After 13 years as president and COO at
Optinose
,
Ramy Mahmoud
has stepped into a new role
as its CEO. He is taking the place of
Peter Miller
, who stepped down earlier this week, though Miller is still staying with the company as a consultant.
In 2010, the two business partners joined Optinose to take it in a new direction, transforming it from a delivery platform to product company. They previously worked together at
Johnson & Johnson
, when Miller was president at
Janssen
and Mahmoud headed medical affairs. Miller said after he learned about Optinose, “I did what I always do, which is find people smarter than me to talk with about the idea. And the first person I called was Ramy … and I said, ‘Hey, Ramy, what do you think of this technology?’”
Optinose outlicensed its first product, a nasal spray for migraines, while it kept its second — a spray for nasal polyps known as
Xhance
. Last year, Optinose unveiled Phase III data on an expanded indication in chronic sinusitis. The wider indication could expand the patient population for Xhance by 10 times, according to Mahmoud and Miller.
But for the next leg of the process, Mahmoud will be at the helm. Optinose plans to submit for a supplementary indication this month, which Mahmoud said could bring its drug from specialists to primary care providers.
“It’s not a disease a lot of people know about, although it’s really common — 30 million people in the US. But as one patient once told me, it’s a
Rodney Dangerfield
disease: It doesn’t get any respect, because it rarely causes fatality, but it causes an awful lot of burden of morbidity,” Mahmoud said.
Optinose recently also hired
Paul Spence
as chief commercial officer, and is currently preparing for the wider indication, including potentially finding a partner to expand its reach in the primary care space.
As for Miller, he said that his immediate next step is to take some time with his family, especially his three grandkids. He floated the idea of doing a bike trip in Europe. But, he said, he will probably find his way back to entrepreneurship soon. “I don’t sit still very well, ” Miller said, chuckling.
—
Lei Lei Wu
→ According
to an SEC filing
on Jan. 29,
Rupert Vessey
is stepping down as research and early development chief at
Bristol Myers Squibb
on July 3. Vessey carried this title with him from
Celgene
after it was sold to Bristol Myers for $74 billion in late 2019, and since that time he’s
helped
swing
deals
with
Dragonfly
,
Immatics
and
Volastra
, among other companies. Bristol Myers CEO
Giovanni Caforio
said on
this week’s Q4 earnings call
that CMO
Samit Hirawat
will lead a consolidated early- and late-stage development team once Vessey leaves the pharma giant. Vessey was a drug discovery exec with
GSK
and
Merck
, then pivoted to Celgene in 2015.
→ While we have Dragonfly on our minds, the
Bill Haney
TriNKET biotech
has appointed
Keytruda
vet
Joseph Eid
as president of R&D. Eid was in charge of Keytruda’s global clinical development during an eight-year run at Merck that ended in 2017 as head of oncology global medical affairs. From there he led medical affairs at Bristol Myers, but turned away from Big Pharma in 2021 to join
Jiangsu Hengrui
spinoff
Luzsana Biotechnology
as CMO and head of global drug development. Along with Eid’s former employers at Merck and BMS, Dragonfly has TriNKET collabs with
AbbVie
and
Gilead
already in the works.
→ The latest ingredient to the
Roche
leadership recipe
has been added
with
Teresa Graham
’s promotion to CEO of
Roche Pharmaceuticals
in March. Graham succeeds
Bill Anderson
and spent 14 years in a plethora of roles at
Genentech
before becoming head of global product strategy in May 2019. With
the group CEO transition
from
Severin Schwan
to
Thomas Schinecker
a month away, Roche also brought CMO and global product development chief
Levi Garraway
into the fold as part of the corporate executive committee. Anderson
left on Dec. 31
and we’ll keep our eyes peeled for where he turns up next.
→ Following the $1.25 billion
Amryt Pharma
buyout that was announced
during the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, Italian pharma
Chiesi
has lined up
a permanent group CEO.
Giuseppe Accogli
will take over for
Ugo Di Francesco
on April 3 and had resigned as COO of
Baxter
at the start of this year, two days before the company
formally announced plans
to split its kidney care and acute therapies global business units — falling in line
with the recent
consumer health
spinouts
executed by J&J and GSK. Accogli was closely associated with the renal division in several posts throughout his 15-year run with Baxter.
Marco Vecchia
has been bridging the gap as interim chief and will again lead legal and corporate affairs, a position he has held since 1987.
