Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Cohera Medical, Inc. Announces Closing of Insider Round of Financing for Over $7.6 Million


PITTSBURGH, May 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Cohera Medical, Inc., a rapidly growing medical device company developing a suite of wound management systems and surgical adhesives, announced today that it has closed an insider round of financing for over $7.6 Million. The proceeds of this transaction will support the growth of the company through pilot clinical trials for its lead product, TissuGlu(R), a strong, resorbable surgical adhesive, as well as pre-clinical development of Cohera's product pipeline.
"Cohera has generated significant value since our last financing and this is reflected in the strong support from our shareholders," said Patrick Daly, President and CEO of Cohera Medical. "The team at Cohera is focused on developing world class products that improve patient care and we are excited about the future of the Company."
"As Cohera's largest investor through our affiliate Kern Medical, LLC, we are delighted to once again lead its investment round," said Jay Kern, Founder and General Partner of Kern Whelan Capital, LLC, and Manager of Kern Medical II. "Strong participation by existing investors in this financing reflects the significant accomplishments that Patrick and his team have made in developing Cohera's revolutionary line of adhesive products."

TissuGlu - Unlike “Superglue” products, TissuGlu® is biocompatible and biodegradable, making it safe for internal use. Unlike “fibrin glue” products, it is strong, easy to use, and contains no human or animal product derivatives. Studies in the laboratory have demonstrated that the bond created with TissuGlu® is as strong after one hour as a normal wound is after a week of healing. It works well on planar surfaces, binding tissue layers to eliminate the potential space between recently separated tissues in which fluid accumulates (potentially reducing the need for fluid drains).

ThermoGenesis, GE Deal

RANCHO CORDOVA, Calif., May 7 --ThermoGenesis Corp. , a leading supplier of innovative products and services that process and store adult stem cells, said today that in partnership with GE Healthcare it has restructured its existing International Distribution Agreement to maximize the AXP product value utilizing each parties' respective strengths and focusing on long-term strategic goals.........more HERE

Global Blood Resources LLC


.....The UConn Health Center in Farmington began using the Hemobag more than a year ago.One of the first institutions to use the device was Salem Hospital in Salem, Ore."We've used over 800 Hemobags," said Scott Beckmann, one of the hospital's perfusionists. "We're using less blood bank products. That's been a cost savings for the hospital."Before Salem Hospital began using the device, "We used cell washers that would wash away significant and beneficial blood elements and would only give back red blood cells — red blood cells are important, but that's not all there is to it," Beckmann said. "Ethically, we would look at this waste bag full of viable elements — proteins, platelets that help plug that hole in the artery — and it was being thrown out."When the Hemobag was finally made available, we sat down with the surgeons and said, 'This looks like a helpful device.' We said 'Let's try it for two weeks,' and before the two weeks were up, we decided to use it during every surgery."...................read more HERE

Orthovita and ThermoGenesis financial reports

Orthovita Reports 2008 First Quarter Financial Results - HERE
ThermoGenesis Corp. Announces Third Quarter Fiscal 2008 Results - HERE

FDA asks ZymoGenetics to revise new product's press release


FDA Letter HERE
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says ZymoGenetics omitted important facts when announcing the launch of its first commercial product, Recothrom, and it asked the company to revise the press release.
The Seattle company's product is a genetically engineered form of thrombin, a protein that helps control surgical bleeding. In a Jan. 17 press release, ZymoGenetics said its product was shown to be as effective as a competitor derived from bovine blood, and had a "lower incidence of antibody formation."
In a letter posted on the FDA's website Wednesday, the agency called that statement "false or misleading," because it suggested that bovine thrombin's antibodies are less safe than Recothrom. In clinical trials, the agency noted, the antibodies did not lead to adverse events in patients treated with the bovine product. Both products had similar instances of adverse events, the FDA said.
In response to the FDA letter, ZymoGenetics added a three-sentence footnote with the missing information. The information is already present in the company's promotional materials, said spokeswoman Susan Specht. "This will not change the sales materials," she said.
The FDA action underscores the fierce competitiveness of the medical market — and how closely federal regulators watch over it. ZymoGenetics has asserted that genetically engineered products, also called recombinant, are less risky than those derived from bovine or human blood, which could contain impurities.
The company said Tuesday that its Recothrom sales had reached $1 million in the first quarter of its launch.
"We believe the launch is going well, and we're seeing strong interest in the marketplace, reflecting an appreciation for the advantages of a recombinant topical hemostat," said Chief Executive Bruce Carter.
Kevin DeGeeter, an analyst with Oppenheimer & Co, said in a note that Recothrom adoption is "taking longer than previously thought," and called the launch "soft."
Many hospitals targeted by ZymoGenetics are stocking both Recothrom and its bovine competitor made by King Pharmaceuticals.
McAdams Wright Ragen analyst Paul Latta cut his 2008 sales outlook to $18 million from $30 million, but said the product's long term potential remained unchanged.
"We're still seeing a $300 million to $400 million product in three to five years," Latta said. "But clearly it will take a while to get there."
Source:Seattletimes.com

