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KaloBios, Seeking to Apply Antibodies Beyond Cancer, Sets Sight on Killing Deadly Lung Invader

17 / 08 / 2010

The people at Genentech have created an enduring perception about antibodies, which says these Y-shaped protein drugs are really good at specifically targeting cancer cells. When I was at Bloomberg News a few years ago, I learned that investors paid close attention to multi-billion dollar sales trends of the big three antibody drugs for cancer—bevacizumab (Avastin), trastuzumab (Herceptin), and rituximab (Rituxan)—and not much else at biotech’s standard-bearing company.

But as any antibody drug developer will tell you, antibodies can be used for a lot more than just targeting cancer cells. Just down the hill from Antibodies ‘R Us in South San Francisco is KaloBios, a venture-backed company with a vision of making antibodies that can specifically interfere with a deadly bacterium found in the lungs of people with cystic fibrosis, and in patients on ventilators who get infections while they’re in hospital intensive care units.

KaloBios, which draws its name from the Greek expression for “good life,” is hot on the trail of an antibody drug for pseudomonas bacterial infections. The company, founded in 2002, has settled on this direction with its lead compound after raising four rounds of venture capital worth a combined $80 million. This 50-person company has a lot of interested parties watching how it does—with a roster of backers that includes MPM Capital, Sofinnova Ventures, Alloy Ventures, GBS Venture Partners, Mitsubishi UFJ Capital, Genzyme Ventures, Baxter International, and the Development Bank of Japan. If KaloBios plays its card right, CEO David Pritchard says, it should be able to build a business worth more than $1 billion within the next three to four years.

“There aren’t very many good names left out there in antibodies that haven’t already been acquired,” Pritchard says.

The antibody drug market was expected to generate $30 billion in worldwide sales in 2009, with an annual growth rate of 14 percent through 2012, according to Datamonitor. Some of the biggest drugs in this category have led to some of biotech’s biggest takeovers of recent years—like Roche’s purchase of Genentech, Eli Lilly’s takeover of ImClone Systems, AstraZeneca’s deal for MedImmune, Amgen’s buy of Abgenix, and Bristol-Myers Squibb’s acquisition of Medarex.

KaloBios sees itself following the industry trend over time, gradually building value to become more like the remaining top-tier antibody companies that are still independent—Cheshire, CT-based Alexion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ALXN), Tarrytown, NY-based Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: REGN), and Seattle Genetics (NASDAQ: SGEN).

What KaloBios has that’s different is a platform technology for making antibodies, as well as some different ideas on how to apply them for medicine. The main scientific idea is to pump out antibody candidates with what it calls “Humaneering” technology. The technology is supposed to make antibodies that are super-specifically focused on the target and nothing else; bind tightly with the target on the cell of interest and don’t let go; and avoid provoking an immune system reaction that essentially can render the drug useless. KaloBios, to be sure, isn’t the only company out there with what it thinks is a better way to discover and produce antibody drug candidates—San Francisco-based Ablexis, Bothell, WA-based Alder Biopharmaceuticals, and Lebanon, NH-based Adimab are just a few companies we’ve covered at Xconomy that are taking creative approaches that seek to solve some of the traditional limitations of antibodies.

So Pritchard spent most of his time talking about product candidates, not the gee-whiz anything-is-possible-now nature of the technology platform. The lead drug candidate is KB001. This drug made the news last January during the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, when KaloBios said it secured $35 million in upfront cash from Paris-based drug giant Sanofi-Aventis to co-develop the treatment.

The co-development agreement was structured as as a classic Big Pharma deal, where the bigger company takes responsibility for the broadest application of the drug, while the biotech keeps the rights to the orphan disease use. In this case, Sanofi gets the right to develop KB001 for infections people get in the hospital while they are on ventilators, and KaloBios will focus on developing the treatment for patients with cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis. Something like 500,000 people a year are thought to get dangerous pseudomonas infections in hospitals each year, meaning that a big company like Sanofi is best suited to take on that market, while about 30,000 patients in the U.S. have cystic fibrosis, making that a niche indication suitable for a little biotech like KaloBios, Pritchard says.

The idea of using an antibody against pseudomonas infections is where things get really interesting. Cystic fibrosis is caused by a single missing or faulty gene that causes buildup of thick, sticky mucus in the lungs. That mucus becomes a haven for pseudomonas bacteria. Pseudomonas then causes havoc partly by puncturing and killing critical immune defense cells known as neutrophils. The body’s immune system tries to fight off the pseudomonas, but it’s a tug of war that over time leads to excess inflammation, scarring of the lungs, and ultimately suffocation.

“It’s the war between the immune system and pseudomonas that kills you,” Pritchard says.

There are conventional antibiotic small-molecules on the market today which are made into inhalable formulations to knock down the pseudomonas, like Novartis’ tobramycin (TOBI) and Gilead Sciences’ aztreonam lysine (Cayston). These drugs are effective at getting inside the bacterial cells and disrupting their machinery for a while, but eventually, as with most antibiotics, the bugs develop resistance.

Based on some novel research at UCSF, KaloBios is tackling this problem in a totally different way. The KB001 antibody is designed to hit a target called PcrV that is found on pseudomonas bacteria, but isn’t found on any cells in the human body, Pritchard says. Essentially, the antibody binds with pseudomonas and renders it unable to puncture white blood cells. So while the antibody doesn’t actually appear to kill the bug itself, it basically makes it a sitting duck for the body’s immune system to swarm and kill the invader like it wants to, Pritchard says. This is a different mechanism than classic antibiotics, and might mean that the pseudomonas won’t be able to develop resistance to the antibody, he says. “People can’t figure out a way in which pseudomonas gets resistance to it,” Pritchard says.

This drug still has a very long way to go in clinical trials to prove this notion. One study presented in May looked at 35 patients in France who were getting antibiotics while on mechanical ventilators in the hospital. About 46 percent of the patients on a single high-dose IV infusion of the KaloBios drug were alive and pneumonia-free after 28 days, compared with 20 percent who did that well on a placebo. Another trial of 27 patients with cystic fibrosis showed that the drug looked safe, and was able to reduce the amount of inflammation and pneumonia bacteria in patients. Both studies were presented to doctors at the American Thoracic Society annual meeting in May.

While the intravenous form of the drug might be fine for patients who get pseudomonas infections in the hospital intensive care unit, KaloBios needs to reformulate the drug for more chronic usage if it wants to treat cystic fibrosis patients. That’s happening now, as the company is developing a form that patients can self-inject just under the skin once every two weeks. That new form of the drug should be ready for clinical trials in late 2011, Pritchard says.

KaloBios will have to do better than that in the next round of clinical trials, showing it can help people breathe better over a 28-day period, if it wants to win FDA approval for the new drug. But if it can clear that hurdle, it could have quite a valuable new asset. Cambridge, MA-based Vertex Pharmaceuticals has a couple of novel small-molecule drugs in the pipeline for cystic fibrosis patients that have been hailed by leading researchers, but nobody else has an antibody drug in clinical trials, Pritchard says.

If this drug can get through the clinical trial process, it will have the advantage of 12-year market exclusivity for biotech drugs that was part of the recently passed healthcare reform. The KaloBios drug would certainly be a high-priced product. The antibiotics on the market now have helped cystic fibrosis patients extend their average lifespan into their late 30s, and it’s conceivable that KaloBios could extend that number further if it can kill pseudomonas and solve the problem with antibiotic resistance. Do that, and perceptions might change about antibodies being useful for more than just cancer and autoimmune disease.

“Antibodies are what your body produces to fight infections. So we’re making antibodies for infectious disease. It makes perfect sense,” Pritchard says.