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THE INVESTOR

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19

BIOTECHNOLOGY

The Cell and GeneTherapy Catapult’s

Chief Executive KeithThompson says:

‘There has been a transition from public to

private funding for cell therapy.When we

started, financing in the UKwas dominated

by government finance, especially for basic

research. Hardly any corporates were

investing because cell therapy was regarded

as too complex; investors were reluctant to

invest without a clear path to approval.

‘That has changed dramatically over the

past five years.Where there has been a

clear clinical benefit, with proven results,

investors have piled in.’

Overall, between 2015 and 2016 the

value of the UK’s quoted healthcare sector

grew by £40 billion to nearly £400 billion,

according to figures from the London

Stock Exchange

1

.A total of £1.96 billion

was raised in British life science IPOs and

additional offerings, bringing the total

since 2014 to £6 billion

1

.

Money is coming from a variety of

private-sector sources: venture capital,

biotechnology and broader investment

funds traded onAIM, such asTouchstone

Innovations, as well as the pharmaceutical

companies themselves.Also featuring are

public-private partnerships such as Syncona

and Cancer ResearchTechnology,which

have invested £13.2 million into a new

UCL‘spin-out’ calledAchillesTherapeutics.

Still, the sector as a whole must keep

a wary eye on the impact of Brexit on

the people, innovation, regulation

and finance that underpin its

success. Lowdell argues, for

example, that it is important

that the UK keeps as much as

possible of the budget it has

allocated to Horizon 2020, the EU

biotech research and innovation

programme.

Meanwhile, the trade body BioIndustry

Association accepts that, post-Brexit, the

EuropeanMedicinesAgency is likely to be

taken away from the UK after 2020. But it

has been reassured by the prime minister’s

insistence that the UKwill stay in the

vanguard of science and innovation, and

seek continued collaboration with its

European partners.

is that the cells injected no longer have to

be a close tissue match, usually from a

relative of the patient.

The Medical Research Council and

Innovate UK, the UK government

innovation agency set up to bridge the

funding gap between‘discovery science’

and commercial development, are

funding the clinical trial. During the

trial, 100 billion cells will be created in

a £2.1 million manufacturing laboratory

run by Mark Lowdell, Professor of Cell &

TissueTherapy at UCL and Director of

the Centre for Cell, Gene & Tissue

Therapy at the Royal Free Hospital in

London.The facility will enable scientists

to create or modify cells and tissues from

stem cells that can be used to treat a

range of conditions, including

haemophilia and macular degeneration.

In the UK this success in cutting-edge

science has not always translated into

commercial applications.Why not?‘It’s

a very complex problem,’ explains

Lowdell.‘There’s a disconnect between

the scientists who are doing the complex

research and how that work is translated.

Usually, if research [fails to reach the

market] it is because it has not been

translated into clinical activity.’

And, according to Lowdell, big pharma

companies don’t always understand how

to navigate the various phases of clinical

trials, particularly the need to plan the

late (phase three) trials when the drug’s

safety and efficacy are tested.He believes

there is little point doing the opening

(phase one) trials unless they can be

scaled up for the late stage: it is not

enough to make a drug that works if it

does not benefit enough patients to make

it viable after taking into account all the

marketing and manufacturing costs.

Another of Innovate UK’s initiatives is

the Cell and GeneTherapy Catapult, one

of 11 late-stage research and development

hubs. Set up in 2012 to accelerate

investment in technologies such as genetic

editing, its particular achievement is the

building of a £55 million manufacturing

plant in Stevenage,which is due to open

later this year.

A £55m facility

will open in

Stevenage later

this year

Getty Images. Source: 1 Future of Healthcare Investor Forum, hosted by the London Stock Exchange, January 2016

Whenwe started,

financing in the UK

was dominated by

government finance.

That has changed

dramatically