Chi-Med Announces Amendment to the 2013 License & Collaboration Agreement on Fruquintinib with Eli Lilly and Company

On December 20, 2018 Hutchison China MediTech Limited ("Chi-Med") (AIM/Nasdaq: HCM) reported certain amendments ("2018 Amendment") to the 2013 License and Collaboration Agreement ("2013 Agreement") on fruquintinib with Lilly Shanghai an affiliate of Eli Lilly and Company ("Lilly") (Press release, Hutchison China MediTech, DEC 20, 2018, View Source [SID1234532206]). The 2018 Amendment covers adjustments in the respective roles and responsibilities of Chi-Med and Lilly, in China, for the development and commercialization of fruquintinib in the areas of future life cycle planning and development, collaborations for co-development of fruquintinib with other third-party anti-cancer agents as well as promotion and distribution rights of fruquintinib.

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"Through this amendment, Chi-Med is stepping forward to take on greater responsibility in return for a broader role and a larger share of the future economic interest on fruquintinib," commented Simon To, Chairman of Chi-Med. "Lilly has been and will continue to be a most important partner for Chi-Med in bringing fruquintinib to as broad a patient population as possible and we share a common goal to maximize the commercial success of fruquintinib in China." He added, "The recent approval and launch of fruquintinib for colorectal cancer in China is an important first step on this journey."

Fruquintinib Life Cycle Indications ("LCI"):

Under the terms of the 2013 Agreement, decision making on LCI development beyond the initial indications of third-line colorectal cancer ("CRC"), third-line non-small cell lung cancer ("NSCLC") and second-line gastric cancer was controlled by Lilly. The majority of development costs for LCIs were to be paid by Lilly, with the minority by Chi-Med.

The 2018 Amendment now gives Chi-Med all planning, execution and decision making responsibilities for LCI development on fruquintinib in China. Chi-Med will pay all of the costs associated with fruquintinib LCI development in China. In return for this investment of capital and resources, Lilly will pay Chi-Med a $20 million milestone upon approval of each fruquintinib LCI in China, for up to three LCIs, totaling up to $60 million in LCI approval milestone payments. Furthermore, upon the launch of the first LCI, the tiered royalty structure, payable by Lilly to Chi-Med on total molecule sales in China, has been raised from the range of 15-20% in the 2013 Agreement to a new level of 15-29% under the 2018 Amendment.

China commercial – Co-Promotion rights:

Under the terms of the 2013 Agreement, Lilly held full commercialization rights to fruquintinib in China.

The 2018 Amendment provides Chi-Med the right to promote fruquintinib in provinces that represent 30% of the sales of fruquintinib in China ("Chi-Med Territory") upon the occurrence of certain commercial milestones. The Chi-Med Territory will expand to provinces that represent 40% of the sales of fruquintinib in China subject to additional criteria being met. Lilly will pay Chi-Med a fee for service to conduct all promotional activities in the Chi-Med Territory.

Immunotherapy collaborations:

Lilly has provided consent, and freedom to operate, for Chi-Med to enter into joint development collaborations with certain third-party pharmaceutical companies to explore combination treatments of fruquintinib and various immunotherapy agents. The first such collaborations with Innovent Biologics (Suzhou) Co. Ltd. ("Innovent") and Genor Biopharma Co. Ltd. ("Genor") will explore the combination of fruquintinib and their respective programmed cell death protein-1 ("PD-1") antibodies, sintilimab (IBI308) and genolimzumab (GB226), in several solid tumor settings.

FINANCIAL GUIDANCE:

Our updated guidance for 2018, compared to the most recent guidance in our 2018 Interim Results announcement for the period ended June 30, 2018 dated July 27, 2018, includes a $12 million increase in expected full year Innovation Platform R&D expense to $142-152 million. This increase reflects the 2018 Amendment of the fruquintinib collaboration with Lilly; our recent co-development collaborations with multiple partners to explore immunotherapy (PD-1) combinations with our vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) inhibitors; as well as a general rise in clinical trial spending on our eight clinical drug candidates and discovery programs including a one-time non-cash adjustment relating to one of our joint ventures. Further, while progress has been made towards realizing the one-time property compensation gain under the Commercial Platform, it is not expected to occur in 2018. We make no other changes to the full year 2018 financial guidance as detailed below:

2018 Previous Guidance

2018 Current Guidance

Adjustment

Group Level:

– Consolidated revenue

$155-175m

$155-175m

None

– Admin., interest & tax

$(16)-(18)m

$(16)-(18)m

None

– Net loss[1]

$(39)-(72)m

$(71)-(84)m

$(12)-(32)m increase

Innovation Platform:

– Consolidated revenue

$40-50m

$40-50m

None

– Adjusted (non-GAAP) R&D expenses

$(130)-(140)m

$(142)-(152)m

$(12)m increase

– Net loss[1]

$(80)-(100)m

$(92)-(112)m

$(12)m increase

Commercial Platform:

– Sales (consolidated)

$115-125m

$115-125m

None

– Sales of non-consolidated JVs[2]

$460-480m

$460-480m

None

– Net income on an adjusted (non-GAAP) basis excl. one-time gains[1]

$41-43m

$41-43m

None

– One-time gains[1]

$0-20m[3]

$0m

$0-(20)m decrease

– Net income[1]

$41-63m

$41-43m

$0-(20)m decrease

Notes: [1] Attributable to Chi-Med; [2] Joint ventures; [3] One-time property compensation, timing of which is dependent on Guangzhou government policy.

