Med-tech happenings, including deals and partnerships, grants, preclinical data and other news in brief: Activstyle, Adapthealth, Astrazeneca, Bio-Techne, Cerus, Echelon Diagnostics, Emed Technologies, Genscript Biotech Europe, Histoindex, IBM Watson Health, Koru Medical Systems, Leica Biosystems, Mauna Kea Technologies, Mesa Labs, Repro Med Systems, Seti, Siemens Healthineers, Skywater Solara Medical Supplies, St Robotics, Velano Vascular, Vizient.
The pandemic hasn't kept biotechs from going public. In fact, through the first five or so months of the year, the industry has raised more than $3.3 billion through IPOs, more capital than biotechs have raised during the first five months of any of the previous 20 years.
DUBLIN – Merck & Co. Inc. is placing two separate bets on recombinant viral vector technology in a broad effort to tackle COVID-19, in which it is also in-licensing a small-molecule antiviral drug. Kenilworth, N.J.-based Merck is acquiring Austrian vaccine developer Themis Bioscience GmbH in a move that propels the latter firm’s COVID-19 vaccine program to the front ranks of the industry pipeline. It is entering a COVID-19 vaccine development collaboration with the not-for-profit vaccine research organization IAVI.
Regulatory snapshots, including global drug submissions and approvals, clinical trial approvals and other regulatory decisions and designations: Abivax, Akeso, Algernon, Alnylam, Aurinia, Cytrx, Expression, Hansa, Kala, Neurobo, Novaremed, Orphazyme, Qurient, Rockwell, Sino, Takeda, Zealand.
Wall Street has stabilized enough after the recent pandemic-induced volatility to offer enthusiastic support to a med tech generating significant revenue that already reached breakeven during the first quarter. Inari Medical Inc. priced its IPO at the top of an already upwardly revised range to raise $156 million. It sold 8.2 million shares at $19, above the prior range of $17 to $18. Shares of the Irvine, Calif.-based company (NASDAQ:NARI) then more than doubled to hit about $43 on its first day of trading.
The U.S. FDA reported that 28 serology tests for antibodies for the SARS-CoV-2 virus either have been withdrawn from the market by the sponsor or delisted by the agency for failure to comply with its notification process for emergency use authorization (EUA). The agency said the list of unavailable tests will be updated over time. For his part, Commissioner Stephen Hahn said the move was undertaken “to ensure that Americans have access to trustworthy tests.”