Lineage Cell Therapeutics, Inc. (NYSE American and TASE: LCTX),
a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing allogeneic cell
therapies for unmet medical needs, today published a letter to
shareholders highlighting the company’s recent achievements and
outlook for 2025.
Dear Fellow Shareholders,
We hope you had a restful holiday season and wish you a happy
new year. As we look at our plans for the new year, we want to
update you on our recent progress and explain why we believe 2025
will be an exciting year for our company.
As many of you know, Lineage is an emerging cell therapy
company, but we more accurately should be referred to as a cell
transplant company. The term cell transplant is more accurate
because we do not administer “stem” cells to patients. Instead, we
deliver mature, differentiated cells, which are guided along a
specific lineage to become functionally identical to the cells
which an individual has lost due to disease or trauma. Those cells
are then transplanted in a one-time procedure to treat conditions
caused by the loss or dysfunction of a specific cell type. We
summarize this approach as “replace and restore”. In the setting of
dry-age related macular generation (dry-AMD), our manufacturing
team creates new retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells to replace
the RPE cells that have been lost by an individual after decades of
use. This allogeneic cell therapy program, OpRegen®, led to a
global development and commercialization partnership with Roche and
Genentech, a member of the Roche Group. Our partners are currently
evaluating OpRegen in a Phase 2a clinical trial. We also have
established a pipeline of earlier-stage product candidates, each
utilizing a single, carefully selected and cultured cell line for
the life of a product, which eliminates donor variability and
reduces regulatory risk. We believe we are the only publicly
traded, non-oncology cell transplant company, which is one reason
why we believe Lineage is the leading entity in this rapidly
growing field of medicine.
Often, the most important things we do occur behind the scenes.
Actions which increase our programs’ probabilities of success do
not always become press releases. And discoveries that we make may
be more valuable to our shareholders as trade secrets than as
patents. Last year was a great example of these circumstances; we
made significant progress in many areas, advancing our programs,
expanding collaborations, and strengthening our balance sheet to
help reach important milestones in 2025 and beyond. However, these
advances were masked by significant uncertainty in the biotech
sector, which has continued for years, making value-creation in
biotech increasingly difficult and, unsurprisingly, frustrating
many investors.
This communication is intended to provide clarity and
transparency into certain areas of our business and is an
opportunity to provide relevant context and expectations for our
audience which aren’t normally covered in a press release. Those
areas are: financing strategy, manufacturing capabilities, and our
plans for long-term success. I aim to address each of those topics
for both existing and future potential shareholders.
Financing – A Strong Foundation
For the past 6 years, Lineage has been funded by diverse sources
of capital, including business development deals, sales of non-core
assets, and an ATM facility. At their respective times, we believe
each of these offered a better cost of capital than traditional
investment bank-led financings. But traditional financings
sometimes have advantages, and in particular, the
“milestone-warrant” structure employed in our November financing
was an ideal fit for our unique situation. However, the structure
of that deal is complex and invites some clarity.
As many shareholders know, the company’s future is tightly
linked to whether our partners, Roche and Genentech, elect to
advance OpRegen into its next phase of clinical development. A
forthcoming “go/no-go” decision to conduct a controlled clinical
trial of OpRegen will be a major event for Lineage and for
OpRegen’s probability of commercialization, so we sought not only
to secure immediate capital, but also created a path to future
capital, contingent in part upon the successful advancement of
OpRegen by our partners into a controlled clinical trial.
In November, we closed on an initial $24 million in gross
proceeds, and we expect to close on an additional $6 million later
this month, subject to stockholder approval. Based on our current
operational plan, we expect this capital will provide Lineage with
runway into Q1 2027. In addition, we issued warrants for up to an
additional $36 million at a strike price of at least $0.91, which
included an acceleration (i.e. “call”) of the warrants if and when
the advancement of OpRegen into a controlled trial is disclosed. In
a single transaction, we raised more than a year of capital and
provided a path to a second year of capital if OpRegen meets the
milestone defined in the warrant. We believe establishing this
line-of-sight to additional capital reduces a future financial
overhang and puts Lineage in greater control of its future with
respect to capital raises or strategic discussions we may conduct
with new or existing partners.
