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License and Collaboration Agreements
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2023
License And Collaboration Agreements [Abstract]  
License and Collaboration Agreements

Note 5 — License and Collaboration Agreements

We have entered into various collaboration agreements including license agreements and collaborative research, development and commercialization agreements with various pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. Under these collaboration arrangements, we are entitled to receive license fees, upfront payments, milestone and other contingent payments, royalties, sales milestone payments, and payments for the manufacture and supply of our proprietary PEGylation materials and/or reimbursement for research and development activities. We generally include our costs of performing these services in research and development expense, except for costs for product sales to our collaboration partners which we include in cost of goods sold. We analyze our agreements to determine whether we should account for the agreements within the scope of ASC 808 Collaborative Arrangements, and, if so, we analyze whether we should account for any elements under ASC 606 Revenue from Contracts with Customers.

Eli Lilly and Company (Lilly): Rezpegaldesleukin (previously referred to as NKTR-358)

On July 23, 2017, we entered into a worldwide license agreement (the Lilly Agreement) with Eli Lilly and Company (Lilly) to co-develop rezpegaldesleukin, a novel immunological drug candidate that we invented, pursuant to which we received an initial payment of $150.0 million and were eligible for up to $250.0 million in additional development and regulatory milestones. The Lilly Agreement provided that, during Phase 1B and Phase 2 development, we shared development costs wherein 75% of the costs were borne by Lilly and 25% of the costs were borne by us.

On February 23, 2023, we announced the topline data from the Phase 2 study (Phase 2 Lupus Study) of rezpegaldesleukin in adult patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Although the Phase 2 Lupus Study did not meet its primary endpoint, patients who received the middle dose within the modified intent-to-treat population, defined as all patients who were randomized and received at least one dose of rezpegaldesleukin, demonstrated improvement in SLEDAI-2K score as compared to placebo. Nonetheless, Lilly notified us that it does not intend to advance rezpegaldesleukin into Phase 3 development for SLE.

On April 23, 2023, we received from Lilly a notice of at-will termination of the Lilly Agreement. On April 27, 2023, we announced that we would regain full rights to rezpegaldesleukin from Lilly, and the Lilly Agreement had subsequently terminated. Following the return of our rights to develop rezpegaldesleukin, we bear all costs of development. We have initiated a Phase 2b study of rezpegaldesleukin in patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis, and we are planning to initiate in late 2023 or early 2024 a new Phase 2b study of rezpegaldesleukin in patients with alopecia areata. We will also explore other auto-immune indications for the development of rezpegaldesleukin.

On August 7, 2023, we announced that the interim efficacy data previously generated by Lilly for rezpegaldesleukin that were presented at the EADV conference in September 2022 were incorrectly calculated by Lilly. The erroneous interim data were reported in connection with the Phase 1b study of rezpegaldesleukin in adult patients with atopic dermatitis (Phase 1b AD Study) and the Phase 1b study of rezpegaldesleukin in adult patients with psoriasis. We reported the new and corrected data from the Phase 1b AD Study of rezpegaldesleukin.

On October 13, 2023, we announced final efficacy data from the Phase 1b AD Study at the 2023 EADV conference. The final data from the study demonstrated rezpegaldesleukin resulted in dose-dependent improvements in EASI, validated investigated global assessment (vIGA), body surface area (BSA), and itch numeric rating scale (NRS) over twelve weeks of treatment compared to placebo, which were sustained post-treatment over an additional thirty-six weeks.

Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (BMS): Bempegaldesleukin, also referred to as NKTR-214

Effective April 3, 2018, we entered into a Strategic Collaboration Agreement (the BMS Collaboration Agreement) and a Share Purchase Agreement with BMS. Pursuant to the BMS Collaboration Agreement, we and BMS jointly developed bempegaldesleukin in combination with BMS’ Opdivo®. The parties share the internal and external development costs for bempegaldesleukin in combination regimens based on each party’s relative ownership interest in the compounds included in the regimens. In accordance with the agreement, the parties share development costs for bempegaldesleukin in combination with Opdivo®, 67.5% of costs to BMS and 32.5% to Nektar. The parties also shared costs for the manufacturing and pre-commercial costs of bempegaldesleukin, 35% of the costs to BMS and 65% to Nektar.

Upon the effective date of the BMS Collaboration Agreement in April 2018, BMS paid us a non-refundable upfront cash payment of $1.0 billion and purchased 8,284,600 shares of our common stock pursuant to the Share Purchase Agreement for total additional cash consideration of $850.0 million. In 2020, we received additional non-refundable milestone payments of $50.0 million.

