member states governing the processing of personal data, impose
strict obligations on entities subject to the GDPR, including but
not limited to: (i) accountability and transparency requirements,
and enhanced requirements for obtaining valid consent from data
subjects; (ii) obligations to consider data protection as any new
products or services are developed and to limit the amount of
personal data processed; (iii) obligations to comply with the data
protection rights of data subjects; and (iv) obligations to report
certain personal data breaches to governmental authorities and
individuals. Data protection authorities from the different E.U.
member states and other European countries may enforce the GDPR and
national data protection laws differently, and introduce additional
national regulations and guidelines, which adds to the complexity
of processing European personal data. Failure to comply with the
requirements of the GDPR and the related national data protection
laws may result in significant monetary fines and other
administrative penalties (the GDPR authorizes fines for certain
violations of up to 4% of global annual revenue or €20 million,
whichever is greater) as well as civil liability claims from
individuals whose personal data was processed. Additionally,
expenses associated with compliance could reduce our operating
margins.
The GDPR also prohibits the transfer of personal data from the E.U.
to countries outside of the E.U. unless made to a country deemed by
the European Commission to provide adequate protection for personal
data or accomplished by means of an approved data transfer
mechanism (e.g., standard contractual clauses). Data protection
authority guidance and enforcement actions that restrict companies’
ability to transfer data may increase risk relating to data
transfers or make it more difficult or impossible to transfer E.U.
personal data to the U.S.
Competitive Environment
The pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries are characterized
by rapidly evolving technology and intense competition. Our
competitors include major multi-national pharmaceutical companies
and biotechnology companies developing both generic and proprietary
therapies to treat serious diseases. Many of these companies are
well-established and possess technical, human, research and
development, financial, and sales and marketing resources
significantly greater than ours. In addition, many of our potential
competitors have formed strategic collaborations, partnerships and
other types of joint ventures with larger, well established
industry competitors that afford these companies potential research
and development and commercialization advantages in the therapeutic
areas we are currently pursuing.
Academic research centers, governmental agencies and other public
and private research organizations are also conducting and
financing research activities which may produce products directly
competitive to those being developed by us. In addition, many of
these competitors may be able to obtain patent protection, obtain
FDA and other regulatory approvals and begin commercial sales of
their products before us.
Companies that currently sell or are developing proprietary
products for the prevention and treatment of C. difficile infection include: Actelion
Pharmaceutical Ltd., Artugen Therapeutics, Inc.,
AzurRx, Inc., Deinove, Pfizer Inc., Merck & Co. Inc.,
Merus B.V., Pfizer Inc., Rebiotix, Inc., Seres
Therapeutics, Inc., Summit Therapeutics plc. and Vedanata
Biosciences Inc. Companies that sell or are developing products for
the treatment or prevention of acute graft-versus-host-disease
(aGVHD) include: Amgen, Inc., Astellas Pharma, Janssen
Biotech, Inc., Mallinckrodt plc, Mesoblast, Inc., Novartis
International AG, Pfizer, Inc. Roche AG and Takeda
Pharmaceutical Company Ltd.
Only three oncolytic virus (OV) products have been approved in
different global markets. Amgen Inc.’s Imlygic® (T-VEC, OncoVEX)
for melanoma (USA); Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited‘s DELYTACT® for
malignant glioma (Japan) and Shanghai Sunway Biotech Co., Ltd
Oncorine® for patients with late-stage refractory nasopharyngeal
cancer (China).
More than 60 companies have publicly identified that they are
pursuing clinical development of different forms of OV products.
Adenoviruses are the most commonly used viruses in these programs,
with modified adenoviruses under development by companies including
AdCure Bio LLC, Candel Therapeutics, Inc., CG Oncology, Inc.,
DNAtrix, Inc., EpicentRx, Inc., GeneMedicine, Co Ltd., IconOVir
Bio, Inc., Lokon Pharma AB, Multivir, Inc., NewGenPharm
Incorporation, Oncolys BioPharma, Inc., Orca Therapeutics B.V.,
PsiOxus Therapeutics Ltd, Shanghai Sunway Biotech Co., Ltd ,
Targovax Oy|Targovax ASA, Tessa Therapeutics, TILT Biotherapeutics,
Ltd., and Valo Therapeutics Oy.
OV products have been or are being developed using other virus
backbones, including: Coxsackie virus (Viralytics Ltd., Oncorus
Inc.); herpes simplex virus (Amgen, Inc., Candel Therapeutics,
Inc., Daiichi Sankyo Company Ltd., Oncorus, Inc., Replimune, Inc.,
Takara Bio, Inc., Wuhan Binhui Biotechnology Co., Ltd.); Maraba
virus (Turnstone Biologics, Inc.); measles virus (Vyriad, Inc.);
myxoma virus (OncoMyx Therapeutics, Inc.); parvovirus (Oryx GmbH
& Co. KG), reovirus (Oncolytics Biotech, Inc.); Seneca Valley
virus