→
Keith Dionne
has called it quits
as CEO of
Third Rock
’s
Casma Therapeutics
but is staying on the board of directors.
Frank Gentile
, the COO at Casma since May 2018, was elevated to chief executive on Jan. 13. Gentile was a venture partner at Third Rock before jumping to Casma, which has raised more than $154 million in three separate financing rounds.
In a 2020 interview with Endpoints, Dionne described Casma’s focus on autophagy, the Waste Management of cell processes. “If you imagined your house, where you plug up the garbage disposal, plug up the toilets and stop taking out the trash, you would find, probably fairly quickly, the house would become unlivable. And that’s essentially the same thing that happens inside of a cell,” Dionne told Nicole DeFeudis at the time of
Casma’s $50 million Series B
. “If we don’t have these mechanisms of maintaining homeostasis to clear out materials that were maybe used once, or maybe mutated to begin with but otherwise built up inside of the cell — the cell becomes dysfunctional.”
→
Fresh Tracks Therapeutics
— the Boulder, CO company known as
Brickell Biotech
until a September 2022 revamp —
has tapped
Andrew Sklawer
as CEO. Sklawer helped co-found the biotech with chairman
Reginald Hardy
and was COO in addition to his duties as president. Fresh Tracks hopes to read out Phase I data “by early 2023” on its oral DYRK1A inhibitor
FRTX-02
.
→ Remember
MiMedx
? In case you didn’t, just a little refresher:
Back in 2020
, MiMedx had two of its former executives, CEO
Parker Petit
and COO
William
Taylor
, convicted of conspiracy and fraudulently boosting company sales. Now, nearly three years later and looking to put all that behind them, the company
has picked up
Joseph Capper
as CEO. Capper is taking over from
Todd
Newton
, who has been serving in the interim since September 2022 and will remain on the board of directors. This isn’t Capper’s first time as a CEO, having served in the role at
BioTelemetry
,
Home
Diagnostics
and
CCS
Medical
. Earlier in his career, Capper served in a variety of roles during his decade-long stint at
Bayer
.
→ In the spring of 2021,
we told you about
Christopher Wright
joining
AavantiBio
as part of CEO
Bo Cumbo
’s hiring bonanza. AavantiBio
has since merged
with Duchenne player
Solid Bio
and all the baggage that comes with it — from previous
clinical holds
to
trial flops
— and now Wright
will join
gene therapy biotech
Ring Therapeutics
as CMO and head of translational research on Feb. 7. Before his stint with AavantiBio, Wright was chief development officer for
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals
and CMO of its spinoff
Cyclerion
. Ring has raised $167 million since its 2019 launch; is
Tuyen Ong
’s squad due for another round?
→
Nadège Pelletier
is taking up the mantle
as CSO of
AstraZeneca
’s Covid-19 vaccine collaborator
Vaccitech
upon the retirement of
Tom Evans
, who will still have a consulting role. Pelletier is a seven-year Roche vet who owns further Big Pharma credentials as senior principal scientist (autoimmunity, transplantation & inflammation) with the
Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research
.
Bill Enright
has been at the controls at Vaccitech since Evans shifted from CEO to CSO in August 2019.
→ The road has been lined with potholes for
Athira Pharma
, which has grappled with the
data manipulation scandal
involving ex-CEO
Leen Kawas
, a
Phase II miss
with its Alzheimer’s med, and a board kerfuffle
with Kawas ally
Ric Kayne
. Looking to turn its fortunes around in 2023, Athira
has promoted
Kevin Church
to CSO. After his years in the Palouse at Washington State University, Church headed west to Bothell-based Athira in 2016 as a research scientist and he’s steadily climbed through the ranks ever since, earning his previous promotion to EVP of research in November 2021.
→
Eric Ostertag
will have an even more reduced presence at
Poseida
,
resigning as chairman
of the San Diego gene therapy player but offering his expertise “on technical and scientific matters” in a consulting role.
Mark Gergen
succeeded Ostertag
as CEO almost exactly a year ago.
→
Karuna Therapeutics
, arguably the gold medalist in the positive-data-to-public-offering Olympics,
will bring
William Kane
on board as chief commercial officer on Feb. 6. Kane previously appeared in this space when he was named to the same post at
BioXcel
in June 2020, and the former
Allergan
exec also had an 18-year run at
Pfizer
that included the product launches of
Vraylar
and
Ubrelvy
, among other drugs. A Phase III study
yielded positive results
with Karuna’s schizophrenia drug
KarXT
, clearing a path
for an eye-popping raise
totaling $862.5 million in August.