As discussed in Note 1, in April 2022, we announced that BMS and we decided to discontinue all development of bempegaldesleukin in combination with Opdivo®. On September 6, 2023, BMS and we terminated the BMS Collaboration Agreement, and pursuant to the surviving provisions of the BMS Collaboration Agreement, we and BMS continue our efforts to wind down the bempegaldesleukin program, and the cost sharing provisions continue to remain in effect as the parties wind down the studies.

We determined that the BMS Collaboration Agreement falls within the scope of ASC 808. Based on the cost sharing percentages described above, we recognized BMS’ reimbursement of our expenses as a reduction of research and development expense and our reimbursement of BMS’ expenses as research and development expense. As discussed in Note 6, beginning in the second quarter of 2022, we began reporting clinical trial, other third-party costs and employee costs for the wind down of the bempegaldesleukin program in restructuring, impairment and costs of terminated program. Accordingly, during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022, we recorded $8.3 million and $16.7 million, as a reduction of such expense for the net reimbursement from BMS. During the nine months ended September 30, 2022, we recorded $24.9 million as a reduction of research and development expense for the net reimbursement from BMS recorded in the three months ended March 31, 2022. The net reimbursement payable to BMS for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2023 was not significant.

SFJ Pharmaceuticals

On February 12, 2021, we entered into a Co-Development Agreement (the SFJ Agreement) with SFJ Pharmaceuticals XII, L.P., a SFJ Pharmaceuticals Group company (SFJ), pursuant to which SFJ would pay up to $150.0 million to support a Phase 2/3 study of bempegaldesleukin in combination with Keytruda® (pembrolizumab) in metastatic or unresectable recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (the SCCHN Clinical Trial). SFJ had primary responsibility for the clinical trial management of the SCCHN Clinical Trial, and we were the sponsor of the SCCHN Clinical Trial. The SFJ Agreement provided for us to pay up to $637.5 million in Success Payments in the event of FDA approval of bempegaldesleukin in up to three indications.

We accounted for the SFJ Agreement as a derivative liability, which we remeasured to fair value at each reporting date. We recorded increases to the liability for non-cash research and development expense as SFJ conducted the SCCHN Clinical Trial and for cash receipts from SFJ to us to support our internal costs of conducting the trial. We presented the gain (loss) from the remeasurement as change in fair value of development derivative liability in our Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations.

At March 31, 2022, due to the negative results of the metastatic melanoma trial and initial discussions with SFJ, we concluded that it was remote that SFJ and we would continue the SCCHN Clinical Trial. Accordingly, the fair value of the development derivative liability was reduced to zero as of March 31, 2022, and we recognized a corresponding gain in change in fair value of development derivative liability. In April 2022, we announced that SFJ and we agreed to discontinue the SCCHN Clinical Trial. Accordingly, SFJ will not be entitled to any Success Payments, and SFJ has the responsibility to wind down the SCCHN Clinical Trial at its sole cost. SFJ has no right to seek reimbursement from us for any costs incurred for the SCCHN Clinical Trial.

The following table presents the change in the derivative liability for the nine months ended September 30, 2022:

 

 

 

Fair Value
Hierarchy
Level

 

Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022

 

Fair value at beginning of period

 

3

 

$

27,726

 

Non-cash research and development expense

 

 

 

 

4,951

 

Cash receipts from SFJ

 

 

 

 

750

 

Change in the fair value of development derivative liability

 

 

 

 

(33,427

)

Fair value at end of period

 

3

 

$

 

 

Other

We have other collaboration agreements that have resulted in commercialized products for our collaborations partners. Under these agreements, we may sell our proprietary PEGylation materials for use in these products, and we are entitled to receive royalties based on net sales of these products as well as sales milestones. As discussed in Note 3, we have sold our rights to receive royalties from these other collaboration agreements. Our non-cash royalty revenue, which totaled $18.3 million and $52.2 million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022, respectively, and totaled $18.2 million and $50.9 million for three and nine months ended September 30, 2023, respectively, represents revenue for granting licenses which we had satisfied in prior periods.

Additionally, we have a collaboration agreement for a product under development, under which we are entitled to up to a total of $40.0 million of regulatory milestones, as well as sales milestones upon achievement of annual sales targets and royalties based on net sales of commercialized products, if any. However, given the current phase of development of the potential product under this collaboration agreement, we cannot estimate the probability or timing of achieving these milestones, and, therefore, have excluded all development milestones from the transaction price for this agreement.