Business Wire06.03.16
ExThera Medical Corporation, a developer of blood filtering technology, has closed a Series B financing round with an equity investment led by new investor Fresenius Medical Care Ventures GmbH. The round included existing investors, and the conversion of the company’s convertible note, for a total of $15.3 million. Other terms were not disclosed.
Proceeds from the financing will be used to support European and U.S. clinical trials and regulatory approvals, and to scale manufacturing of the company’s therapeutic blood filter, aimed at reducing mortality and complications from bloodstream infections and blood-borne diseases.
Fraser Finance LLP served as financial adviser to ExThera Medical in this transaction.
“ExThera’s vision is to make life-threatening bloodstream infections unheard of in the future by providing clinicians with a broad-spectrum therapeutic option that allows treatment to begin quickly—even before pathogen identification,” said Robert Ward, CEO of ExThera Medical. “With mortality rates as high as 50 percent for certain bloodstream infections1, the continued emergence of drug-resistant pathogens, and fewer anti-infective drugs in development, we see a critical need to address this growing global health issue with safe, accessible and cost-effective solutions. We are pleased to add Fresenius Medical Care Ventures as a supportive investor.”
ExThera’s proprietary Seraph Microbind Affinity Blood Filter is the only device of its kind capable of capturing and removing a broad range of sepsis-causing bacteria, viruses, toxins and pro-inflammatory cytokines from whole blood, according to ExThera. Validated in preclinical studies, and currently under evaluation in a first-in-man clinical trial in Europe, the device promises to address significant unmet needs for the immediate treatment of suspected or known bloodstream infections.
“We continually look for new technologies for the prevention and treatment of deadly infections for our chronic dialysis and acute care patients,” said Dr. Olaf Schermeier, CEO for global research and development at Fresenius Medical Care.
While ExThera’s immediate focus is on therapeutic applications in high-risk populations such as patients undergoing dialysis, Seraph also has the potential for other applications that could offer far-reaching global impact, such as treatment for drug-resistant “superbugs,” and the purification of blood for use by blood banks, which are increasingly vulnerable to the growing threat of emerging pathogens.
“The mission of Fresenius Medical Care Ventures is to invest in early-stage companies that develop products, technologies and therapies, which could have a significant value for the patient and for health care systems. We believe that ExThera has the team and technology that fits perfectly into our investment portfolio,” said Florian Jehle, managing director of Fresenius Medical Care Ventures.
Bacterial bloodstream infections are believed to be one of the top seven causes of death in North America and Europe, with an estimated annual incidence of up to 677,000 cases in North America and up to 1,200,000 cases in Europe2. Once bacteria enter the bloodstream from a local site of infection, they can be disseminated throughout the body, leading to metastatic complications such as endocarditis, meningitis, and osteomyelitis. If not treated properly, uncontrolled infections quickly lead to a dysfunctional immune response. Disease progression may lead to sepsis and septic shock.
Dialysis patients rely on infection-prone vascular access sites, contributing to infection. The second leading cause of death, infection poses a constant threat to overall health and wellbeing of dialysis patients, especially within the first six months after beginning treatment3,4,5. Because nephrologists are on the frontlines in the battle against blood infections, they are ideal partners for ExThera’s European clinical trials for Seraph in dialysis patients infected with Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The results of the trial, which is currently enrolling patients in Germany, will provide data about the device’s safety and its potential to improve patient outcomes.
As a patient’s blood flows through the Seraph Microbind Affinity Blood Filter, it passes over proprietary microspheres coated with molecular receptor sites that mimic the receptors on human cells that pathogens use when they invade the body. Harmful substances are captured and adsorbed onto the proprietary surface and thereby removed from the bloodstream without adding anything to the treated blood, which is returned to the patient’s body with blood cells intact. The adsorption media is a flexible platform that uses chemically bound, immobilized heparin for its unique binding capacity, and may be configured with optional supplemental adsorbents to remove other toxins and evolved pathogens. The blood filter has a blood-contacting surface that is very anti-thrombogenic and anti-inflammatory and which has been proven to be safe in other medical devices and implants.
Based in Martinez, Calif., ExThera Medical is a privately held firm developing a single-use blood filter capable of capturing and removing a broad range of bacteria, viruses, parasites, toxins or other harmful substances from whole blood. The company intends to develop therapeutic products to treat patients in the clinic or hospital, and also devices that purify donated, banked blood prophylactically, before transfusion.
Fresenius Medical Care Ventures was established in 2015 to invest in startups and early-stage companies in the healthcare sector.
References:
1. Neuner, Elizabeth A., et al. "Treatment and outcomes in carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae bloodstream infections." Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease 69.4 (2011): 357-362.
2. Goto, M., and M. N. Al‐Hasan. "Overall burden of bloodstream infection and nosocomial bloodstream infection in North America and Europe." Clinical Microbiology and Infection 19.6 (2013): 501-509.
3. Engemann, John J., et al. "Clinical outcomes and costs due to Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia among patients receiving long-term hemodialysis." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 26.06 (2005): 534-539.
4. Wang, I-Kuan, et al. "Bacteremia in hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis patients." Internal Medicine 51.9 (2012): 1015-1021.)