All dollars are expressed in US dollar currency unless otherwise stated.

About Fruquintinib

Fruquintinib (brand name: Elunate) is a small molecule, selective and highly potent inhibitor of VEGFR 1, 2 and 3. VEGFR inhibitors play a pivotal role in tumor-related angiogenesis, cutting off the blood supply that a tumor needs to grow rapidly. The global market for anti-angiogenesis therapies was estimated at over $18 billion in 2017, including both monoclonal antibodies and small molecules approved in around 30 tumor settings. During the discovery research process, which began at Chi-Med in 2007, fruquintinib was successfully designed to be differentiated by improving kinase selectivity in comparison to other approved small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), to minimize off-target toxicities, improve tolerability and provide more consistent target coverage, resulting in better clinical efficacy.

The superior tolerability, along with fruquintinib’s low potential for drug-drug interaction based on preclinical assessment, suggests that it may be highly suitable for innovative combinations with other anti-cancer therapies. The most common adverse reactions included hypertension, hand-foot syndrome and proteinuria. Clinically effective management of these adverse effects is feasible. For important safety information about fruquintinib, please see www.chi-med.com.

About Other Fruquintinib Development Programs

Global Development

Phase I monotherapy in the U.S.: In December 2017, Chi-Med initiated a multi-center, open-label, Phase I clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of fruquintinib in U.S. patients with advanced solid tumors (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT03251378). This study is almost complete, and proof-of-concept ("POC") studies are expected to begin in 2019.

PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor combination: It is an important part of Chi-Med’s strategy to explore the potential synergies of its drug candidates in combination with other anti-cancer treatments in several solid tumor settings. In November 2018, Chi-Med entered into a global collaboration agreement to evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of fruquintinib in combination with sintilimab (IBI308), a PD-1 inhibitor being developed by Innovent.

China Development

CRC in China: The National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) approved the first New Drug Application ("NDA") for fruquintinib for the treatment of patients with advanced CRC in September 2018. The NDA is supported by data from the successful FRESCO study, a Phase III pivotal registration trial of fruquintinib in 416 patients with CRC in China, which was highlighted in an oral presentation at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) (Free ASCO Whitepaper) Annual Meeting held on June 5, 2017 and was published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, JAMA, in June 2018 (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02314819).

Gastric cancer in China: In October 2017, Chi-Med initiated a pivotal Phase III clinical trial of fruquintinib in combination with Taxol (paclitaxel), known as the FRUTIGA study, in approximately 500 patients with advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma who have progressed after first-line standard chemotherapy (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT03223376). An interim analysis on FRUTIGA, to establish POC, is anticipated during the first half of 2019 and if successful could trigger a POC milestone payment from Lilly. The FRUTIGA study followed a Phase I/II clinical trial in 34 patients with gastric cancer that demonstrated that combination therapy of fruquintinib and Taxol was generally well-tolerated with promising tumor response (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02415023).

Lung cancer in China: The FALUCA trial is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-center, Phase III registration study targeted at treating patients with advanced non-squamous NSCLC, who have failed two lines of systemic chemotherapy. 527 patients were randomized at a 2:1 ratio to receive either: 5mg of fruquintinib orally once per day, on a three-weeks-on / one-week-off cycle, plus best supportive care ("BSC"); or placebo plus BSC. On November 16, 2018, Chi-Med announced that FALUCA did not meet the primary endpoint to demonstrate a statistically significant increase in overall survival (OS) compared to placebo, however the data did show statistically significant improvement in all secondary endpoints including progression free survival (PFS), objective response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR) and duration of response (DoR) as compared to the placebo. The safety profile of the trial was in line with that observed in prior clinical studies. Full detailed results are expected to be disclosed at an upcoming scientific meeting. Additional details about this study can be found at clinicaltrials.gov, using identifier NCT02691299.

Along with FALUCA, fruquintinib is concurrently being studied in a Phase II study in combination with Iressa (gefitinib) in patients with untreated advanced or metastatic NSCLC (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02976116). Preliminary results were highlighted in an oral presentation at the 18th World Conference on Lung Cancer on October 16, 2017.

PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor combination: In October 2018, Chi-Med entered into a further collaboration in China to evaluate the combination of fruquintinib with genolimzumab (GB226), a PD-1 inhibitor being developed by Genor.