→ Synthetic lethality player
Aprea Therapeutics
has found a new CFO
as
Scott Coiante
leaves “to pursue other opportunities.”
John Hamill
spent two and a half years as finance chief of
Windtree Therapeutics
before coming to Aprea, which reprioritized its pipeline and took its p53 reactivator
eprenetapopt
off the board after the consumption of
Atrin Pharmaceuticals
in May 2022. “We currently have no ongoing clinical trials of eprenetapopt,” Aprea
said in a November release
, after the drug’s
clinical hold was lifted
nearly a year earlier. Its new lead asset is the ATR inhibitor
ATRN-119
.
Aprea also changed CEOs, with Atrin chief
Oren Gilad
replacing
Chris Schade
. While keeping the role of chairman at Aprea, Schade
has also joined
Flagship Pioneering
this week as growth partner. Before he was named president and CEO at Aprea, Schade was the chief executive for two companies that drew the eye of Big Pharmas:
Novira
(sold to J&J) and
Omthera Pharmaceuticals
(sold to AstraZeneca).
→
Fairooz Kabbinavar
has signed on
as CMO of
Cardiff Oncology
, which is developing the PLK1 inhibitor
onvansertib
for a range of cancers but scrapped its study in prostate cancer back in September. Kabbinavar has worked on
Tecentriq
as Genentech’s principal I/O medical director, and subsequent gigs include stops at
Puma Biotechnology
(SVP of clinical R&D) and
Huyabio
(global head of R&D).
→
Patrick Fabbio
was part of the cleanup efforts at
Rafael Holdings
after its pancreatic cancer drug
suffered
a Phase III bomb in November 2021,
but he’s moved on
to cancer and rare disease biotech
Protara Therapeutics
as CFO. Fabbio, who held the dual roles of president and CFO at Rafael, is a board member at
BeyondSpring
and the ex-finance chief at
WindMIL Therapeutics
.
→
Aprecia Pharmaceuticals
has pulled in
Owen Murray
to help run the ship as CEO. Murray hails from
Recordati Rare
Diseases
, where he was VP of North American technical operations and quality assurance. Before that, Murray was with
Cardinal
Health
,
Lundbeck
and
Ovation
Pharmaceuticals
.
→
Teaming up on mRNA vaccines
with
Emergent BioSolutions
, Calgary-based
Providence Therapeutics
has welcomed
Robert Georgantas
as president and chief technology officer. Georgantas is the ex-director of immunology at AbbVie’s Genomics Resource Center and was elevated to CSO of lung disease diagnostic specialist
Biodesix
last year.
→ In the ramp-up to the clinic for its T cell therapy candidate
BSB-1001
, Pittsburgh’s
BlueSphere Bio
has installed
Erkut Bahceci
as CMO. After leadership posts at
Astellas
from 2010-20, Bahceci set off for
Takeda
as head of clinical science, then was promoted within a year to SVP and head of oncology development.
→ Cashing in on the radiopharma craze
with a €25 million Series A
in June 2022, Germany’s
Ariceum Therapeutics
has recruited
Germo Gericke
as CMO. Gericke spent 21 years with
Novartis
, and from 2020-22, he was CMO of the Swiss pharma’s subsidiary
Advanced Accelerator Applications
, the original home of the radiotherapy
Lutathera
. Novartis has since added
Pluvicto
to its pipeline of approved radioligand drugs.
→
Jonathan Lieber
has been appointed
CFO of
Rallybio
,
Martin Mackay
’s rare disease biotech
that linked arms
with
AbCellera
on antibodies and
grabbed an anemia drug
from
Sanofi
last year. Lieber brings plenty of CFO experience from such companies as
Applied Genetic Technologies Corporation
(
acquired by
Syncona
last fall) and
Repligen
. He also sits on the board of
Salarius Pharmaceuticals
.
→ North Carolina-based
vTv Therapeutics
has called upon
Elizabeth Keiley
to be EVP and general counsel. She comes to the diabetes biotech from AstraZeneca’s old antibiotics spinout
Entasis Therapeutics
— which
went private in May 2022
thanks to
Innoviva
— where she also held the role of general counsel.