In the short-term, we expected the dilutive impact of this
raise, because it was conducted in highly unfavorable market
conditions, but it is important to run the business from a position
of optionality and strength. Notably, based on our historic
spending rates, we have capitalized the company potentially into
mid-2028, subject to receiving the $36 million of warrant capital.
And if certain alliance milestones, grants, and/or business
development transactions that we are currently evaluating
successfully close, Lineage could even be funded for the next four
years. With this recent financing, we believe we have set Lineage
on its strongest financial foundation in its history.
Manufacturing – Achieving the Unprecedented
One of the challenges of working in cell therapy is that many
people restrict their scope of cell therapy to cancer, but the
CAR-T field is unsustainably crowded with many poorly
differentiated assets. We believe the more compelling growth
opportunity in cell therapy resides in diseases and conditions
outside of cancer, or what we like to call “noncology”. There are
only a few companies that have reached clinical testing with a
“noncology” asset, including Bluerock (acquired by Bayer) for
Parkinson’s Disease, and Semma (acquired by Vertex) for Type 1
Diabetes. In fact, to our knowledge, Lineage is currently the only
publicly traded company in which one can invest exclusively and
directly in this exciting and increasingly validated branch of
medicine.
A second challenge is that a focus on clinical outcomes often
overlooks the difficulty, or in some cases the feasibility, of
manufacturing a product using a commercially-viable and scalable
process. Autologous products are expensive because each dose is
made for just one person, which precludes affordability in all but
the most serious conditions (i.e. cancer). Allogeneic therapies,
for which the cells are sourced from one donor but delivered to
many patients, offer a theoretical solution to the problem of
scale, but in our view, a truly affordable allogeneic process has
not yet been reduced to practice by any company. Our view is that
making 10, 100, or even 1,000 doses from a single donor fails to
deliver on the intent or power of an allogeneic therapy. In fact,
we call those approaches “shallow-geneic” because they lack the
depth of a scalable process. They may be allogeneic by definition,
but they are not sufficiently more scalable than autologous cell
therapies, and therefore, do not genuinely address the issue of
cost.
We believe the full vision of an off-the-shelf allogeneic
therapy comes from scaling production by ten million, or even a
hundred million-fold. To our knowledge, no company has yet
demonstrated they can manufacture thousands of doses of their
product from a stable Working Cell Bank (WCB), which itself was
generated from a stable Master Cell Bank (MCB), and yet the
multiplication stemming from that sequence of expansions is
necessary to reach the commercially-desirable cost of goods implied
from a “true” allogeneic product. Lineage aspires this year to be
the first company to demonstrate this multiplicative scalable
capability, using actual production lots. If we are successful, we
believe it will help establish our manufacturing team as proven and
capable leaders in cell therapy manufacturing.
Strategy and Future Goals – Planning for Success
The third message is how our development and financing decisions
are linked to a longer-term vision of success for Lineage. We
understand there are significant expectations on the ongoing
OpRegen trial. While we believe our phase 1/2a results are
compelling, validation and affirmation of our findings in a larger
trial conducted by an international pharmaceutical company can
reasonably be expected to add substantial credibility to our
initial findings and future expectations. If OpRegen continues to
perform as it has to date, we believe it will reflect positively on
our team’s capabilities, our technology platform, and the value of
the company.
