Here's another: Biotech Beach. First of two parts.
No easy cure | Fore more than a decade, biotech has been one of San Diego's most powerful growth industries. But products -- and profits -- have been elusive.
Thomas Kupper STAFF WRITER
08-Mar-1998 Sunday
San Diego's biotech industry
Ted Greene arrived in San Diego in 1978 with dreams of building a biotech powerhouse. Twenty years later, he's just as ambitious.
His latest company, Amylin Pharmaceuticals, has spent some $200 million on one drug, pramlintide. If it works, Greene thinks it could revolutionize the treatment of diabetes, a deadly disease with a worldwide market of more than 100 million patients.
It would be one of the industry's greatest victories, one that would quickly boost Amylin into an elite group of hugely profitable biotech companies.
The reality, however, is that despite a decade of work, Amylin is still at least two years away from even applying to the Food and Drug Administration for approval. Mixed results in late-stage testing sent investors running last summer and wiped out half the value of Amylin's stock. Last week, Amylin's partner, Johnson & Johnson, which was carrying half the costs, backed out of the project.
"The timing of it has been disappointing," Greene said. "But I still think the medical potential is quite exciting."
San Diego's biotech industry, a cluster of 21,000 scientists and other professionals largely based in La Jolla, is filled with stories that share a common theme with Amylin's: big dreams but no products.
After more than a decade of effort and huge investments into research, San Diego has yet to produce a "home run" drug or dominant company that cranks out one product after another.
In fact, the local biotech community has produced only two new drugs -- products from Idec Pharmaceuticals and Agouron Pharmaceuticals that both won approval last year.
But, like Amylin, a growing number of local biotechs have products in phase III trials, the make-or-break stage that can lead to government approval. The next few years could thus be a critical period.
Success is important to San Diego's future, because the city has identified biotech as one of the primary building blocks of a new economy for the 21st century, one that will replace lost defense-related work with high-paying technology jobs.
The county is home to more than 200 biomedical businesses, including more than three dozen publicly traded biotechs.
Hopes for 'Biotech Beach'
San Diego will never become a Silicon Valley of biotech, though, with millionaire chemists cruising Torrey Pines Road in fancy cars, unless significant numbers of new drugs start to emerge from the laboratories along La Jolla's "Biotech Beach."
The downside is troubling. Without products and the revenue they bring, any company eventually will run out of money.
Investors, who have financed the growth of San Diego's biotech sector in the hope of big returns down the road, have only so much patience.
"Eventually all the science has to be turned into products for the industry to be sustained," said Peter Johnson, Agouron's chief executive. "But there's evidence that's happening. Idec and Agouron could be the tip of the iceberg."
While biotech's presence remains relatively small in a region of 2.7 million people with a $90 billion economy, rapid growth in the next few years is possible.
An example of the potential is Thousand Oaks-based Amgen, the world's largest biotech company, which employed as many people by itself in 1996 as did all 29 publicly traded companies in San Diego -- around 4,600.
Other biotech clusters around the country also have more to show for their efforts. East Coast biotech hubs in New Jersey and around Washington both generated more product sales than San Diego's larger biotech community in 1996, the last year for which data are available.
The San Francisco Bay Area has produced industry powerhouses Chiron and Genentech, profitable companies with stock market valuations of over $3 billion.
Ask many who work in San Diego biotech why none of their companies has become the next Amgen and they give a similar answer: Be patient.
They say the reason San Diego biotechs are smaller and less successful isn't that they're inferior companies, just that they're younger.
Losses are accepted
While years of heavy losses would be an indication of failure in most industries, for young biotechs red ink is an accepted fact of life.
Investors put up their money with full knowledge that drugs can take a decade or longer to develop, and employees understand that scientific discovery isn't easy or quick.
"There's probably a very strong self-selection for people who can deal with that," said Steve Worland, a scientist who's been at Agouron for almost a decade.
Indeed, most of the industry's power hitters have been around longer than any of San Diego's companies. Amgen, for example, began business in 1980, while most of San Diego's top biotechs were formed in the late '80s and early '90s.
Agouron, the first San Diego biotech to get a drug approved, was founded in 1984 and is one of the older local companies.
Additionally, some executives argue that the job has gotten harder than it was for the industry's pioneers. The first companies sensibly picked the easiest projects, they argue, and also had less trouble raising money because investors were particularly hot for biotech stocks in the early days.
The general rule is that it takes about a decade to discover, test and launch a new drug, and that's roughly how long it took Amgen. The company's first product, the anemia drug Epogen, won approval in 1989 and produced $1 billion in sales by 1992.
By that time frame, then, San Diego is entering a critical period. Within the next few years, it should become clear whether a breakout company will emerge, or if there will just be a lot of small companies that struggle to maintain profitability -- if they reach it at all.
"It's too early for disappointment," said chief executive Stanley Crooke of Carlsbad-based Isis Pharmaceuticals. "But it's about the right time to ask the question."
Idec, Agouron lead
Idec and Agouron, the first two San Diego biotechs to get drugs on the market, are clearly among the front-runners to break from the pack. Agouron already has reached profitability on the strength of its AIDS drug Viracept -- a feat that puts it in an elite club of fewer than a dozen profitable biotechs nationwide.