→ Last we heard from
Ocugen
last September, the Pennsylvania-based company
was entering a licensing deal
to commercialize its “universal” intranasal covid vaccine. Now, the company
has brought aboard
Quan Vu
as CBO. Vu joins the team from
180 Life
Sciences
, where he served as COO/CBO. Prior to that, Vu had gigs with
Melius BioPharma
Consulting
,
Opiant
Pharmaceuticals
,
Impax Laboratories, Anthem
and
Amgen
.
→ Swedish-based
Cantargia
has picked its next CFO
in
Patrik
Renblad
. Renblad will be taking over for
Bengt
Jöndell
and the company says he will assume the role by August 2023 at the latest. Renblad currently serves as CFO of
SynAct Pharma
and previously had a decade-long stint at
Leo Pharma
and a gig at AstraZeneca.
→ Focused on cell engineering tech,
Avectas
is elevating
one of its board members,
Ann
Brady
, to the role of the company’s CBO. Brady has been with the board since 2016 and will continue to serve in her seat. Most recently, Brady was president,
Theravance Biopharma
Ireland and had prior roles at Shire.
→ Way back in 2018, low-profile
Adrenomed
secured a $27 million financing round
to prep for human trials for its septic shock treatment. Now, the German-based company
has enlisted
Stephen
Witte
as CMO. Witte comes along from
Atriva
Therapeutics
, where he was VP of clinical science & operations. Prior roles include VP clinical trials at
Breath Therapeutics
and head of clinical development and regulatory affairs at
Inotrem
.
→ CRO
ProtaGene
has welcomed two new faces
to its leadership team with the appointments of
Jennifer Chadwick
as CSO and
Owen Hitchins
as CCO. Chadwick most recently served as VP of analytical development at
BioAnalytix
and, before that, was a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of Kansas. Meanwhile, Hitchins has held a variety of roles at
Thermo Fisher Scientific
,
Indigo
Biosystems
and
Covance
, among others.
→
ReCode Therapeutics
topped off its Series B
with a $120 million extension
last May, and now the Menlo Park, CA biotech
has selected
April Loui
as SVP of quality and CMC regulatory affairs. A
Genentech
and
Bayer
alum, Loui was senior director of CMC clinical quality operations at Gilead before joining
Alector
in 2020 as VP of quality. ReCode is hitting primary ciliary dyskinesia and cystic fibrosis first with its lipid nanoparticle platform.
→
Medtronic
, the company whose insulin pumps were
flagged as vulnerable to hackers
by the FDA last September,
has promoted
Michael Blackwell
to India VP. Blackwell replaces
Madan Krishnan,
who will be assuming a global role within the company. Blackwell has been with Medtronic since 2006.
→ Led by
Novartis Gene Therapies
vet
Lisa Deschamps
, London-based
AviadoBio
has plugged in
a new chairman for its board of directors. Ex-
Surface Oncology
chief
Jeff Goater
is on interim CEO duty at
Atavistik Bio
and is a venture partner with
The Column Group
.
→
Ztalmy
maker
Marinus Pharmaceuticals
has added
Excision BioTherapeutics
CFO
Christine Silverstein
to the board of directors. Silverstein is also a board member at
Abeona Therapeutics
, where she was promoted to CFO during her four years with the biotech.
→
Leaps by Bayer
’s senior director of venture investments health
Rakhshita Dhar
is bounding over
to the board of directors at
Vesigen Therapeutics
. Leaps co-led Vesigen’s
$28.5 million Series A
with
Morningside Ventures
in July 2020.
→
Scancell
, an I/O biotech out of the UK,
has named
Jean-Michel Cosséry
as non-executive chairman, replacing
John Chiplin
. The one-time
GE Healthcare
marketing chief was VP for North America oncology during his five years at
Eli Lilly
.
→ While securing
$20 million from a Series A
, Boston startup
Ratio Therapeutics
is also picking up
Susan Whoriskey
for its board of directors. Whoriskey brings experience from her times at
Vera Therapeutics
,
Moderna
,
Momenta Pharmaceuticals
and
Cubist
Pharmaceuticals
.
→ Go for launch:
Vaxxinity
is moving from Dallas to Cape Canaveral, FL and
adding to the board of directors
along the way. The four new members are
Katherine Eade
,
Landon Ogilvie
,
James Smith
, and ex-
Tesla
chief people officer
Gaby Toledano
, bringing the total to nine after the resignations of
James Chui
and
Greg Blatt
.