I never heard of the company till your post. I didn't do much DD just started looking at the site and saw this. Do you know if this is just part of their business model? Do they have novel drug discovery or do they just coformulate existing generics or something like that?
OMER - I looked at this company a few months ago because of their pain drug for ACL reconstruction. The drug is a propriety combination of existing generic products so I'm not sure what type of a market exists. The drug met all endpoints for the ACL indication in earlier trials and the results are due sometime in the 2nd half of this year. The GPCR drugs are in a very early stage.About 14 M of the outstanding shares became eligible for resale around April/May of this year based on what I remember from their prospectus.
Omeros Successfully Unlocks Orphan GPCRs - Opportunity for Development of Unprecedented Number of Novel Drug Targets -
SEATTLE, June 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Omeros Corporation (Nasdaq:OMER - News) today announced that it has successfully identified compounds that interact with three orphan G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) linked to cancer, metabolic disorders and appetite control. This breakthrough demonstrates Omeros' unique capability to introduce a large number of new drug targets to the pharmaceutical industry, which could lead to the development of novel therapeutics across a wide range of diseases and disorders. GPCRs represent the premier family of drug targets, with more than 30 percent of currently marketed drugs targeting only 46 GPCRs. There are approximately 120 orphan GPCRs, and Omeros expects to unlock a large percentage of these for drug development.
"To my knowledge, Omeros' team is the first and only group to be able to unlock orphan GPCRs in high-throughput," stated Marc G. Caron, Ph.D., James B. Duke Professor of Cell Biology at Duke University. Dr. Caron is a leading expert in GPCRs and, together with his colleagues, was the first to purify and clone a GPCR. "I expect that this will result in a long line of wholly new and exciting drug targets, which will have a profound impact on the pharmaceutical industry," continued Dr. Caron.
"These initial successes in our GPCR program represent more than 10 years of hard work by our first-rate group of scientists, and I am immensely proud of what they have accomplished," stated Gregory A. Demopulos, M.D., chairman and chief executive officer of Omeros. "We plan to complete high-throughput screening of all orphan GPCRs and pursue a commercialization strategy focused on both partnering and internal development. Based on our success to date, we expect to unlock a large percentage of the remaining orphan GPCRs."
Ongoing GPCR Program
Omeros has begun screening an initial set of five orphan GPCRs against its small-molecule chemical libraries using a proprietary, high-throughput assay. With less than 40 percent of its libraries screened to date, Omeros has already identified and confirmed sets of compounds that interact selectively with, and modulate signaling of, three of these orphan receptors. The assay detects receptor antagonists and agonists. Antagonists comprise the majority of marketed drugs, and all of the compounds identified so far by Omeros are antagonists.
About G Protein-Coupled Receptors
GPCRs, which mediate key physiological processes in the body, are the most valuable family of drug targets. Annual worldwide drug sales exceed $700 billion and, according to Insight Pharma Reports, GPCR-targeting drugs represent 30 to 40 percent of marketed pharmaceuticals. Examples include Claritin® (allergy), Vicodin® (pain), Lopressor® (high blood pressure), Imitrex® (migraine headache) and Reglan® (nausea) as well as all other antihistamines, opioids, alpha and beta blockers and serotonergics.
The industry focuses its GPCR drug discovery efforts on non-sensory GPCRs. Of the 363 total non-sensory GPCRs, approximately 240 have known ligands (molecules that bind the receptors) with nearly half of those targeted either by marketed drugs (46 GPCRs) or by drugs in development (about 70 GPCRs). Without a known ligand, drug development for a given receptor is extremely difficult. There are approximately 120 GPCRs with no known ligands, which are termed "orphan GPCRs."
Omeros uses a proprietary high-throughput assay to identify small-molecule agonists and antagonists for orphan GPCRs, unlocking them to drug development. Omeros believes that it is the first to possess the capability to unlock orphan GPCRs in high-throughput, and that currently there is no other comparable technology. The Company believes that there may be more than 65 new drugable targets among the orphan GPCRs. Unlocking these receptors could lead to the development of drugs that act at these new targets. There is a broad range of indications linked to orphan GPCRs including cardiovascular disease, asthma, diabetes, pain, obesity, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia, learning and cognitive disorders, autism, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis and several forms of cancer.
About Omeros Corporation
Omeros is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company committed to discovering, developing and commercializing products focused on inflammation and disorders of the central nervous system. The Company's most clinically advanced product candidates are derived from its proprietary PharmacoSurgery™ platform designed to improve clinical outcomes of patients undergoing a wide range of surgical and medical procedures. Omeros has five ongoing clinical development programs, including four from its PharmacoSurgery™ platform and one from its Addiction platform, the most advanced of which is in Phase 3 clinical trials. Omeros also has the near-term capability, through its GPCR program, to add an unprecedented number of wholly new drug targets to the market. Behind its clinical candidates and GPCR platform, Omeros is building a diverse pipeline of antibody and small-molecule preclinical programs targeting inflammation and central nervous system disorders.