2 - Eurasanté
Transcription
2 - Eurasanté
PROGRAM December 2 & 3 2014 • Lille • FRANCE A 360° approach to build life sciences partnerships www.biofit-event.com Organized by In cooperation with • • • W e l c o m e t o B i o F IT 2 0 1 4 • • • Edito For the third time, BioFIT offers international actors in the life sciences a meeting place between public and private stakeholders and keeps fostering the emergence of new and innovative projects and products. The desire to join forces has brought actors from various sectors (pharma, biotech, medtech, IVD, animal health, technology transfer, licensing and IP professionals, academia and investors...) to discuss partnerships and bring the most relevant public and private audience to Lille on December 2nd and 3rd. On the agenda: • partnering activities with pre-screened one-to-one meetings • a conference program dealing with collaborative research, new funding sources and new approaches in technology transfer, • a presenting technologies session offering the possibility to present key technologies, licensing opportunities and product development. This edition is the event not to be missed as it will gather over 1 000 attendees from 25 countries, including leading companies and professionals from pharma, biotech, medtech, IVD but also technology transfer, licensing and IP professionals, academia and investors. Thanks to the quality and diversity of its participants, BioFIT looks certain to generate this year again, excellent collaborating opportunities. With this vote of confidence received from its attendees, the event has been taken to the next level and we are proud to announce that BioFIT will become a yearly event. Its 4th edition will be held in Strasbourg on December 1st & 2nd, 2015! Mark it in your agendas and join us! We wish you a fruitful and enjoyable two-day event full of meetings and partnership opportunities and hope to see you again next year! Etienne VERVAECKE, General Commissioner of BioFIT 2014 and Eurasanté General Manager ••organizers•• Eurasanté is the economic development agency dedicated to Health, Nutrition and Biotechnology in the Nord-Pas de Calais region. Eurasanté offers since 1996 a complete range of services allowing to define, strengthen, finance and launch every development project on the health and nutrition markets. Nutrition Health Longevity (NHL) Cluster is a dynamic network focusing on today’s main health issues, at the crossroads of Nutrition, Biotechnology, and Health. In the Health sector, NHL focuses on developing preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic solutions applicable to cardiovascular and metabolic conditions, neurodegenerative diseases and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD). Its projects in the Food sector aim at protecting health and well-being through a safe, healthy, and sustainable diet. In cooperation with • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 2 • • ••summary•• • 2 Editorial 4/5 BIOFIT Agenda 6 STEERING COMMITTEE 8/9 floor plan/exhibitors list PARTNERING ACTIVITIES 11 Plenary session 14 December 2nd 15 BIOPARTY 18 December 3rd 19 Posters & presentations 25 OUR MISSION: THERAPEUTIC INNOVATION GENFIT (Euronext Paris:GNFT) is a biopharmaceutical company at the forefront of developing therapeutic and diagnostic solutions in fields of high medical need due to a lack of suitable treatment and an increasing number of patients worldwide. ! GENFIT’s R&D efforts are focused on bringing new medicines to market for patients with metabolic, inflammatory, autoimmune and fibrotic diseases, that affect the liver (such as NASH - Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) or the bowel (such as inflammatory bowel disease). ! GFT505 is GENFIT’s lead pipeline product for the treatment of NASH, a major recognized unmet medical need. ! ! ! Connect together: GENFIT Headquarters - Parc Eurasanté 885, Avenue Eugène Avinée 59120 Loos France +33 (0)3 2016 4000 www.genfit.com ! PARTNERING • Big consortia: how do they work and what are their outcomes? L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 4 • Who will be funding the maturation phase in the future? One-to-one meetings Animal Health: a key actor in tomorrow’s innovations? PLENARY SESSION Pasteur Amphitheatre New models for bridging the gap from research to market RUBENS ROOM One-to-one meetings In partnership with Full program p.25 Technologies & Services Presentations PLENARY SESSION Accessing innovation: how to build long term partnerships? Looking ahead: can big data hold the key to breakthrough treatments? 