Lineage is primarily known for OpRegen, but we are capable of
much more than making RPE cells. A clearly articulated product
portfolio, especially one that is generated from an
internally-owned platform, can offer a compelling foundation for
value creation. For this reason, we are establishing a pipeline of
closely-related neurological cell transplant product candidates,
which each employ our core technology, including: OPC1
(oligodendrocyte progenitors), to improve mobility following a
severe spinal cord injury, ReSonance™ (auditory neuronal
progenitors) to improve hearing in people suffering from
sensorineural hearing loss, and a third, as yet undisclosed
program. If OpRegen advances into a later-stage trial and our
manufacturing objectives are reached, we believe our cost of
capital will improve and allow us to move faster and farther with
these programs. Once the power of our platform is further
demonstrated and validated, we believe that the pipeline of
internally-owned assets that we are advancing will make us a
desirable partner for pharma and an attractive opportunity for
investors.
Looking ahead, we will continue to support our partners in the
development of OpRegen. In parallel, our internal focus will be on
conducting the DOSED clinical study of OPC1, advancing ReSonance
for the treatment of hearing loss, and other carefully chosen
initiatives.
We remain committed to acting in the best interests of our
shareholders and will continue to implement a thoughtful and staged
approach to product development. We believe that long-term value
and appreciation can be created through the advancement of our
clinical and preclinical pipelines, where we intend to apply our
technology and expertise to validate our unique cell transplant
approach.
We appreciate your support and belief in our vision. We invite
you to stay engaged with our progress through regular updates,
earnings calls, and announcements.
Replace and Restore,
Brian Culley, CEO Lineage Cell Therapeutics, Inc.
About Lineage Cell Therapeutics, Inc.
Lineage Cell Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology
company developing novel, “off-the-shelf,” cell therapies to
address unmet medical needs. Lineage’s programs are based on its
proprietary cell-based technology platform and associated
development and manufacturing capabilities. From this platform,
Lineage designs, develops, manufactures, and tests specialized
human cells with anatomical and physiological functions similar or
identical to cells found naturally in the human body. These cells
are created by applying directed differentiation protocols to
established, well-characterized, and self-renewing pluripotent cell
lines. These protocols generate cells with characteristics
associated with specific and desired developmental lineages. Cells
derived from such lineages are transplanted into patients in an
effort to replace or support cells that are absent or dysfunctional
due to degenerative disease, aging, or traumatic injury, and to
restore or augment the patient’s functional activity. Lineage’s
neuroscience focused pipeline currently includes: (i) OpRegen, a
retinal pigment epithelial cell therapy in Phase 2a development
under a worldwide collaboration with Roche and Genentech, a member
of the Roche Group, for the treatment of geographic atrophy
secondary to age-related macular degeneration; (ii) OPC1, an
oligodendrocyte progenitor cell therapy in Phase 1/2a development
for the treatment of spinal cord injuries; (iii) ReSonance (ANP1),
an auditory neuronal progenitor cell therapy for the potential
treatment of auditory neuropathy; (iv) PNC1, a photoreceptor neural
cell therapy for the potential treatment of vision loss due to
photoreceptor dysfunction or damage; and (v) RND1, a novel
hypoimmune induced pluripotent stem cell line being developed in
collaboration with Factor Bioscience Limited. For more information,
please visit www.lineagecell.com or follow the company on X/Twitter
@LineageCell.
Forward-Looking Statements
Lineage cautions you that all statements, other than statements
of historical facts, contained in this press release, are
forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements, in some
cases, can be identified by terms such as “believe,” “aim,” “may,”
“will,” “estimate,” “continue,” “anticipate,” “design,” “intend,”
“expect,” “could,” “can,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “seek,”
“should,” “would,” “contemplate,” “project,” “target,” “tend to,”
or the negative version of these words and similar expressions.
