Ambys Medicines Completes $47 Million Series A Extension

<p><strong>SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO<&sol;strong> &&num;8212&semi; Ambys Medicines&comma; a company pioneering cell-based therapies for severe liver diseases&comma; has completed a &dollar;47 million extension of its Series A financing&period; This brings the total Series A funding raised by Ambys to &dollar;107 million&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ambys is developing an entirely new approach to treating severe liver disease&period; The company&&num;8217&semi;s liver-cell production processes can produce&comma; at scale&comma; high-quality liver cells that function in vivo as normal healthy liver cells&period; The company is advancing multiple preclinical programs&period; The proceeds from this financing will enable the continued expansion of Ambys&&num;8217&semi;s proprietary liver cell therapy production capabilities and the advancement of the company&&num;8217&semi;s lead program&comma; AMI-918&comma; through pre-IND activities&period; Third Rock Ventures led the financing with participation from Takeda&comma; Schroders Capital&comma; Laurion Capital&comma; Smilegate Investment&comma; and Alexandria Venture Investments&comma; among others&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&&num;8220&semi;Serious liver diseases affect tens of millions of people worldwide&comma; with most patients experiencing severe&comma; irreversible outcomes and a median overall survival of just two years&comma;&&num;8221&semi; said Ronald Park&comma; M&period;D&period;&comma; Chief Executive Officer of Ambys Medicines&period; &&num;8220&semi;This takes a tremendous toll on both patients and their family members&period; Beyond the human toll&comma; liver diseases drive a huge portion of societal health spending&period; It&&num;8217&semi;s one of the biggest problems in healthcare but has received much less focus than it deserves&period; At Ambys&comma; we&&num;8217&semi;re working to redefine how severe liver diseases are treated&comma; and we&&num;8217&semi;ve made important progress over the last three years towards our goal&period; Importantly&comma; we&&num;8217&semi;ve presented data validating our ability to expand mature&comma; fully functioning liver cells that maintain biological function and are core to our therapeutic approach&period; And we&&num;8217&semi;ve opened our state-of-the-art manufacturing facility to enable industrial-scale cGMP production of our therapeutic liver cells&period; Our focus now is on advancing our lead program to the clinic in 2023 and progressing our follow-on programs&period;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The liver is one of the most regenerative organs in the body&period; When it loses regenerative capacity&comma; patients start on the irreversible path of disease&period; Decades of clinical experience have shown that when patients receive adequate quantities of high-quality liver cells&comma; those cells can support or even replace liver function&period; Until now&comma; however&comma; it hasn&&num;8217&semi;t been possible to produce mature liver cells in sufficient quantities needed for therapeutic purposes&period; Amby&&num;8217&semi;s liver-cell production processes overcome this challenge&period; The company has already demonstrated the ability to produce at scale high-quality liver cells that function in vivo as normal healthy liver cells&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&&num;8220&semi;Ambys&&num;8217&semi;s technology is a breakthrough in cell production with the potential to solve an enormous medical problem&comma;&&num;8221&semi; said Erwin Boos&comma; PharmD&comma; Head of Biotech Venture Investments at Schroders Capital&period; &&num;8220&semi;There is still significant work to validate this approach in the clinic&comma; but we believe strongly in the underlying science&comma; which may enable a true breakthrough in medicine&comma; and we believe just as strongly in the passion of the Ambys team to deliver on the promise of their technology&period;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Amby&&num;8217&semi;s first program&comma; AMI-918&comma; is an allogeneic liver-cell therapy to manage acute liver disease&period; This therapy would provide a potential life-extending solution to the 100&comma;000 patients in the U&period;S&period; alone who&comma; each year&comma; experience liver function crises by improving outcomes&comma; reducing re-hospitalization rates&comma; and extending the time to liver transplantation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Amby&&num;8217&semi;s second program is designed to bring the promise of its liver-cell platform to many more patients by providing extended durability of replacement cells and easier dosing and administration without the need for immunosuppressive therapy&comma; which is intended to enable access to the broader population of patients with chronic liver disease&period; This follow-up program aims to slow disease progression and ultimately reverse disease in patients with decompensated liver disease&period; This advanced technology has the potential to benefit more than a half-million liver disease patients in the U&period;S&period; alone each year&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&&num;8220&semi;When we started this effort&comma; it was a moonshot&comma; given the tremendous challenge of producing the types of cells needed at scale&period; With the opening of our production facility earlier this year&comma; we are well on our way to overcoming that hurdle and will be able to produce high-quality&comma; mature liver cells to support clinical development and early commercialization activities&comma;&&num;8221&semi; said Markus Grompe&comma; M&period;D&period;&comma; Chief Scientific Officer of Ambys Medicines&period; &&num;8220&semi;With that gate lifted&comma; we are in the process now of working through pre-IND activities as we prepare to move AMI-918 into clinical development in 2023&period;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Liver disease has many causes&comma; including viral infections&comma; cancer or other tumors&comma; inherited diseases&comma; or exposure to toxins &lpar;including poisons&comma; drugs&comma; or alcohol&rpar;&period; In most instances&comma; liver cells lose their ability to function normally&period; And&comma; without a properly functioning liver&comma; a host of serious medical issues arise from the inability to metabolize foods and medicines&comma; process fats&comma; and store energy&period; As liver function declines&comma; patients become critically ill&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Worldwide&comma; more than 50 million people live with chronic liver disease&comma; and liver diseases account for more than 2 million deaths per year worldwide&period; And while liver transplantation is the second most common solid organ transplantation&comma; less than 10&percnt; of patients in need of a transplant will receive one&period; Liver disease is severely compromising to those affected&comma; resulting in high social and economic costs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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