7.00 • 10.00 pm bioparty 4.00 • 5.30 pm RUBENS ROOM 3.30 • 4.00 pm coffee break 2.00 • 3.30 pm FAIDHERBE ROOM 12.30 • 2.00 pm lunch 11.00 • 12.30 pm PASTEUR AMPHITHEATRE 10.30 • 11.00 am coffee break 9.00 • 10.30 am RUBENS ROOM 8.30 • 9.00 am Registration and Exhibition opening/ Welcome coffee CONFERENCES EGID Symposium Eurotop Auditorium 5:00 pm: Conclusions 4:45 pm: Best poster award 4:00 pm: Brown adipose tissue and skeletal muscle mitochondrial function as targets for the treatment of type 2 diabetes: focus on human intervention studies 3:30 am: Coffee break 2:45 pm: Metabolic control of nash 2:00 pm: The impact of sleep loss and circadian misalignment on metabolism 12:30 pm: Lunch 11:45 am: Poster session 11:00 am: Islet inflammation in type 2 diabetes 10:30 am: Coffee break 9:45 am: Role of innate and adaptive immunity in atherosclerosis European Genomic Institute for Diabetes 9:00 am: Role of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of diabetes 8:30 am: Registration / Welcome coffee Meta-inflammation in diabetes and its complications European Genomic Institute for Diabetes hosted events DAY ONE • d e c e m b e r 2 n d • • • AGENDA • • • PARTNERING Driving innovation in Europe: using Horizon 2020 program l • Emerge & happen: creative solutions for difficult problems in dealmaking L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 5 • Make it work and last: how to best apply strategic alliance management Scouting innovation: academia push and industry pull RUBENS ROOM track 3 4:00 pm: Outsourcing: the future of the industry 2:00 pm: Meeting: Working Group Major Accounts 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm: Do we need a European joint diabetes research agenda? who should contribute to it? what should be the goals of this joint research agenda? 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm: Is stratified/personalized/precision medicine one of the paradigm on which we could ground our collective efforts for research in diabetes? 12:30 pm: Lunch 11:00 am - 12:30 pm: What do you expect as a good level of maturity of research finding? Too early stage for me guy!! 9:00 am - 10:30 am: 2013-2014 Breakthroughs & innovations in the field of diabetes 9:15 am: Open Board of Directors 11:00 am - 12:30 pm: Speeches and exchanges 8:30 am: Welcome coffee Eurotop Auditorium 8:30 am: Welcome coffee Artois Room hosted events DAY t w o • d e c e m b e r 3 r d solutions for transferring innovation to market: l Creative TTO’s and industry’s new approaches One-to-one meetings One-to-one meetings track 2 Early stage innovation: new routes to funding sources The road less traveled: new approaches to finance early stage innovation l FAIDHERBE ROOM New practices from the VC industry in sourcing innovation FAIDHERBE ROOM The valuation process: do all stakeholders use the same criteria? l FAIDHERBE ROOM Biotech meets Medtech: a future perspective track 1 Emerge, last and deliver: best practices in collaborative research 4.00 • 5.30 pm RUBENS ROOM 3.30 • 4.00 pm coffee break 2.00 • 3.30 pm RUBENS ROOM 12.30 • 2.00 pm lunch 11.00 • 12.30 pm RUBENS ROOM 10.30 • 11.00 am coffee break 9.00 • 10.30 am FAIDHERBE ROOM 8.30 • 9.00 am Registration and Exhibition opening/ Welcome coffee CONFERENCES • • • AGENDA • • • • ••steering committee•• • BioFIT 2014 is honored to receive the support of a prestigious Steering Committee composed of 19 renowned international experts in their fields, coming from different sectors: academia, industry, clusters, service providers… The BioFIT 2014 Steering Committee ensures the relevance of the conference program and contributes to the choice of the speakers. Associations, Clusters, Investors Industries Academia, TTOs Zeina ANTOUN, Clinical Research Director, GSK - GlaxoSmithKline (FR) Richard BERGSTROM, Director General, EFPIA - European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (BE) Hervé ANSANAY, Business Developer, SATT Nord (FR) Maria BOBADILLA, Senior Director, Extending Innovation Network, Roche (CH) Claude-Alain CUDENNEC, General Director, AFSSI - Association Française des Sociétés de Services et d’Innovation (FR) Sami CHTOUROU, Director of technology platforms and innovation, LFB (FR) Isabelle DIAZ, Research & Biotechnology Director, LEEM / General Secretary, ARIIS - Alliance pour la Recherche et l’Innovation des Industries de Santé (FR) Ivan BAINES, Chief Operating Officer, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (DE) Garold BREIT, CEO, Breit Ideas (USA) Marco FIORINI, General Secretary, Aviesan - French National Alliance