Thomson Geer helps strike canine cancer treatment deal

The firm previously acted for the company in a pioneering merger

Thomson Geer helps strike canine cancer treatment deal

Thomson Geer has continued its work with an Australian life sciences company, which has struck a deal with a leading animal health firm for its canine anti-cancer drug.

Thomson Geer acted for QBiotics Group on its agreement with French-headquartered Virbac for the marketing and distribution of tigilanol tiglate to the US, Swiss, Norwegian, UK, and European markets.

Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed. The deal has the possibility to expand to Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, Thomson Geer said.

As many as one in four dogs will develop cancer, while almost half of all dogs over 10 years will die of cancer. There few drugs available to treat cancer in animals. Tigilanol Tiglate has demonstrated its potential to fight cancer in a range of solid tumours in dogs during clinical trials.

QBiotics is banking on the launch of the drug in veterinary markets to provide cash flow to further develop the drug for application to human cancers and wound healing.

The deal continues the work of Thomson Geer with QBiotics. Last year, it assisted the company in a pioneering merger transaction.

 

Recent articles & video

New report reveals key trends in global corporate legal departments in 2024

K&L Gates lures JWS M&A partner

Making Christmas bon-bons alerted this climate law superstar to industrial waste

Generative AI part of day-to-day work for 50% of lawyers: survey

Wisconsin Bar redefines 'diversity' in clerkship program amid claims of racial discrimination

BigLaw partner sanctioned for unprofessional conduct at Texas deposition

Most Read Articles

QIC GC joins HSF as executive counsel

Lander & Rogers spotlights South Sudanese artist in Gallery Project 35 exhibit

DLA Piper helps Indian tech company to boost customer service offering with acquisition

Allens helps Pacific Energy boost renewable energy project investment