Glaxo joins Alphabet in medical venture

The GlaxoSmithKline building is pictured in Hounslow, west London. File picture: Luke MacGregor

The GlaxoSmithKline building is pictured in Hounslow, west London. File picture: Luke MacGregor

Published Aug 1, 2016

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London - GlaxoSmithKline, the UK’s biggest drugmaker, is forming a joint venture with Google parent Alphabet’s life-sciences business to research and develop bioelectronic medicines.

Read also: GSK invests in three manufacturing sites

Glaxo will hold a 55 percent stake in the venture, called Galvani Bioelectronics, and Alphabet’s Verily Life Sciences LLC will hold 45 percent, according to a statement on Monday.

The companies will make an investment of up to 540 million pounds ($715 million) over seven years, subject to completion of milestones.

Glaxo is seeking to find new sources of revenue growth as its blockbuster respiratory treatment Advair faces the threat of generics in the US. Bioelectronic medicine is a new field that aims to tackle chronic diseases using miniature, implanted devices that modify electrical signals that pass along nerves in the body. Glaxo’s researchers believe conditions like arthritis, diabetes and asthma could be treated using these devices.

Verily aims to use technology to develop software and hardware for the health-care field. It is one of Alphabet’s most important new ventures, residing in the tech giant’s Other Bets division alongside smart-home device maker Nest and fast internet service provider Fiber. In the second quarter, those Other Bets generated $185 million in revenue and Alphabet Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said that mostly came from Nest, Fiber and Verily, in that order.

Verily has worked extensively with traditional pharmaceutical companies, such as developing smart contact lenses that can measure glucose with Novartis AG and helping Biogen study the progression of multiple sclerosis with sensors and data analysis tools.

The collaboration with Glaxo is not the first joint venture for Verily: in December, it funded a robotic surgery company with Johnson & Johnson.

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