for Life Sciences and Health (FR) Nicolas CARBONI, President, SATT Conectus Alsace (FR) Gunilla EKSTROM, Vice President Operations, Karolinska Development (SE) Jean-Luc CHAGNAUD, Healthcare Business Development Manager & IP Manager, Aquitaine Science Transfert (FR) Titta ROSVALL-PUPLETT, Executive Director, EBE - European Biopharmaceutical Enterprises (BE) Esther LANGE, Industry Liason Manager, Ascenion (DE) Maria M. FLOCCO, Senior Director, Head Strategic Research Partnerships Europe, Pfizer (FR) Guy HELIN, CEO, Syngulon (BE) Tomas LANDH, Director, Strategy & Innovation Sourcing, Diabetes Research Unit, Novo Nordisk (DK) Stephan LENSKY, Vice President Strategic Transaction & Alliances, BOEHRINGER INGELHEIM (DE) Anne ROY, Journalist, AEF – Specialized news agency (FR) Frédéric SCAEROU, Director, Scientific Affairs Oncology, Ipsen Innovation (FR) Emilie ROYERE, Director, Eurobiomed (FR) Mohammed CHARKI, Research & Development Partnerships Director, Global Project Leader Online Open Innovation, Sanofi (FR) BioFIT for me is one of the best places where you can meet academics, big pharma and biotech. It’s really a unique opportunity to meet them all in one place. Guy HELIN, CEO, Syngulon • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 6 • 80% © Palani Mohan of our development projects are biologics 9 high-potential projects are in late-stage* €4.8 bn of investment in R&D in 2013 Dean, Australia, with multiple sclerosis EXPLORING THE BOUNDARIES OF MEDICAL INNOVATION Sanofi has created an open innovation model, based on solid collaborations with its partners and the scientific community. With this new R&D approach, Sanofi can meet its main challenges: accelerating the transformation of scientific innovation into targeted therapeutic solutions for patients and developing new biologic entities. www.sanofi.com *As of february 6, 2014 • ••floor plan•• • F LANDRES HALL level 8 exhibitors list 22 Poster Area 19 E 20 21 17 18 Internet Terminals Partnering Desk 1 16 14 12 15 13 11 10 8 D Coffee Break 9 Coffee Break Bar 7 Access to Level 11 Partnering - Lunch Area C Access to Pasteur Amphitheatre 6 5 B 4 Access to Welcome Desk Eurotop Auditorium 3 European Genomic Institute for Diabetes 2 A Coffee Break European Genomic Institute for Diabetes 1 Partnering Desk 1 Poster Area Conferences Rooms (Rubens, Faidherbe, Goya) Preview Room (Rembrandt) Breakfast, Coffee Breaks • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 8 • AFSSI (French Association of Outsourcing and Innovative Companies in the field of Life Sciences) ADVANCED BIODESIGN BIOSIMS TECHNOLOGIES CELL&CO BIOREPOSITORY CILCARE EVEDRUG PHYLOGENE PHYTOSAFE POPSI CUBE RD-BIOTECH ROOWIN EGID (European Genomic Institute for Diabetes) ILLUMINA RAMERY TRACE ARCHITECTES EURASANTE & NHL CLUSTER APTEEUS EATCELL BIOTECH E-ZYVEC KIBIOS MACOPHARMA OCR SMARTMABS VAXINANO X’PROCHEM Réseau SATT (Tech Transfer Accelerator Network) SIMV (French Association of Animal Health Industry) 4P-PHARMA ADMESCOPE AMYLGEN ATLANPOLE BIOTHERAPIES BACCINEX CITOXLAB CYANAGEN ERDYN EUROPEAN COMMISSION HAZGO IP PRAGMATICS MEDICEN PARIS REGION MERCODIA MITA - Agency for Science, Innovation and Technology NORGINE ORIGINAL PROCESS PIERRE FABRE CDMO PRAXIS PHARMACEUTICAL RWS GROUP SCREENCELL SOLADIS STRATICELL A D C B E 6 20 2 10 11 1 18 17 19 9 21 8 15 4 12 22 3 5 14 13 7 16 • ••floor plan•• • J EANNE DE F LANDRE HALL level 11 Access to Level 8, Flandres Hall Catering Partnering Booths Poster Area Partnering Desk 2 Poster Area Catering Partnering Desk 2 Partnering Booths 1 - 44 Sponsor Meeting Rooms 45 - 46 Poster Area Catering Poster Area 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 Internet Terminals 45 46 conception : Luncheon AP instit 210x148_Mise en page 1 20/11/14 15:57 Page1 AUJOURD’HUI ET DEMAIN Groupe biopharmaceutique français, le LFB est présent dans les domaines de l’immunologie, de l’hémostase et des soins intensifs avec une large gamme de médicaments dérivés du plasma qui traitent chaque année plus de 500 000 patients atteints de pathologies graves et parfois très rares. VOUS POUVEZ COMPTER SUR LE GROUPE LFB Afin de faire progresser la prise en charge de certaines pathologies très graves et améliorer également l'accessibilité de certains traitements, le LFB développe des programmes dans les biotechnologies avec deux axes de développement majeurs : les anticorps monoclonaux et les protéines recombinantes par transgénèse. Le LFB s'engage pour relever les défis thérapeutiques et technologiques des traitements de demain. www.lfb.fr Meet at BioFIT 2014 through