5. Powe, Neil R., et al. "Septicemia in dialysis patients: incidence, risk factors, and prognosis." Kidney international 55.3 (1999): 1081-1090.)
Proceeds from the financing will be used to support European and U.S. clinical trials and regulatory approvals, and to scale manufacturing of the company’s therapeutic blood filter, aimed at reducing mortality and complications from bloodstream infections and blood-borne diseases.
Fraser Finance LLP served as financial adviser to ExThera Medical in this transaction.
“ExThera’s vision is to make life-threatening bloodstream infections unheard of in the future by providing clinicians with a broad-spectrum therapeutic option that allows treatment to begin quickly—even before pathogen identification,” said Robert Ward, CEO of ExThera Medical. “With mortality rates as high as 50 percent for certain bloodstream infections1, the continued emergence of drug-resistant pathogens, and fewer anti-infective drugs in development, we see a critical need to address this growing global health issue with safe, accessible and cost-effective solutions. We are pleased to add Fresenius Medical Care Ventures as a supportive investor.”
ExThera’s proprietary Seraph Microbind Affinity Blood Filter is the only device of its kind capable of capturing and removing a broad range of sepsis-causing bacteria, viruses, toxins and pro-inflammatory cytokines from whole blood, according to ExThera. Validated in preclinical studies, and currently under evaluation in a first-in-man clinical trial in Europe, the device promises to address significant unmet needs for the immediate treatment of suspected or known bloodstream infections.
“We continually look for new technologies for the prevention and treatment of deadly infections for our chronic dialysis and acute care patients,” said Dr. Olaf Schermeier, CEO for global research and development at Fresenius Medical Care.
While ExThera’s immediate focus is on therapeutic applications in high-risk populations such as patients undergoing dialysis, Seraph also has the potential for other applications that could offer far-reaching global impact, such as treatment for drug-resistant “superbugs,” and the purification of blood for use by blood banks, which are increasingly vulnerable to the growing threat of emerging pathogens.
“The mission of Fresenius Medical Care Ventures is to invest in early-stage companies that develop products, technologies and therapies, which could have a significant value for the patient and for health care systems. We believe that ExThera has the team and technology that fits perfectly into our investment portfolio,” said Florian Jehle, managing director of Fresenius Medical Care Ventures.
Bacterial bloodstream infections are believed to be one of the top seven causes of death in North America and Europe, with an estimated annual incidence of up to 677,000 cases in North America and up to 1,200,000 cases in Europe2. Once bacteria enter the bloodstream from a local site of infection, they can be disseminated throughout the body, leading to metastatic complications such as endocarditis, meningitis, and osteomyelitis. If not treated properly, uncontrolled infections quickly lead to a dysfunctional immune response. Disease progression may lead to sepsis and septic shock.
Dialysis patients rely on infection-prone vascular access sites, contributing to infection. The second leading cause of death, infection poses a constant threat to overall health and wellbeing of dialysis patients, especially within the first six months after beginning treatment3,4,5. Because nephrologists are on the frontlines in the battle against blood infections, they are ideal partners for ExThera’s European clinical trials for Seraph in dialysis patients infected with Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The results of the trial, which is currently enrolling patients in Germany, will provide data about the device’s safety and its potential to improve patient outcomes.
As a patient’s blood flows through the Seraph Microbind Affinity Blood Filter, it passes over proprietary microspheres coated with molecular receptor sites that mimic the receptors on human cells that pathogens use when they invade the body. Harmful substances are captured and adsorbed onto the proprietary surface and thereby removed from the bloodstream without adding anything to the treated blood, which is returned to the patient’s body with blood cells intact. The adsorption media is a flexible platform that uses chemically bound, immobilized heparin for its unique binding capacity, and may be configured with optional supplemental adsorbents to remove other toxins and evolved pathogens. The blood filter has a blood-contacting surface that is very anti-thrombogenic and anti-inflammatory and which has been proven to be safe in other medical devices and implants.
Based in Martinez, Calif., ExThera Medical is a privately held firm developing a single-use blood filter capable of capturing and removing a broad range of bacteria, viruses, parasites, toxins or other harmful substances from whole blood. The company intends to develop therapeutic products to treat patients in the clinic or hospital, and also devices that purify donated, banked blood prophylactically, before transfusion.
Fresenius Medical Care Ventures was established in 2015 to invest in startups and early-stage companies in the healthcare sector.
References:
1. Neuner, Elizabeth A., et al. "Treatment and outcomes in carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae bloodstream infections." Diagnostic microbiology and infectious disease 69.4 (2011): 357-362.
2. Goto, M., and M. N. Al‐Hasan. "Overall burden of bloodstream infection and nosocomial bloodstream infection in North America and Europe." Clinical Microbiology and Infection 19.6 (2013): 501-509.
3. Engemann, John J., et al. "Clinical outcomes and costs due to Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia among patients receiving long-term hemodialysis." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 26.06 (2005): 534-539.
4. Wang, I-Kuan, et al. "Bacteremia in hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis patients." Internal Medicine 51.9 (2012): 1015-1021.)
5. Powe, Neil R., et al. "Septicemia in dialysis patients: incidence, risk factors, and prognosis." Kidney international 55.3 (1999): 1081-1090.)