On May 4, 2022, Turning Point Therapeutics, Inc. (the "Company") reported that entered into a license agreement (the "LaNova License Agreement") with LaNova Medicines Limited ("LaNova") for an exclusive, royalty-bearing license to intellectual property related to LM-302, a clinical stage anti-Claudin18.2 antibody drug conjugate (the "Product"), on a worldwide basis excluding Greater China and South Korea (the "Company Territory") (Filing, 8-K, Turning Point Therapeutics, MAY 4, 2022, View Source [SID1234613640]). Under the LaNova License Agreement, the Company has the exclusive right to research, develop, use, register, offer for sale, import and otherwise commercialize the Product in the Company Territory and non-exclusive rights to manufacture the Product worldwide in support of activities in the Company Territory.
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Pursuant to the LaNova License Agreement, the Company will pay LaNova an upfront cash payment of $25.0 million and may be obligated to pay milestone payments, which include up to $195.0 million in development and regulatory milestones and up to $880.0 million in sales milestones, and tiered royalty payments based on percentages (ranging from the mid-single digits to the mid-teens) of net sales (subject to customary deductions).
Subject to specified exceptions, for a period of time, the Company has agreed that neither it nor its controlled affiliates or sublicensees will engage in any clinical development, use or commercialization of specified products that would compete with the Products in the Company Territory, and LaNova has agreed that neither it nor its affiliates, licensees and its sublicensees will conduct any clinical development, use or commercialization of specified products that would compete with the Products in the Company Territory, other than expressly permitted activities.
The LaNova License Agreement will continue in effect until expiration of the last royalty term for the Product in any country in the Company Territory, where the royalty term for a Product in a given country in the Company Territory continues until the later of (i) the date of the last-to-expire valid claim within the Company’s patent rights that covers the Product in such country; (ii) the expiry of the regulatory exclusivity for such Product in such country; or (iii) 10 years after the date of the first commercial sale of the Product in such country. Subject to the terms of the LaNova License Agreement, the Company may terminate the LaNova License Agreement for convenience by providing written notice to the Company, which termination will be effective following a prescribed notice period. In addition, either party may terminate the LaNova License Agreement for the other party’s uncured material breach of the LaNova License Agreement, with a customary notice and cure period, or for the other party’s insolvency. LaNova may also terminate the agreement if the Company is acquired by a third party and the acquired party is engaged in activities with competing products that are not divested or discontinued, upon notice of termination to the Company within a specific period following closing of such acquisition. In addition, LaNova may terminate the LaNova License Agreement under specified circumstances if the Company or certain other parties challenge LaNova’s patent rights. If the Company terminates the agreement for convenience, the Company will grant to LaNova a non-exclusive, worldwide license, which may be royalty-bearing in certain circumstances, to intellectual property owned by the Company that is necessary for and was used by the Company to commercialize the Product.
The Company is responsible for conducting the development and commercialization activities in the Company Territory related to the Products at its own expense. The Company and LaNova will collaborate on a global development plan under which both parties will conduct global clinical studies in their respective territories. The Company and LaNova will each be responsible for the costs allocated to them in accordance with the agreed budget under the global development plan. Both the Company and LaNova have the ability to conduct local studies outside of the global development plan at their own expense.
Both the Company and LaNova have the obligation to use commercially reasonable efforts to conduct development activities under the agreed-upon global development plan. The Company has the obligation to use commercially reasonable efforts to perform local studies independent of the global development plan and to obtain regulatory approvals for the Product in the Company Territory.
LaNova has an initial obligation to supply the Company with the Product. After a specified period, the Company will assume responsibility for supply of the Product.
As part of the LaNova License Agreement, the Company also obtained the right of first negotiation for an exclusive license to develop, use, manufacture and commercialize other products containing components of the Product. In addition, the Company has the option to collaborate with LaNova on up to three additional antibody drug conjugate programs, initiated or proposed by either the Company or LaNova.
The foregoing description of the material terms of the Agreement does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the complete text of the Agreement, a copy of which the Company intends to file, with confidential terms redacted, with the Securities and Exchange Commission as an exhibit to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2022.