Please collect a print out of your partnering schedule at the partnering desk which is located in the exhibition hall and opposite the partnering booths Network with 26,000 dealmakers Promote your company, products or ideas Gain key insights and knowledge YOU Engage in expert groups Monitor Screen 12,000 companies for partnering fit Leverage the social web partnering360® is an online network of life science dealmakers, providing www.partnering360.com • • • P ARTNERING ACTIVITIES • • • w h o w ill y o u meet Ascenion, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Evotec, Pfizer, Roche, Eli Lilly, Sanofi, GSK, Takeda, Max Planck Institute, Karolinska Institute, Provendis, University of Oxford, Leiden University, King’s College London, ISIS Innovation, Pasteur Institute, Institute Curie, Inserm Transfert, Karolinska Development, Kurma Partners, Index Ventures, GIMV, Novo Seeds, Imperial Innovations…… and many others 28% Investors, Clusters, Services 43% Pharmas, Biotechs, Medtechs 29% Academics , TTO BioFIT’s partnering platform is powered by renowned software, which has already facilitated over 40,000 one-to-one meetings at events worldwide in the past 18 months and is the most widely used partnering platform in the life sciences industry. 25 represented countries Germany Spain Czech Republic Ireland France Italy Belgium Poland Netherlands Switzerland Portugal Japan Finland Israel Denmark Canada Lithuania Sweden Hungary Norway United States United Kingdom Luxembourg Austria • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 1 1 • novo nordisk Partnering for innovation IN PROTEIN-BASED THERAPEUTICS AND TECHNOLOGIES Novo Nordisk is a world leader in diabetes care and we have a leading position within haemostasis management and growth hormone therapy. We have refined our protein competencies since 1923, and have developed world class expertise in driving proteins from molecule to market. We continuously look for new partnerships. • DIABETES Novel proteins or peptides affecting any aspect of diabetes; Novel treatments for obesity, diabetes complications and T1D. • HAEMOPHILIA Novel non-replacement therapies that improve haemostasis. • TECHNOLOGY Technologies for expressing, modifying or producing proteins and peptides; Formulation and drug delivery technologies for proteins and peptides. For more information and to contact us visit www.novonordisk.com\science\partnering Novo Nordisk is a global healthcare company with more than 90 years of innovation and leadership in diabetes care. The company also has leading positions within haemophilia care, growth hormone therapy and hormone replacement therapy. Headquartered in Denmark, Novo Nordisk employs approximately 40,700 employees in 75 countries, and markets its products in more than 180 countries. Novo Nordisk’s B shares are listed on NASDAQ OMX Copenhagen (Novo-B). Its ADRs are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NVO). For more information, visit novonordisk.com. Your innovation partner At the crossroads of Nutrition, Biotechnology and Health is co-organised by NHL Cluster • • • d e c e m b e r 2 nd• • • PLENARY SESSION Accessing innovation: how to build long term partnerships? Pharma’s interest for early stage technologies is no longer news in the life sciences industry. In their quest to accessing knowledge, pharma and large biotech get more and more involved in early stage research, either by supporting big consortia or building collaborative research partnerships directly with academia. However, what do we know about the success of such partnerships and big consortia? Have they really worked and what were the outcomes? 11.00 am – 12:30 pm PASTEUR AMPHITHEATRE Chairman John HODGSON, Data Editor, Scripp Intelligence (UK) Mike MARTIN, Senior Director, Search & Evaluation, Takeda (USA) Wen Hwa LEE, Strategic Alliances Manager, University of Oxford, Nuffield Department of Medicine (UK) Werner LANTHALER, CEO, Evotec (DE) Schwarz Holger, External Innovation, Merck Serono (DE) • • • d e c e m b e r 2 nd• • • BioFIT for me is the place to be if you want to learn from others in tech transfer from academia to pharma and develop business. Nicolas CARBONI, President, SATT Conectus Alsace 9.00 am – 10:30 am RUBENS ROOM Big consortia: how do they work and what are their outcomes? Many companies and research institutes are getting more and more involved in consortia of different sizes in order to work together around specific questions they are all looking to find an answer to. Of course their organization can be very different depending on