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#43217

Re: Farmas USA

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

(Operator Instructions) And our first question comes from the line of Ted Tenthoff with Piper Jaffray.

Ted Tenthoff - Piper Jaffray
I wanted to touch basically first on the extension of the BARDA contracts and the [ph] quick related question. Obviously, activity is heating up here, but what kinds of funds do you still expect to receive under that initial $97 million contract? And that was extended September of this year, is that correct?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
So the way the BARDA contract works is back in, I think it was 2009 and early 2010, we submitted a proposal for a five-year research and development plan for, in this case, seasonal and avian influenza. And so they approved it and we started the contract in early 2011. And as with any research program, things change, scope changes. We went from a trivalent to a quadrivalent. We used new adjuvants in the program. So trying to keep track of all those changes.

And so the contract is broken into two pieces, a three-year base period, which was predicted to be worth $97 million; and then a two-year option period to bring it up to a total of $186 million. So that base period was predicted to end in February of this year. And as it turns out, because of all the scope changes, the work wasn't going to be finished in the base period. The normal way you go about these government contracts is you get to the end of the base period, you resubmit for a what's called a no cost extension to the period which you think you'll use up all $97 million. So we've done.

The answer to your question is, is we expect to use up the entire $97 million and then move into the option period for the additional $87 million.

Ted Tenthoff - Piper Jaffray
And related to that, reading the 2014 anticipated events, you say that the goal is to start a Phase 2 study, which is a quadrivalent VLP seasonal vaccine in the first quarter. Now is that a push-out? Is that [ph] crumble that you're referring to there? Or is that the Phase 2 for just the quadrivalent? I mean is there some push-out to start in the fourth quarter or so? What will those remaining $30 million-plus or so for the BARDA contract go to, as the quardrivalent study does start in the fourth quarter?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
All of the activities that we're working on right now are an effort to sequence the development of this through to licensure. And if you start with licensure and go back, you got to run a Phase 3 program. And during that Phase 3 program, you're going to be making your consistency lots. And before you do your Phase 3 program, you've got to make the lots for Phase 3. And then we have to time the last Phase 2 before the flu season this year, so we can begin our Phase 3 next year. And so all of our activities are to scale up the process, so that we're confident that the process that we use for this Phase 2 we can just turn on the dime and start manufacturing Phase 3 materials. So that's what we're using the time for. And that trial should start before the flu season and beginning of the fourth quarter.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Bill Tanner with FBR Capital Markets.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
Looks like a lot of balls moving down the field on the vaccine front. I just wondered if you could touch on how you view this feasibility of moving any or all of them through registration. And I guess really thinking more along the lines of two dimensions, one being the development capacity that you have at the company and if that's adequate or needs to be expanded, and then secondly as it relates to the capital or might be your access to capital, I guess, would be required to do that.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So let me take the infrastructure and people part of it first and really answer the basic question. We have a very full plate. We've got a lot of successes. We've got arguably several different products coming down the platform towards licensure. We've got a quadrivalent seasonal flu. We've got a pandemic or avian influenza vaccine. We've got and then three different approaches to RSV and the maternal, pediatric and elderly. And it's possible that we would approach one or more of these with a combination pentavalent respiratory vaccine.

So do we have the capacity to do that? To date, we do. We've got 215 people in the company right now. I think roughly 180 or 185 of those people are new since I've been CEO in the last three years. We've been building up the capability to do all the things that are required, maybe not very sexy, but are required to take a product into licensure. And that includes analytical development, process development, regulatory, clinical and control quality insurance. And that's where all of our growth has been, and it's all focused on we'll take multiple products to licensure. Inevitably when you're trying to work on that many things, time tables change on one program or the other. But right now, clinical data drives the clinical timeline.

And so you also asked about capital. We recently raised capital. The capital that we did last year was to be able to give us the run rate to get through some clinical data points and show proof-of-concept in a couple of our different programs and initiate a Phase 3 trial, our first Phase 3 trial with flu. So we have capital to do that right now. And it's clear in the future, we'll need to add to that stockpile of capital to be able to take the products through clinical safety and licensure.

