ALAMEDA, Calif., Dec 18, 2008 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) -- Avigen, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company, announced today that the company has sold the rights to its early stage blood coagulation compound, AV513, to Baxter Healthcare Corporation, a global leader in hemophilia therapy, for $7 million. Baxter acquired all rights to AV513, a compound poised for clinical research that has been shown to improve blood coagulation in preclinical models for hemophilia. Avigen has been developing AV513 as an oral therapy to treat patients with bleeding disorders, including hemophilia A.
"The sale of AV513 is an example of building value in a product that is differentiated from current therapies, and bringing it to a valuation point that generated a positive return on investment," said Kenneth Chahine, Ph.D., J.D., Avigen's president and chief executive officer. "Our team identified AV513 as a drug candidate with a novel approach for treating hemophilia and other bleeding disorders, and which offered strong IP potential in a target patient population with an unmet need. Because it was outside our neurology focus, it was our goal to follow a reasonable budget to establish AV513's value, and then move it to a better-resourced company with the expertise to develop a safe and effective therapy."
"This technology acquisition supports Baxter's efforts to research the application of novel technologies that will pioneer the next generation of hemophilia therapies," said Hartmut Ehrlich, M.D., vice president of global BioScience research and development for Baxter.
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