the number of partners involved and the questions addressed. But how can their outcomes be evaluated, knowing that what comes out is non-tangible knowledge which itself is later used in other R&D processes in order to obtain real results? Moreover, what type of guidance is necessary in order to make them work and obtain successful outcomes? Chairman Hugh LAVERTY, Senior Scientific Project Manager, IMI - Innovative Medicines Initiative (BE) Bernd STOWASSER, Head of Public Private Partnerships External Innovation & Science Policy, Jacky VONDERSCHER, President, Enyo Pharma (FR) Sanofi (DE) 2.00 pm – 3:30 pm Rubens Room New models for bridging the gap from research to market Even though there are many collaborations put in place between pharma and academia, the gap from academic discovery to market still exists. In this context, we are witnessing the emergence of new initiatives like pharma-driven innovation centers, incubators and consortia. Their purpose is to help advance drug discovery projects by accelerating the process of innovation, but what impact will they have on the life sciences ecosystem, including the pharma-biotech relationships? Chairman Garold BREIT, Owner, Breit Ideas (USA) Duncan HOLMES, European Head, Discovery Partnerships with Academia, GSK (UK) Bruno FRANCOIS, Clinical Lead COMBACTE Consortium, CHU Limoges/Inserm (FR) Jeffrey ULMER, Global Head of External R&D, Novartis Vaccines (USA) Stefaan ALLEMEERSCH, Director Business Development, Centre for Drug Design and Discovery (CD3 – Leuven) (BE) • Christian TIDONA, Founder & Managing Director, Biomed X Innovation Center (DE) Lille - 2014 - Biofit | 15 • Odile PIOT-GROSJEAN, Strasbourg R&D Site Director, SANOFI (FR) GSK, A KEY PLAYER IN R&D We have three primary areas of business in pharmaceuticals, vaccines and consumer healthcare. Our commercial success depends on creating innovative new products and making these accessible to as many people as possible. By achieving this, we will be able to grow our business and provide benefits to patients, consumers, society, our employees and our shareholders. Our headquarters are based in the UK, and we have a wide geographical reach. We have offices in more than 115 countries, major research centres in the UK, USA, Spain, Belgium and China and an extensive manufacturing network with 87 sites globally. Research is vitally important to the success of our business, and we spent just under £4 billion in 2012 in our search to develop new medicines, vaccines and innovating consumer products. We are one of the few healthcare companies researching medicines and vaccines for the World Health Organisation’s three priority diseases HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. As a science-led global healthcare company we have the opportunity to improve the health and well-being of millions of people around the world. Through investment in R&D and infrastructure, and through collaboration with other organisms, we are innovating to address currently unmet health needs. We are improving access to our products, irrespective of where people live or their ability to pay, and we are working to control or eliminate diseases affecting the world’s most vulnerable people. FR/GSKI/0011/13 – 12 septembre 2013 – © Laboratoire GlaxoSmithKline GlaxoSmithKline is a science-led global healthcare company that researches and develops a broad range of innovative medicines and brands. Our products are used by millions of people around the world, helping them to do more, feel better and live longer. • • • d e c e m b e r 2 nd• • • 2.00 pm – 3:30 pm Faidherbe Room Who will be funding the maturation phase in the future? Nicolas CARBONI, President, SATT Conectus Alsace (FR) Rémi DROLLER, Managing Partner, Kurma Partners (FR) In a difficult economic climate, in which venture companies prefer to invest in lower risk or mature enterprises, finding financial resources for project maturation seems to get ever more complicated. To whom do TTOs and academic laboratories turn when looking for funding at this stage and which are the best strategies to spin-off the technology so as to ensure its success? Tony HICKSON, Managing Director, Technology Transfer, Imperial Innovations (UK) Manfred HORST, Director, Scientific Liaison France, Ge, Eastern EU Licensing & External Research EU, Merck Sharp & Dohme (FR) Matthieu COUTET, VP operation & Business Development, AAVLIFE (FR) BioFIT is covering key aspects of getting better at working with external partners, identifying them and finding alternative sources of funding. Frédéric