Lineage’s forward-looking statements are based upon its current
expectations and beliefs and involve assumptions that may never
materialize or may prove to be incorrect. Such statements include,
but are not limited to, statements relating to: the potential
therapeutic benefits of OpRegen in patients with GA secondary to
AMD, as well as the clinical advancement of OpRegen and its impacts
on us; our ability to successfully manufacture OpRegen at scale;
statements relating to the terms of the financing described herein,
which do not purport to be complete and are qualified in their
entirety by the full text of the financing documents, copies of
which are attached as exhibits to our Current Report filed on Form
8-K on November 20, 2024, our ability to obtain stockholder
approval to close on an additional $6 million in gross proceeds
later this month and issue corresponding warrants, the acceleration
of the expiration of the warrants in connection with the
achievement of the OpRegen clinical milestone, or the exercise of
the common warrants in cash prior to their expiration; that our
cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities is sufficient to
support our planned operations into 2027, or into 2028 assuming
exercise of the warrants, or beyond 2028 assuming additional
alliance milestones, grants, and/or business development
transactions occur; the growth of cell therapy in diseases and
conditions outside of cancer, relative to oncology cell therapy, or
at all; the broad potential for Lineage’s regenerative medicine
platform and our ability to develop additional product candidates,
including the commencement of the DOSED clinical study for OPC1;
and the potential of our pipeline, platform technology and/or
manufacturing capabilities, independently and/or in connection with
the clinical advancement of the OpRegen program, to validate our
approach or create value. Forward-looking statements involve known
and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause
Lineage’s actual results, performance or achievements to be
materially different from future results, performance or
achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements
in this press release, including, but not limited to, the following
risks: that we may need to allocate our cash to unexpected events
and expenses causing us to use our cash, cash equivalents and
marketable securities more quickly than expected; that we are
unable to obtain shareholder approval to close on an additional $6
million in gross proceeds and issue corresponding warrants; that
the warrants may not be exercised for cash, including if the price
per share of our common stock never reaches or exceeds the warrant
exercise price of $0.91 per share, or that we do not have an
effective registration statement on file at the time of exercise,
or if other conditions contained in the warrants are not met; that
development activities, preclinical activities, and clinical trials
of our product candidates may not commence, progress or be
completed as expected due to many factors within and outside of our
control; that positive findings in early clinical and/or
nonclinical studies of a product candidate may not be predictive of
success in subsequent clinical and/or nonclinical studies of that
candidate; that OpRegen may not clinically advance, and even if it
does, that such advancement will not have a positive effect on us,
our share price, our cost of capital, nor the overall success of
the OpRegen program; that OpRegen may never be proven to provide
durable anatomical functional improvements in dry-AMD patients;
that competing alternative therapies may adversely impact the
commercial potential of OpRegen; that Roche and Genentech may not
be successful in obtaining regulatory approval for OpRegen in any
particular jurisdiction; that the ongoing Israel-Hamas war and
broader regional conflict may materially and adversely impact our
manufacturing processes, including cell banking and product
manufacturing for our cell therapy product candidates, all of which
are conducted by our subsidiary in Jerusalem, Israel; that Lineage
may not be able to manufacture sufficient clinical quantities of
its product candidates in accordance with current good
manufacturing practice; and those risks and uncertainties inherent
in Lineage’s business and other risks discussed in Lineage’s
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Further
information regarding these and other risks is included under the
heading “Risk Factors” in Lineage’s periodic reports with the SEC,
including Lineage’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K filed
with the SEC and its other subsequent reports, which are available
from the SEC’s website. You are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the
date on which they were made. Lineage undertakes no obligation to
update such statements to reflect events that occur or
circumstances that exist after the date on which they were made,
except as required by law. All forward-looking statements are
expressly qualified in their entirety by these cautionary
statements.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250106031795/en/
Lineage Cell Therapeutics, Inc. IR Ioana C. Hone
(ir@lineagecell.com) (442) 287-8963
Russo Partners – Media Relations Nic Johnson or David
Schull (Nic.johnson@russopartnersllc.com)
(David.schull@russopartnersllc.com) (212) 845-4242
Grafico Azioni Lineage Cell Therapeutics (AMEX:LCTX)
Storico
Da Dic 2024 a Gen 2025
Grafico Azioni Lineage Cell Therapeutics (AMEX:LCTX)
Storico
Da Gen 2024 a Gen 2025