Novartis entered separate license agreements with bluebird bio and Celyad for patents related to the manufacture of CAR-T cells.
On May 2, 2017, bluebird bio and Celyad both announced license agreements with Novartis for separate chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) patents. The deal with bluebird involves patents related to the company’s lentiviral vector technology to develop and commercialize CAR-T therapies for oncology, including CTL019, Novartis’s anti-CD19 CAR T investigational therapy. While the financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed, bluebird said in a press release that the deal included an upfront payment as well as milestone and royalty payments.
In a separate deal, Novartis will pay Celyad $96 million upfront with additional milestone and royalty payments, for its patents on allogenic CAR-T cells. The agreement specifically involves Celyad’s United States Patent No. 9,181,527 related to allogeneic human primary T-Cells that are engineered to be T-Cell Receptor (TCR) deficient and express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). According to Celyad, the granted claims are not limited to specific CARs or specific methods of generating allogeneic CAR-T, such as genome editing or genetic engineering. The company said that it will not be involved in the development of Novartis’ CAR-T cells and that it plans to continue to focus on its own CAR-T pipeline.
Source: bluebird bio, Celyad
Drug Solutions Podcast: Gliding Through the Ins and Outs of the Pharma Supply Chain
November 14th 2023In this episode of the Drug Solutions podcast, Jill Murphy, former editor, speaks with Bourji Mourad, partnership director at ThermoSafe, about the supply chain in the pharmaceutical industry, specifically related to packaging, pharma air freight, and the pressure on suppliers with post-COVID-19 changes on delivery.