U.S. drug firm drops safflower insulin option

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: April 2, 2009

A Los Angeles-area drug company that paid for a year-long option to license the rights to a Calgary firm’s plant-produced insulin has let the option lapse.

MannKind Corp.’s option on SemBioSys Genetics’ insulin product, produced in genetically modified safflower plants, expired on Tuesday “without action,” SemBioSys said in a release Wednesday.

MannKind’s decision follows its announcement March 9 that it would buy drug giant Pfizer’s insulin facility at Frankfurt, Germany for US$33 million, including a license to make bulk insulin there for its rapid-acting pulmonary insulin product, Afresa.

Read Also

The Amazon soy moratorium is considered one of the most important forces slowing deforestation rates in the Brazilian Amazon over the past two decades as it bars signatories from buying soybeans from farmers who plant on land deforested after July 2008. Photo: Paralaxis/Getty Images Plus

Soy trading firms to abandon Amazon protection pact in Brazil

Some of the world’s largest soybean traders are preparing to break their agreement to curb deforestation of the Amazon rainforest to preserve tax benefits in Brazil’s top farm state, two people with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

Afresa, now in clinical studies, is meant to be an inhalable form of insulin delivered through a small palm-sized device. MannKind’s option, if exercised, would have made Afresa the “primary use” of SemBioSys’ safflower-based product.

The decision by MannKind, which paid US$2.5 million for its option with SemBioSys, now leaves the Calgary company “free to execute agreements relating to its insulin program with other parties,” SemBioSys said Wednesday.

“Bioequivalent”

But the news also comes just as SemBioSys reported results from the Phase I/II trials of its safflower-based recombinant human insulin in human volunteers. In the tests, SemBioSys’ SBS-1000 product was “shown to be bioequivalent to Eli Lilly’s Humulin,” a widely-used human insulin.

“While the MannKind option was attractive from a timing point of
view, and provided a valuable cash infusion, additional partnering options may be open to us now that we have positive clinical data for plant-made insulin,” SemBioSys CEO James Szarko said Wednesday.

“Based on prior discussions with third parties, we believe that our recent clinical trial results position us well to continue and expand our partnership discussions.”

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications