other protein
aggregation disorders including Parkinson's, Huntington's and
Frontotemporal Dementia (Pick's Disease). While TauRx headquarters
are in Singapore, its primary
research facilities are in Aberdeen,
Scotland.
About Genting Berhad:
Genting Berhad, its subsidiaries and affiliates operate under the
"Genting" name. It is recognised as one of Asia's leading and best managed
multinationals. There are 5 public companies listed in 3
jurisdictions operating under the "Genting" name, namely Genting
Berhad, its subsidiaries Genting Malaysia Berhad, Genting
Plantations Berhad and Genting Singapore PLC as well as its
affiliate, Genting Hong Kong Limited, with a combined market
capitalisation of about US$35 billion
as at 9 November 2012. Collectively,
they have over 52,000 employees, 4,500 hectares of prime resort
land and about 166,000 hectares of plantation land.
In healthcare, Genting Berhad has invested in Synthetic Genomics
Vaccines, Inc, a company founded by Synthetic Genomics, Inc. and
the J.Craig Venter Institute to develop next generation human
vaccines using genomic sequencing and synthetic genomic
technologies. Synthetic Genomics, Inc is a company founded by
world-renowned scientists, J. Craig
Venter, Ph.D. and Nobel Prize-winner Hamilton O. Smith, M.D.
Genting Berhad is also a major shareholder of London
based DNA Electronics Limited ("DNAe") which owns
rights to patents and know-how in the design and fabrication of a
point of care handheld device for real-time detection of any target
nucleic acid (DNA and RNA) sequence.