SCAEROU, Director, Scientific Affairs Oncology, Ipsen m ore toda y fnd out Chairman • • • d e c e m b e r 2 nd• • • I believe that, in this post crisis era, the importance of partnering cannot be overstated. BioFIT has been structured to meet the needs of the industry and academy and research institutions. Moreover, Lille affords a convenient user-friendly environment in which to meet and conduct business. Garold Breit, CEO, Breit Ideas (USA) INVITATION 4.00 pm – 5:30 pm RUBENS ROOM Looking ahead: can big data hold the key to breakthrough treatments? In today’s healthcare system, we are able to collect large sets of data at multiple levels. However, how can they be transformed into knowledge? This particular aspect is being addressed in large consortia organized by big pharmas together with biotech and IT companies. Let’s find out how they are working and whether they can help get concrete outcomes in terms of use of this data, of handling it and hear about some successful outcomes. DECEMBER 2nd 2014 7:00 pm TRIPOSTAL LILLE - FRANCE A shuttle service is provided to pick you up at Lille Grand Palais and take you to the Tripostal Times of departure from Lille Grand Palais 6.30 pm & 6.40 pm 7.00 pm & 7.10 pm Chairperson Nora BENHABILLES, Manager Program, Health sector, CEA (FR) Kai SIMONS, Research Group Leader and Director Emeritus, Max Planck Institute of Cell Biology and Genetics (DE) Philippe SANSEAU, Head Computational Biology, GSK (UK) Jesper TEGNER, Strategic Professor of Computational Medicine Director, Unit of Computational Medicine, Karolinska Institute (SE) Hans CONSTANDT, CEO, Ontoforce (DE) Exhibition Nathalie JOURDAN, CEO, Bioptimize (FR) • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 1 8 • Networking Cocktail • • • d e c e m b e r 3 rd• • • 9.00 am – 10:30 am Rubens Room Chairman Garold BREIT, Owner, Breit Ideas (USA) Biotech meets Medtech: a future perspective At first glance, there is a clear dividing line between medical technology and biotechnology. In actual fact, the two areas are not always easy to separate and the boundaries are becoming increasingly blurred. One thing is certain – the will to join forces is there. But how do these collaborations work in reality? Let’s hear from our panelists examples of cooperation between biotech and medtech and how they perceive the future of this sector. Eric HALIOUA, CEO, Promethera (BE) Magnus BJÖRSNE, Executive Director, AstraZeneca BioVenture Hub (SE) Manfred KAUER, Senior Deputy Director, BioRegio STERN (DE) • • • d e c e m b e r 3 rd• • • 9.00 am – 10:30 am Faidherbe Room l Chairman In order to speed up innovation, it is obvious that research alone is not enough. It also needs to be put into use. Therefore, the EU began funding not only the research activities, but also the commercialization of these results. Let’s discuss in this session, what Horizon 2020 has to offer to the technology transfer community in life sciences and how to take advantage of these opportunities to be more efficient. Cormac SHERIDAN, journalist, Bioworld (IRELAND) Aletta DEBERNARDI, Senior Advisor Research Funding, Leiden University, LURIS (NL) Driving innovation in Europe: using Horizon 2020 program Hugh LAVERTY, Senior Scientific Project Manager, IMI - Innovative Medicines Initiative (BE) 11.00 am – 12:30 pm RUBENS ROOM Philippe CUPERS, DG Research and Innovation, Head of Neurosciences Sector, European Commission (BE) Philippe VERWAERDE, CEO, Alzprotect (FR) Emerge & happen: creative solutions to difficult problems in dealmaking Chairman That things can go wrong in negotiations and partnership is not surprising. However, when you encounter these problems, sometimes creative solutions are needed in order to finally create a mutually beneficial partnership. During this interactive session, the panelists will discuss the common and not so comment pitfalls in partnering and negotiations, as well as share their experience on the different stages of negotiations, the difficulties they ran into and the solutions they found. Mark Bradley WILSON, Partner, Norton Rose Fulbright (USA) Stephan LENSKY, Vice President Strategic Transaction & Alliances, Boehringer Ingelheim (DE) 11.00 am – 12:30 pm FAIDHERBE ROOM Jürgen WALKENHORST, Head of Life Sciences, Provendis GmbH (DE) l Chairman Pascale REDIG, Member of ASTP-Proton Professional Development Committee, NL Senior Sourcing Manager of Global Pharma R&D, Janssen Pharmaceutica NV (BE) The valuation process: do all stakeholders use the same criteria? Everyone knows putting a value on a technology or know-how is a challenging