Buck Phillips - Chief Financial Officer
Bill, let me just add, I think if you look at our numbers in the past, you'll see under investing activities in the statement of cash. Bill, you'll see what we're spending on CapEx on an annual basis. When we talk about our cash run rate, we anticipate additional investment into our manufacturing facilities, our process development facilities and equipment. So you could assume that when we make statements about our cash run rate, we are contemplating those investments at this point in time.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
And then I had a couple maybe for Greg, I'm assuming he's here. As it relates to the H7N9 and Stan touched on what the expectation is for going forward, I guess, into a Phase 3, but it maybe just describing a Phase 3. I'm assuming that it's still going to be in healthy volunteers. And the extent that you view the program is being relatively de-risk, since I guess you're not going to really challenge anybody with the virus and then maybe how you view the competitive landscape and where you guys are relative to competition.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
(technical difficulty)

The H7N9 is based on immunogenicity. You don't do efficacy with essential pandemic vaccines. So what we will do going forward is after establishing the least dose necessary of both antigen and the adjuvant in young adults, we used to do a trial in elderly subjects, because it's important to public health authorities to cover the elderly population and especially where a pathogen like H7N9, which has a predilection to be most lethal in the elderly population. So we will dose finding in young adults and in older adults and then move forward with those into a Phase 3 trial that allows us to get a safety database several thousand subjects and also show that our immune responses robustly fulfills CBER's criteria for accelerated approval and would more importantly make us eligible for emergency use authorization.

Our Phase 1 data was quite robust for H7N9, which is a notoriously difficult virus to immunize against. And I believe that we should no difficulty in continuing to show robust immunogenicity, which is the name of the game for avian influenza.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
And at the end of the day, I think you'd anticipate a more muted immune response in the elderly. I mean would this still be registerable for a viable vaccine if it's only for adults if the immunogenicity of the safety profile was viewed as maybe non-acceptable on the elderly?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
First of all, with adjuvanted vaccines, generally the safety profile is usually superior in the elderly. So I don't have any particular concerns residing there. It's not uncommon for both unadjuvanted and adjuvanted influenza vaccines to have a lesser immune response in the elderly. I would say that in our first study in which we enrolled individuals 18 to 64 years of age, we did look specifically at the stratum between 50 and 64 and their immune response was pretty good. And over age 64, we have the option of adjusting the adjuvant or the antigen dose to get a better response. We are not necessarily required to use the same formulation to address young adults and over adults. And so we would do that if necessary, so that we have a product that could provide protection in both age strata.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
Just on the RSV, I don't know if anybody can provide any more granularity on the timing in the second quarter. But I guess more importantly really is what would be the key data points to look for. Clearly safety is one of them. But just in terms of trying to get some better insight into other potential efficacy indicators, how should people be thinking about the data when they come out?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
Yeah, we expect to release that data in the second quarter this year. And it's an important trial. As you know, it's important data that will allow us to go to the FDA and get permission to enter into pregnant women. So the safety data is very important here. As you know, to date, we've had quite good safety. We expect that to continue. We also would be looking at the dosing regimen very carefully. And we've done, I think, a very good job of looking at the design trial to allow us to look at immune kinetics, so that we can dose the regimen during the pregnancy to provide peak antibody titers for them. So we plan on immunizing in the last trial of pregnancy which would span from about 28 weeks just to 40 weeks. So that when we immunize is going to be extremely important to decide, so that we can time immunization and get peak antibody titers.

And we do expect to look at the palivizumab antibodies, which again is very important. We'd like to reproduce that we had before. And the palivizumab, as you know, levels are important, we have indication what would be protective and we'd look to maximize those, so that when infants are born, they have the greatest chance of having protection and high palivizumab like antibodies. So this is a very key trial. We expect it to be our last trial in women of childbearing age before entering pregnant women.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Kevin DeGeeter with Ladenburg.

