In a sweet indication of an improving capital market for med-tech companies, Biolinq Inc. landed $58 million in bridge financing to support completion of the U.S. pivotal trial of its intradermal glucose sensor and submission to the U.S. FDA. The round brings the total raised to more than $170 million. With good response so far, the company is optimistic that it can attract more funding in short order. “Biolinq also plans to raise a series C financing of more than $100 million to support commercialization at the end of this year,” Biolinq CEO Rich Yang told BioWorld.
Alterome Therapeutics Inc. has closed a $132 million series B financing to support the advancement of its pipeline of next-generation, small-molecule targeted cancer therapies into the clinic, including a highly specific AKT1 E17K inhibitor and a KRAS selective inhibitor.
With a $128 million series A financing, Diagonal Therapeutics Inc. launched to develop its lead program using agonist antibodies for treating, among other indications, the rare disease hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. The antibodies are designed to activate a receptor complex in the TGF-β superfamily genetically impaired in patients with the bleeding disorder. Diagonal also is developing a treatment for the orphan disease pulmonary arterial hypertension.
Addex Therapeutics has offloaded its portfolio of preclinical allosteric modulation drugs into Neurosterix, a new company that arrives on the scene with a $63 million series A round.
South Korean biosimilar-focused Alteogen Inc. said on March 27 that Chung Hye-shin, former chief strategy officer (CSO) and co-founder, sold 1.6 million of Alteogen shares for ₩316.4 billion (US$234.24 million) to foreign institutional investors.