Some observers think Viracept alone could go a long way toward positioning the company near the top of the industry. The market for such drugs, known as protease inhibitors, is growing fast, and Agouron is catching up with the market leader, Merck & Co.
Already, the drug achieved sales of $91.8 million in the most recent quarter, one of the most successful launches ever for a biotech drug.
Nearly all the other drug companies in La Jolla can outline scenarios for similar success, though in most cases it's several years in the future.
With more than three-dozen publicly traded biotechs in San Diego County, the odds would appear to suggest that at least a few could connect.
Two of the larger companies, Ligand Pharmaceuticals and Isis Pharmaceuticals, have achieved stock market valuations above $300 million with research strategies that have produced wide portfolios of projects but as yet no products.
Ligand's work focuses in part on retinoids, a class of drugs the company plans to test in diabetes and a long list of cancers. The company plans to seek approval this year for a drug for AIDS lesions, a relatively small market but an important test of the company's ability to commercialize the technology.
'The next Microsoft'?
Isis and another local company, Vical, were featured in a June 1996 feature in Worth magazine that sought to identify "the next Microsoft." The article brought a lot of attention to the companies, but both are focused for now just on getting their first products on the market.
Vical has patents on a technology it calls "naked DNA," which could have nearly unlimited potential as a mechanism for genetically engineered vaccines. Isis is developing so-called antisense drugs, which interfere with the process genes use to make proteins.
"I think there's a possibility that someone will make a real breakthrough," Isis' Crooke said. "In fact, I'm increasingly confident that Isis will be one that does it."
Another approach is to focus much of a company's attention on one drug, as Amylin can do with pramlintide because diabetes is among the largest disease markets. If the drug works, it would immediately make Amylin one of the most valuable biotechs.
Similarly, Immune Response Corp. in Carlsbad is banking on success in very large markets, though it has a portfolio of more than a half-dozen projects. The company, co-founded by the late Jonas Salk, has late-stage trials under way in drugs for AIDS and rheumatoid arthritis.
"Just with arthritis and HIV, we could be another Amgen," chief executive Dennis Carlo said.
In the early days of San Diego biotech, there was little clue how long it would take the industry to mature. The first San Diego biotech achieved profitability in the mid-'80s.
That company, Hybritech, specialized in diagnostic products and narrowly broke into the black in 1984, when its sales reached $14.6 million.
A year later, however, Hybritech agreed to be acquired by the Indianapolis drug giant Eli Lilly and Co. Its legacy was a large cadre of executives who disbursed to form new biotechs, companies that today are trying to commercialize their first products.
"I believe that the company would have been successful," said former Hybritech President David Hale, who remains a prominent figure in San Diego biotech. "Whether it would have gotten to be the size of an Amgen or a Chiron, it's hard to tell."
The two front-runners in San Diego today, Idec and Agouron, both have pipelines of additional drugs in development, and both companies are working to sustain their momentum. Idec hopes to follow its lymphoma drug Rituxan with another lymphoma treatment and a drug for rheumatoid arthritis.
Revenues limit risk
Analysts think Rituxan alone could make Idec profitable, though the company only began selling the drug at the end of last year and it's too soon to tell how it's doing. Just having revenue coming in, though, can be an advantage.
"That puts a company into an elite group where the risk is much more limited," said biotech analyst Peter Ginsberg of Piper Jaffray. "It shows that your clinical team and your scientific team and your regulatory team have the ability to bring a product through."
Agouron suffered a setback with its No. 2 drug late last year that left its stock price lower than it had been before Viracept won approval. The company halted development of its cancer treatment, Thymitaq, and dissolved a cancer research collaboration with the pharmaceutical company Roche.
Johnson, the company's chief executive, said two cancer compounds Agouron has in early development could make it to market by early in the next century -- fast enough for Agouron to maintain the momentum it is building with Viracept.
The more revenue Viracept brings in, of course, the more there will be to pay for other research and the higher the odds of the work's paying off. That's the advantage larger biotech companies have -- which San Diego's companies don't have yet.
"The connection between large products and staying power is a real one," Johnson said. "Amgen's at that scale. It's one of the biggest problems for the rest of us."
How local biotechs stack up
Here's how some of San Diego County's more prominent biotechs compare to a few of the industry leaders:
Company...Location..Market capitalization..Revenue..Profit/Loss..Employees
.................(1-2-98)...............(1996) ....(1996)
Amgen...Thousand Oaks...$14.2 B...$2.2 B...+$679.8M.....4,646
Chiron Emeryville $ 3.0 B $1.2 B +$55.1M 7,434
Genentech South San Fran. $ 2.8 B $904.6M +$118.3M 3,071
Biogen Cambridge, Mass. $ 2.8 B $259.7M +$40.5M 675
Centocor Malvern, Pa. $ 2.5 B $135.5M -$12.8M 545
Agouron San Diego $906.2M $132.1M* -$42.8M 708
Idec San Diego $646.7M $ 30.0M -$5.0M 265
Advanced Tissue Sciences
San Diego $460.5M $ 14.6M -$22.4M 196
Ligand San Diego $420.7M $ 36.6M -$37.3M 329
Isis Carlsbad $336.2M $ 22.6M -$26.5M 287
Immune Response
Carlsbad $251.9M $ 7.0M -$21.0M 146
* fiscal year ended 6/97. |