ZymoGenetics says first product is meeting expectations

ZymoGenetics says first product is meeting expectations
ZymoGenetics' executives said Tuesday that the company's first commercial product, a synthetic protein to control bleeding during surgery, has brought in nearly a million dollars in sales since its launch in mid-January ?an amount they said met their expectations.
However, analysts cautioned that it was too early to tell how much market share ZymoGenetics' product, Recothrom, would ultimately capture from King Pharmaceuticals, which has dominated the market for treatments to control bleeding during surgery for more than a decade.
ZymoGenetics claims that Recothrom avoids complications associated with King's animal-derived product, which is sold with a warning regarding the potential for abnormalities, including severe bleeding.
Although the Recothrom sales numbers were below several analyst's estimates, analysts said that the early figure was largely inconsequential.
Because Recothrom is bought by hospitals, committees at those institutions have to meet in order to decide whether to add the treatment to the selection of products that doctors can choose from to use. The process can take six months or more.
"Everybody wants to read a lot of information into the first data point you get. But it's the first one you get," said Kevin DeGeeter, an analyst at Oppenheimer & Co., who has repeatedly questioned Recothrom's prospects because ZymoGenetics has priced Recothrom at a 20 percent premium to King's product. "My concern ultimately remains the same."
DeGeeter had estimated that Recothrom would bring in $3.3 million during the first quarter. "There's nothing here to suggest this is jumping off the shelves," he said.
Hanzhong Li, an analyst at Stanford Group, expected Recothrom to bring in $2 million but said the figure was largely a "placeholder," noting that ZymoGenetics had long said that most of Recothrom's sales would take place during the second half of this year. He estimates that Recothrom sales will reach $35 million for the year.
Of the 60 hospital committees that have reviewed Recothrom so far, 22 have decided to buy the product exclusively, while another 27 more have added it, in addition to the King product, said ZymoGenetics CEO Bruce Carter during a conference call. The other committees have not yet made decisions. An additional 100 committee meetings will take place this month alone.
Carter said that ZymoGenetics has enlisted the support of more than 2,000 surgeons and 1,000 pharmacists to ask that their institutions add Recothrom to the selection of products that they could use.
"It will take time for our efforts to bear fruit," he said during the conference call, which was held to report the company's first-quarter earnings. "We do expect that work to pay off in the second half of the year."
For the quarter, ZymoGenetics said that its total revenue increased to $13.5 million, compared to $5.2 million during the same period a year earlier, due in part to milestone payments associated with treatments in its pipeline. The company also posted a net loss of $40.9 million, or 60 cents per share, compared with a net loss of $33.3 million, or 49 cents a share, during the first quarter of 2007.
As of March 31, ZymoGenetics had $155 million in cash and short-term investments.
During the conference call, ZymoGenetics CFO James Johnson said that the company was working on a "financing transaction" to raise additional funds this year. He said the company could potentially use its inventory of Recothrom in order to raise money.
DeGeeter of Oppenheimer & Co. said Johnson's remarks probably meant that the company would issue debt, backed in part by its inventory. But he said the company would probably eventually also have to issue more stock to raise funds.
"You have a company that in the first quarter that lost $41 million," he said. "How quickly can they grow sales to get that number down to something more manageable? Because $41 million is not manageable. We'll see."
May 6, 2008 3:26 p.m. View more HERE