Pfizer
in Talks to Acquire Seagen in Deal Likely Valued at More
Than $30 billion
Potential deal
would help the drug company add to its lineup of cancer
treatments
Pfizer Inc is in talks to acquire biotech
Seagen Inc.,
according to people familiar with the matter, the latest potential deal for a big
drug company aimed at adding a promising class of targeted cancer therapies.
The talks are at an early stage
and there is no guarantee there will be a deal, the people said. A number of hurdles
would need to be overcome, including the potential for a stringent antitrust review
of any proposal. If there is a deal, it would be big: Seagen
has a market value of some $30 billion and would be expected to command a premium
over that.
Seagen was
in advanced talks last year to be acquired by Merck & Co., in a deal that would
have been worth
$40 billion or more, The Wall Street Journal reported at the time,
but the two sides failed to reach agreement. Pfizer at the time was also looking
at Seagen, people familiar with the matter have said.
After talks with Merck fell apart
last year, Seagen named David Epstein, a former Novartis executive who more recently
was a partner at venture firm Flagship Pioneering, as chief executive.
A deal would help Pfizer, one
of the world’s biggest pharmaceutical companies with $100 billion in sales last
year, add to its lineup of cancer treatments a class of
agents that have shown promise working with so-called immunotherapies against some
of the most prevalent tumors.
It could also help Pfizer offset
$17 billion in sales that the company projects it could lose due to patent expirations
by 2030. Pfizer has set a goal of adding $25 billion in revenue by the end of the
decade from business-development moves including acquisitions. Seagen had nearly $2 billion in sales last year.
New York-based Pfizer is flush
with cash. The drugmaker has some $22.7 billion from sales of its Covid-19
vaccines, drugs and other products.
Last year, Pfizer acquired sickle-cell-drug
maker Global Blood Therapeutics Inc. for more
than $5 billion and the rest of Biohaven
Pharmaceutical Holdings Co. for more
than $10 billion.
Seagen, of
Bothell, Wash., helped pioneer a
class of cancer therapy known as antibody drug conjugates that works
like a guided missile attacking tumors with toxic agents.
The therapies had been approved
for cancers such as Hodgkin’s and other lymphomas, and more recently have shown
promise in combination with an immunotherapy against
other kinds of tumors including
a form of breast cancer.
The potential in breast cancer
could be particularly appealing to Pfizer, which has a top-selling drug, named Ibrance, treating the condition.
The Food and Drug Administration
is reviewing whether to approve a combination of the Padcev
antibody drug conjugate, from Seagen and Astellas Pharma Inc.,
and Merck’s Keytruda immunotherapy for treatment of advanced bladder cancer.