Kevin DeGeeter - Ladenburg
First off, I just want to offer my congratulations to John. Welcome back to the team. Good to have you back. And maybe two-part question on RSV and manufacturing process development. Can you just sort of walk us through, I guess, with some granularity on the key steps on scale-off between now and say initiation of a potential Phase 3 for RSV vaccine and just sort of your updated thoughts on a reasonable range for commercial COGS for an RSV standalone vaccine.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
So essentially the same production process as for our flu program. And then the question, just like in flu, to treat RSV is another strain and all the strains have different levels of production and of course there's different doses in a vaccine. So take those two and account how do we predict scalability and the commercial profitability on that. So in flu, as you know, the flu vaccines sell from the wholesaler at somewhere in the range of $10 to $12 per dose and it's been a trivalent dose with the cost of goods sold in below $5 for the three strains.

If we treat RSV similarly, but assume that the dose is going to be higher, it'll be more like a quadrivalent dose or perhaps a six-valent dose in terms of micrograms per dose, you can get an idea of what we expect for our cost of goods sold. The production levels at the scale that we've been doing this now are higher than any of our individual flu strains. So there's great potential for a standard pharmaceutical barge-in for RSV vaccine.

Kevin DeGeeter - Ladenburg
And maybe on a separate question with regard to the pentavalent respiratory vaccine, how do we begin to think about potential regulatory endpoints and what that means for the size of potential Phase 2 and Phase 3 studies? Specifically, I'm assume an accelerated approval under immunogenicity endpoint is unlikely for pentavalent vaccine. So how do we think about relevant clinical endpoint and what that might mean for clinical trial?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
I think the most relevant clinical endpoints for a multivalent respiratory vaccine are going to be efficacy. I think we may be able to, for example, independently show efficacy with the influenza vaccine and then build off of that to demonstrate a correlate of reduced risk, which is immunologic, and then do a separate efficacy trial which involves efficacies for RSV and immunogenicity for flu. Alternatively, we could do a large single trial that look the best to see for both in influenza and the RSV components.

We're going to have to look at efficacy of both components of the influenza and the RSV in the combination product. But whether it's most opportune to do that sequentially or in one trial, I don't think we've determined yet.

Kevin DeGeeter - Ladenburg
Do you anticipate the target population for pentavalent vaccine being similar to the RSV elderly population or more akin to an influenza product label, including a broader continuum of age groups?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
I think that the potential target population for the combination vaccine could be any of the population that we're pursuing in the RSV spectrum. Certainly, the elderly would benefit from the vaccine that covers both influenza, which you've seen as the major pathogen in the elderly, but which also covered RSV which is a covert cause of hospitalization. We know already that pregnant women benefit markedly from influenza vaccine. And if we could add the RSV component to that, then both mothers and infants would be likely to benefit from that. And both RSV and influenza are significant causes of morbidity in children. They have different age peaks within children, but both viruses are important in children, both in terms of causing serious illness and hospitalization and also causing relatively minor ailments, but that have tremendous economic impact based on the burden that they place on parents. So I think a combination vaccine could be a player in any of the segments where we're looking at RSV vaccine.

Operator

Your next questions comes from the line of George Zavoico with H.C. Wainwright.

George Zavoico - H.C. Wainwright
I have a question regarding the H7N9 since tomorrow. The Chinese announced that they're preparing H7N9 vaccine seeds for mass production in case of human-to-human transmission occurs, which I suspect as it seems that they're getting ready for human testing eventually. Does Novavax have a footprint at all in China, because you're ahead of the Chinese in this regard? And along with that, you have the Korean efforts going as well. So perhaps they're involved with the pandemic as well. Can you sort of triangulate China, Korea and Maryland here?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
So we've had several tropes and tropes planned in the near future to talk with various parts of China. As you know, there're a lot of different moving parts. But we've had conversations with the Chinese, FDA, the Chinese CDC and continued to have those. And I think it's in our part of matter of educating them as to who Novavax is and showing them the data, showing them now that we've got credibility with the US government, we've got publications in the New England Journal and showing what our capabilities are. I think they would be a potential customer. We would be a potential supplier.

I can't predict how that will go. Chinese companies have been working on H7N9 with the traditional egg-based method. And so I think we're an additional player there. Right now, without an emergency, the need for emergency use vaccine, you have to manufacture vaccines in China to be able to distribute them in China. And we've also evaluated that. So we're working all the angles in China. But there is also a lot of other countries that border China that I think have the problem of not having capacity of making H7N9 vaccines, and those are equally likely customers.