process. And if the value is not correctly measured, it could get a wrong start for the project or create difficulties in transferring the technology. So let’s try to find out from our panel of experts how value is measured in the life sciences field. Do all the stakeholders (TTOs, VCs, pharma and biotech) use the same criteria? Ivan C. BAINES, Chief Operating Officer, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (DE) Ed SALTZMAN, President, Defined Health (USA) • Daniel BACH, Managing Partner, Aravis (CH) L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 2 0 • Mohammed CHARKI, Research &Development Partnerships Director, Sanofi (FR) • • • d e c e m b e r 3 rd• • • 2.00 pm – 3:30 pm RUBENS ROOM Make it work and last: how to best apply strategic alliance management Chairman The deal signature is just the beginning of a long road to travel for putting in place a successful partnership. The alliance management is an important piece of the puzzle and if well implemented and understood by both parties, it becomes an effective and invaluable tool in the management of the deal. Let’s discuss how to set it correctly on paper and how to identify the right key licensing terms to the deal and how to manage the partnership in an efficient and rewarding way for both parties. Mark Bradley WILSON, Partner, Norton Rose Fulbright (USA) Stephan LENSKY, Vice President Strategic Transaction & Alliances, Boehringer Ingelheim (DE) Jürgen WALKENHORST, Head of Life Sciences, Provendis GmbH (DE) Pascale REDIG, Member of ASTP-Proton Professional Development Committee, NL Senior Sourcing Manager of Global Pharma R&D, Janssen Pharmaceutica NV (BE) BioFIT is a European independent event and it fits very well into fostering the targets that we have in identifying innovation. Tomas LANDH, Director, Strategy & Innovation Sourcing, Diabetes Research Unit, Novo Nordisk history_148x210_4c.qxd:BioFIT 17.11.2014 16:56 Uhr Seite 1 Value through Innovation The chemist and Nobel Prize winner Professor Heinrich Wieland (right) was in charge of setting up the company’s first scientific department in the 1920s. Research for health calls for endurance. The best thing is to make an early start. For Boehringer Ingelheim, success as a pharmaceutical company for more than 129 years has been synonymous with introducing innovative medications. In researching and developing new therapies and dosage forms the company invested around €2.7 billion in 2012 alone. This investment in the future has a long tradition. So it’s no coincidence that Boehringer Ingelheim is one of the 20 most successful companies in pharmacetuicals worldwide. Research is our driving force. More than 47,400 employees around the globe, of whom some 13,900 are in Germany, are working to improve the prospects for healthier lives. www.boehringer-ingelheim.com • • • d e c e m b e r 3 rd• • • 2.00 pm – 3:30 pm FAIDHERBE ROOM New practices from the VC industry in sourcing innovation Chairman The traditional VC industry invests in young start-ups once they evaluate the project and the potential outcomes. However, recently they have started looking more into academia and approaching research projects in order to detect innovation as early as possible, support it and help it get mature. Has this trend generalized in the industry so as to speak of a shifting environment? How are pharma and biotech seeing this and is academia interested in the bargain? Stephane Mottola, Director of International Development, FIST (FR) Giovanni Mariggi, Associate, Index Ventures (CH) Magnus BJÖRSNE, Executive Director, AstraZeneca BioVenture Hub (SE) 4.00 pm – 5:30 pm Faidherbe Room Christophe VAN VAECK, Senior Investment Manager Life Sciences, GIMV (BE) Nanna LÜNEBORG, Investment Director, Novo Seeds (DK) Scouting innovation: academia push and industry pull Chairman Academia wants to push out knowledge and innovation on the one hand and the industry is looking to pull it in and bring it to market on the other hand. However simple this might seem, when putting it into practice there are many challenges to overcome. Let’s find out which are the new models that pharma and biotech are using in scouting innovation and how are TTOs better packaging the offer in order to find more matches with the demand? Georg KÄÄB, Cluster Manager Bavarian Biotech Cluster, Bio-M Corporate Communications, BioM Biotech Cluster Development Development GmbH (DE) Adam STOTEN, Deputy Head of Technology Transfer, ISIS Innovation (UK) • Raj MEHTA, Business Development Executive, Cancer Research Technology (UK) L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 2 2 • Jane Atkins Director, Global Licensing & Business Development (CH) — © Dan Tentler / Getty Images Caroline, still as style-conscious as ever... … and Ipsen played an important part in keeping it that way. For Caroline, who suffers from a debilitating disease, challenging her friends to a quad bike race is priceless. Each year, Ipsen invests 20% of its sales in R&D to further its expertise in three specialty care areas: urology-oncology, endocrinology and neurology. The company also has a significant presence in primary care. In more than 100 countries, Ipsen employees devote their energy and skills to developing innovative therapeutic solutions for debilitating diseases and improving the quality of life of patients. www.ipsen.com • • • d e c e m b e r 3 rd• • • l 4.00 pm – 5:30 pm Rubens Room Chairman Claire Skentelbery, Secretary General, European Biotechnology Network (BE) The road less traveled: new approaches to finance early stage innovation Many experts believe the era of the traditional venture-backed financing model to fund drug development has passed. If this is true, what other models can companies explore for driving innovation? In this session we will discuss some of the alternative paths to funding drug discovery and development, including new collaborative and business approaches, in a challenging economic environment Axel KALINOWSKI, Manager Continental Europe, London Stock Exchange (UK) Souleymane Galadima, Director of Development, WiSEED (FR) Lucia Robert, Director, MATWIN (FR) Condensed innovation 10 years of research in just one cubic centimetre. Our innovations help millions of people by alleviating their suffering and improving their quality of life. We give them hope. 210x148_ProgHeft_Kapsel_e.indd 1 17.11.14 14:00 • • • P o s t e r s & p r e s e n tat i o n s • • • Goya ROOM December 2nd from 2:00 pm – 5:45 pm Come and listen to 10 min pitches of innovative technologies, products and services ABUNDNZ Ultrasensitive assay for bioanalytical studies with innovative medicines 2:00 pm CAPSULAE Microencapsulation as a solution for therapeutic applications 2:15 pm CYANAGEN Novel fluorescent IR-marker for monitoring the kidney function 2:30 pm VITAMFERO VitamFero : a novel generation of veterinary live attenuated prophylactic treatments 2:45 pm DELPHI GENETICS The Staby® technology: No antibiotics and higher yields in recombinant proteins, pDNA productions and antibody development 3:00 pm IMSTAR Innovative Image Cytometry Solutions for biomarkers identification and validation in research and cyto-pathology 3:15 pm INMOTE MEDTECH Inmote MedTech: Easy, secure and consistent documentation in woundcare 4:00 pm JAGIELLONIAN UNI Novel antiviral agents against coronaviruses 4:15 pm OCR OCR – The OneHealth Company 4:30 pm QUINTEN Quinten: Expert in strategic data leveraging 4:45 pm 2BIND Fast and quantitative analysis of molecular interactions using the MicroScale Thermophoresis (MST) 5:00 pm 3M 3M Emphaze aex hybrid purifier: purification to the next level 5:15 pm 4P PHARMA Translating science to product: General methodolodgy for addressing technological and financial Challenges 5:30 pm • L i l l e - B i o f i t - 2 0 1 4 // 2 5 • Discover more technologies and services at the Poster Area - Espace Jeanne de Flandre - Level 8 4P PHARMA, AMYLGEN, KALLISTEM, OCR, QUANTACELL, QUINTEN, VOXCAN, 3M, CAPSULAE, CATALENT, CYANAGEN, ORIGINAL PROCESS, VITAMFERO, 2BIND, ABUNDNZ, INRA, SOLADIS, CAPITOL EUROPE, DELPHI GENETICS, IMSTAR, INMOTE MEDTECH, JAGIELLONIAN UNI, SEPPIC, SUSSEX UNI The Poster & Presentation session is organized in partnership with the LEEM www.biofit-event.com They support us Sponsors Gold silver bronze contributing Farbe/colour: PANTONE 288 CV tium de sor on orisation al hémat ique T V C Supporters CMYK Blue: 100/15/0/35 Orange: 0/75/90/0 Biotechnologie-Industrie-Organisation Deutschland e. V. FEBiotec F e d e r a c i ó n E s p a ñ o l a d e B i o t e c n ó l o g o s media supporters institutional partners Event Management: Conference Program: Registration & Sponsorship: Event Venue Marion SIGIER +33 (0)3 59 39 01 84 [email protected] Ramona PIRV +33 (0)3 59 39 01 84 [email protected] Margaux SATOLA +33 (0)3 59 39 01 82 [email protected] Lille Grand Palais 1 bd des Cités Unies F-59777 Lille-Euralille FRANCE SAVE THE DATE NEW LOCATION 2015 4 th Printed on recycled paper Photos credits : © Sven Hoppe/Fotolia - Eurasante EDITION Want to learn all about BioFIT 2015 ? Register online ! WWW.BIOFIT-EVENT.COM/2015 Organized by Supported by