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GSK taps UK firm for "beyond antibodies" drug technology

Published: 09 Jul 2013 - 11:19 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 11:46 am

LONDON: GlaxoSmithKline plans to exploit new technology from private British biotech company Immunocore to develop next-generation drugs against cancer that fight tumours in ways antibody-based drugs cannot.

Britain's biggest pharmaceuticals group will pay 142 million pounds or $212 million in pre-clinical milestone payments for access to the Oxford-based company's work on multiple drug targets, the two partners said on Tuesday.

Immunocore will also get up to 200 million pounds for each product that finally reaches the market, plus up to double-digit percentage royalties on any sales.

The tie-up with GSK is the second validation of Immunocore's work by a big pharmaceutical company, following a similar deal with Roche's Genentech unit last month.

Immunocore's technology relies on a new type of medicines it calls "ImmTACs." 

These drugs exploit the power of T cell receptors a part of the immune system to recognise changes that occur inside cells during cancer or viral infection. 

ImmTACs then activate the immune system to kill targeted cells.

Traditional antibody-based therapies only recognise changes on the surface of cells.

Laurent Jespers, head of innovation at GSK's biopharmaceuticals unit, said ImmTACs offered "a tremendous opportunity" in treating cancer.

The most advanced ImmTAC drug, IMCgp100 for the treatment of melanoma, is currently in early Phase I/II clinical trials. (Reuters)