With respect to Korea, our partner in Korea, LG Life Sciences have a license to both seasonal and pandemic. And of course if there were a need for H7N9 vaccination, they would come to us for the vaccine for the time being. And their expectation, their plan is to build a manufacturing facility in Korea to supply that market in the future. But we're the only source of that right now.

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
I would like to point out, to date, we're the only group to have published any clinical data on the H7N9 candidate. It's March. We published at the beginning of November. So I've seen various groups making claims that they have an H7N9 vaccine at various stages of development. And no doubt, someone will publish. But to date, there has been no publication of H7N9 data. We have a very good data set.

George Zavoico - H.C. Wainwright
And so you're easily about six to nine months ahead of anybody else I presume at least?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
That's right.

George Zavoico - H.C. Wainwright
And then the Chinese said that there was a dramatically engineered vaccine, which I suppose (inaudible) it's not egg-based, right?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
That's correct. That still could be an egg-based or artificially constructed strain.

George Zavoico - H.C. Wainwright
I'm told it's actually there never will be from a health standpoint a pandemic H7N9 pandemic that never gets to human-to-human transmission state. But right now, there really is no customer for it or is there a plan for stockpiling regardless of whether it's called a pandemic?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
As I say, right now, without emergency use being demanded, our plan is to take this product on to the BARDA contract through to licensure. And once we have licensure, that's when BARDA could make their plans to start file. BARDA in the past, eight or nine years, has stockpiled a couple of billion dollars worth of vaccine. On a yearly basis, it's averaged in $100 million to $200 million. And it's difficult to predict from year-to-year how much BARDA plans to stockpile. So we can't predict that.

George Zavoico - H.C. Wainwright
And the final question regarding Isconova or Novavax AB and the nature of Matrix-M. Genocea has had successful results of the trial. Are you still marketing this as a potential adjuvant to other companies and do you expect much revenue from this regard or pretty much all your resource is directed toward, you've been talking about all afternoon so far?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
It's part of our plan to evaluate that. But right now, we have purchased Isconova for the primary purpose of having access to an adjuvant for our vaccines and that justified the entire acquisition. I think that what we've found since we've acquired the company is if there is a store of preclinical data and some clinical data suggesting that it might have many applications and we over the next year or so will evaluate how to exploit that.

Operator

Our next question in the queue is a follow-up from the line of Bill Tanner with FBR Capital Markets.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
Stan, just on the registration, I mean it sounds pretty clear and feasible that the company can do what is necessary for registration in the US. As you think about global registration and have to confess a bit of near fight in terms of what might be required by other regions such as Europe or the rest of the world, to what extent would you entail having a partner for that at least just to do the registration purposes? I mean as you look farther out, to what extent would you need a partner really at all except for maybe ex-US in terms of commercialization?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
We'll need partners for commercialization clearly. And I think ex-US is the obvious choice for looking for partners. It's possible we'd find someone to co-market within the US, but we haven't made that decision yet. Going back to registration, as part of this great group I just told you about, we have people who have registered products globally in Europe, in the US both with our Head of Regulatory, Amy Fix, and Lou Fries have been involved in registrations outside of the US. And so we have a lot of expertise in it. And so we can do that. And the question is the timing of when we run those clinical trials and collect the data and file the registration. And so that's something we'll look at over the next year. We already have the team in place that can lead that effort.

Bill Tanner - FBR Capital Markets
But at least as it relates to Europe and the ability to leverage the data set from US clinical trials might be limited or not?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
I don't know it's limited.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Vernon Bernardino with MLV & Company.

Vernon Bernardino - MLV & Company
Just wanted to follow up on one of Bill's questions. I didn't quite catch if you had actually given an update as far as the competitive landscape in RSV.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
I can give that to you. So the competitive landscape to which you're referring is the one that was sponsored under a grant by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and PATH, which is a not-for-profit, an NGO in Seattle, to put together an RSV landscape. I think it was December of 2012, which showed basically that every company globally that is working on vaccines has some sort of RSV vaccine candidate program, all of which were in preclinical trials, with two exceptions. There was Novavax, which was in Phase 2s back in December of 2012, way ahead of the industry at that point, and MedImmune, which has had a Phase 1/2 trial with an RSV vaccine largely working in conjunction with the NIH. And so we were basically out there by ourselves.

