GE aims for $1 billion cell therapy 'tools' business with Swiss deal

18 Jul, 2016

General Electric's healthcare unit aims to build a $1 billion business offering vital manufacturing tools for a coming wave of cell therapies, helped by the acquisition of a Swiss firm that doubles its presence in the field.
Using cells to fight cancer is a long way from GE's better-known areas like power generation and aviation, but the head of the US industrial giant's $18 billion-a-year healthcare operation sees a big, high-margin opportunity.
John Flannery, who leads GE Healthcare from its headquarters in Chalfont St Giles, England, reckons he has secured an important part of the supply chain by buying Biosafe Group, a supplier of cell processing systems. "We want to double down on life sciences, and especially so in the cell therapy business," he said in an interview.
"This more than doubles our capability right now in cell therapy and we think we can easily have a $1 billion-plus business in cell therapy in the next 10 years."
GE announced its acquisition of Biosafe on Wednesday but declined to say how much it was paying. A spokesman said the addition of the firm, which was established in 1997, would bring 85 new employees and around 230 customers, doubling GE's cell therapy staff and sales.
The acquisition comes at a testing moment for cell therapy, following the deaths of three leukaemia patients in a trial of Juno Therapeutics' treatment JCAR015, which caused the study to be briefly put on hold by US regulators.
GE's confidence in the technology remains intact, however.
"People are still learning, obviously. But this doesn't change our view that cell therapy is going to be fundamentally transformative in healthcare," Flannery said.
The first so-called CAR-T cell therapies could reach the market as soon as next year, with products from Juno, Kite Pharma and Novartis among the most advanced. They have delivered remarkable results in early trials against blood cancers, eliminating all trace of leukaemia and lymphoma in some patients who had run out of other options, and investors have poured billions of dollars into the field.
GE estimates there are now 375 active T-cell therapy programmes, and seven companies with a market value of $17 billion focused on CAR-T.
Producing the therapies, however, is extremely complex, since it involves extracting cells from an individual patient, altering them to sharpen their ability to kill cancer cells and then infusing them back into the patient.

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