Contract manufacturer Catalent has agreed to buy the gene therapy CDMO Paragon Bioservices for $1.2 billion.
Paragon Bioservices, a private-equity backed biologics contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) focused on gene therapy and next-generation vaccines, will be acquired by fellow CDMO Catalent, the firms announced this morning.
According to its website, 50% of Paragon’s current contracts are for gene therapy. The CDMO also supports vaccine products and has previously won contracts from clients including the US Department of Defense (DoD).
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Catalent set to buy Paragon for $1.2 billion. Image: iStock/macgyverhh
“Paragon’s unparalleled expertise in the rapidly growing market of gene therapy manufacturing will be a transformative addition to our business that we believe will accelerate our long-term growth,” Catalent CEO John Chiminski said.
“Paragon brings to Catalent a complementary capability that will fundamentally enhance our biologics business and our end-to-end integrated biopharmaceutical solutions for customers.”
The deal brings viral vector manufacturing capabilities to Catalent, complementing its biologics production capacity in Wisconsin and Indiana, with a 200,000 square-foot GMP gene therapy biomanufacturing facility in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
The facility is equipped with 500 L and 2,000 L single-use bioreactors for clinical through commercial material production, supporting Paragon’s customers, of which it claims to serve 20 of the top 40 gene-therapy biopharmaceutical companies.
The deal is expected to close in the second quarter of 2019.
Growth strategy
Jefferies analyst David Windley suggested the acquisition is the continuation of Catalent’s M&A growth strategy in a note to investors.
“Catalent has been acquiring steadily to add capabilities to its platform. In that regard, Paragon fits nicely in that strategy. Gene therapy as a therapeutic approach has achieved the validation (de-risking) of a US approval for Luxturna (Spark Therapeutics). Catalent has invested aggressively (organic and inorganic) in its large molecule manufacturing capabilities. Paragon would add yet another platform.â€
In September 2017, the CDMO acquired Bloomington, Indiana-based drug substance and drug product manufacturer Cook Pharmica for $950 million, significantly expanding its biologics capabilities. The recent acquisition of delivery tech and development solutions firm Juniper Pharmaceuticals for $150 million has also expanded Catalent’s small molecule business.
With demand for cell gene therapy manufacturing capabilities currently outstripping supply, the news is the latest example of third-party gene therapy consolidation. Last month, Thermo Fisher paid $1.7 billion to buy viral vector manufacturer Brammer Bio. Lonza, meanwhile, has acquired PharmaCell and a major stake in cell therapy partner Octane Biotech, while Hitachi Chemical recently paid $86 million for German cell therapy manufacturing firm apceth Biopharma.