I think the only update that I have right now is that GSK has registered on clintrials.gov that they started to trial in August of last year with the expectation that they would report results at the end of this year or something like that. So it's a trial in healthy, adult men.

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
It's a sub-unit trial in healthy adult men. They don't really disclose the dosage of formulation, but that's what they tried to start their trials in adult men.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
So I never underestimate the competition. But there are two points from that landscape. One is, is that this is such an important area that everybody is working on some approach to RSV vaccination, number one. And number two that we remain out and front of the pack and that's largely why we've chosen to not barter the program, because we think we can progress the vaccine candidates faster through our own efforts than through partnerships.

Vernon Bernardino - MLV & Company
And as a follow-up, part of my thinking is that as you had described there are different approaches to this market as far as RSV, there're some market share gain effort and so perhaps just wanted to see how (inaudible) healthy adult men, for example, for now what is the approach to shaping this market as far as the market opportunity?

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
So we've mentioned the three different areas that we're going into. We have RSV vaccine. I think what we're looking to do and that with a novel vaccine and the only vaccine that is approved at the time of launch, I think the market we've brought on now for the first time a commercial guy to help us do all the pre-commercialization activities to prepare the market by educating the thought leaders, the KOLs, physician community, the insurance companies and payers help to design an acceptable target product profile that enjoys marketing input and then educating groups like the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, for instance, and the ACOG, the gynecology group, so that we can have marketing price analysis. So that's the effort that we're going into right now and take it for an RSV vaccine alone and then factor in having a pentavalent respiratory vaccine. Not only it builds not only the RSV potential demand for market, but it encroaches upon this $3 billion flu market too. So that's what we're going to be designing.

Vernon Bernardino - MLV & Company
And bottomline, going forward, do you think everyone will have to at least generate data that shows palivizumab like antibody generation?

Greg Glenn - Senior Vice President, Research and Development
Well, I think it's possible via maybe other approaches. Like just would point out, our approach is highly de-risked and it's unique and novel to any vaccine development program. But it's been an activity that's been identified, evaluated in randomized clinical trials and licensed with a level that's known to be protective. So that is completely unique. And I think we felt about an important way to de-risk our programs. So at this point, that's our view that the best way forward is to follow this well proven route that has I think been a very successful product as well.

Operator

And I'm not showing any further questions in the queue. I would like to turn the call back over to the speakers for any closing remarks.

Stan Erck - President and Chief Executive Officer
Good questions. Look forward to talking with you in 90 days. Thanks.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This does conclude the program and you may all disconnect. Have a great day, everyone.

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#43219

Re: Farmas USA

ahora si que diluyen las baxs no??

madre mia!!

#43220

Re: Farmas USA

Baxano Surgical, Inc. Announces $10 Million Private Placement of Convertible Debentures

http://online.wsj.com/article/PR-CO-20140311-904784.html

... announced today that it has entered into a definitive agreement with entities affiliated with two institutional investors in connection with a private placement of approximately $10 million aggregate principal amount of subordinated convertible debentures and warrants to purchase 9,428,000 shares of common stock.

.... The debentures will be convertible into common stock at an initial conversion price of $1.06 per share and will bear interest at 6% per year, maturing on March 11, 2017. The warrants will have an initial exercise price of $1.19 per share. ..

 

Convertible Debentures = Obligaciones convertibles

BAXS

#43221

Re: Farmas USA

Como veis esta manera de financiación, es mejor o peor que sean privadas que publicas?

#43222

Re: Farmas USA

No parece muy importante...¿no?
Lo que pasa que si los insiders compran a 1.06, evidentemente yo no quiero comprar a 1.30

BAXS

#43224

Re: Farmas USA

No es dilución si interpreto bien la new. Pero lo que tu dices, para mi ya 1,30 no me parece tan barato.

No hizo una operacion similar CLSN en Mayo 2013? Localizó intitucionales , fijo un precio y le compraron 10 millones $. La diferencia creo recordar es que en CLSN eran acciones y las compraron a precio superior al que cotizaba en ese momento ... y aqui convertibles a un precio mas goloso para convencer al institucional.

 
BAXS
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