On Oct. 3, Eli Lilly unveiled a $1.4 billion agreement to acquire cross-town radiopharmaceutical company Point Biopharma Global to beef up its oncology capabilities. Wall Street analysts immediately hailed the deal as validation of Point’s portfolio and the long-term value of radiotherapies.
By the end of the month, however, many Point investors have developed new thoughts.
Fast forward to Monday, Dec. 4, Lilly pushed back the deadline of its tender offer for Point’s shares for a second time. This time, only 24.75% of Point shares had been tendered, even lower than the 26.45% Lilly previously collected as of Nov. 16.
“I actually find it fairly confusing,” Jake Van Naarden, president of Lilly’s Loxo oncology unit, said in an interview with Fierce Biotech.
“The idea that there is some Goldilocks scenario where this product completely owns this massive market unchallenged, I think that is actually the thesis that’s sort of playing out with some of these investors,” added David Hyman, M.D., who recently expanded his oncology development role to chief medical officer at Lilly.
The two executives were referring to Point’s lead candidate, PNT2002, a PSMA-targeted radioligand therapy that has an “imminent” readout expected from a phase 3 trial in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) after second-line hormonal treatment.
By Van Naarden’s account, Lilly’s current predicament is caused not by any internal factors but by Point’s rival, Novartis.
A Novartis hiccup
At the European Society for Medical Oncology 2023 Congress in October, Novartis unveiled phase 3 data for its PSMA-targeted Pluvicto in mCRPC before taxane-based chemotherapy. While Pluvicto showed a massive tumor progression benefit against a change of androgen receptor inhibitor, a preliminary but negative trend of overall survival was observed. As a result, Novartis has decided to delay a potential FDA filing, pending longer follow-up of the PSMAfore trial.
PNT2002 is very similar to Pluvicto, and Point’s SPLASH trial is similar to PSMAfore. Apparently, some investors are banking on the scenario where SPLASH’s overall survival readout turns out in favor of PNT2002. But Van Naarden argued that, just like the PSMAfore results, whatever overall survival data SPLASH may produce at the end of the year would be immature and basically “uninterpretable.”
“So if the Point study reads out, and it has a primary endpoint hazard ratio in the range of Novartis’, which I think is very reasonable to assume—that is what we underwrote for our deal, we’ve already valued that. And if the hazard ratio on survival, instead of being like 1.1, is 0.9, like, who cares?” Van Naarden said. “Because the truth of the matter is that given the timeline associated here, it’s pretty likely FDA will end up asking for another refresh [of data] anyway prior to filing […] This is sort of a waystation on the path, and I don’t know how informative it really is.”
When the Point deal was announced in early October, analysts at Leerink Partners said the $12.50-apiece price “fairly” values the commercial potential of PNT2002 and “represents approximately the upper end of” where Point’s stock price could trade in the best-case scenario from the SPLASH/PSMAfore readouts.
After Novartis’ data release, the Leerink team laid out reasons why SPLASH might show a better overall survival result. To explain the disappointing survival showing with Pluvicto, Novartis pointed to a high number of patients who had crossed over from the control arm to the radiotherapy. By comparison, SPLASH may have a lower crossover rate because PNT2002 is not an FDA-approved agent, the Leerink team said.
But Leerink previously also noted that Lilly’s acquisition removes the risk of PNT2002 underperforming Pluvicto in cross-trial comparison, especially as Lilly is paying a price based on the assumption of a successful SPLASH readout.
Still, some investors—seeing little to lose—wanted to take the gamble.
'Significant upside'
Closing the Lilly deal before the imminent SPLASH readout “is not in the best interest” of Point’s shareholders, Biotechnology Value Fund, a private investment firm that holds about 16.4% of Point’s shares, said in a securities filing in early November.
Lilly’s proposal excluded a negative readout from the SPLASH study as a potential trigger for a material adverse effect clause that allows Lilly to back out of the deal, BVF noted. As such, BVF sees “negligible downside and the potential for significant upside” for the Point shareholders to wait for the SPLASH results.
To Lilly, beating Pluvicto and basically monopolizing the market is a long shot for PNT2002.
“There was never a thesis for this deal that we could ‘win this space’ with this medicine, because it’s not fundamentally that different of a medicine, that’s the truth,” Lilly’s Hyman said. He predicted that both drugs will eventually get approved in the pre-taxane mCRPC setting and will split the market.
How hard the Point investors are fighting the deal also puzzles Van Naarden and Hyman because Point won’t book the full financials from PNT2002. Last November, Point out-licensed commercialization rights to PNT2002 and another candidate to Lantheus. After certain commercial milestone payments, Point will get 20% royalties on PNT2002’s sales.
“We bought the company not because we wanted to be a contract drug manufacturer of a medicine exclusively for Lantheus,” Hyman said. “This is because I think this is a great team that has a pipeline that we’re excited about.”
With the PSMA asset already baked in, Lilly is buying Point for its broader radiotherapy capabilities, Van Naarden said.
“We did the deal because we think that [radioligand therapy] technology is coming to a place of real clinical importance for patients and a commercial reality that is real,” Van Naarden said. “It’s a modality that we were gonna have a hard time building on our own because of the complex supply chain and manufacturing.”
“In the face of rapid change and uncertainty, one of the ways to mitigate that is just to diversify the technologies you have in your toolkit so that you can reach for different things, depending on how the ground shifts beneath you,” Van Naarden said of the current oncology landscape.
Lilly now has two options, according to Van Naarden. The company can continue to push back the tender offer until summer 2024 per the merger agreement, or the transaction could be terminated.
When asked whether Lilly would pay more, the Loxo chief said: “We valued the company, we valued success. I don’t know what else there is to pay for.”
Editor's Note: The story has been updated to clarify the two options Lilly has moving forward.