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Merck turns down option to Evaxion’s gonorrhea vaccine, prompting Danish biotech to seek other partners

Merck turns down option to Evaxion’s gonorrhea vaccine, prompting Danish biotech to seek other partners

Merck & Co. is turning down its option to license Evaxion’s gonorrhea vaccine candidate, closing the door on the Danish biotech’s chance to collect up to $592 million in biobucks.

Evaxion will now hold all rights to EVX-B2, an early-stage asset that the company created using its artificial intelligence platform, according to a Dec. 19 release. Evaxion said it is now seeking another licensing partner for the program.

Last year, Merck paid $3.2 million and offered Evaxion the chance to make more than $1 billion in milestones in exchange for options to EVX-B2 and another preclinical vaccine candidate against an undisclosed infectious agent.

Evaxion CEO Helen Tayton-Martin, Ph.D., said the company remains committed to the EVX-B2 program despite Merck’s decision not to exercise its option.

“The data we have generated to date are encouraging and underscore EVX-B2’s potential to be the first approved vaccine for gonorrhea, addressing a major unmet medical need,” Tayton-Martin said in the release. 

Merck’s option was for a protein-based version of EVX-B2. Evaxion also touts an mRNA version of the program that the company is developing with partner Afrigen Biologics & Vaccines.

Evaxion did not consider Merck’s potential in-licensing of EVX-B2 in terms of its cash-flow outlook, according to the company. 

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Just this September, Merck and Evaxion announced an addendum to the 2024 deal, extending the evaluation period for the second vaccine candidate, with a decision on potential licensing now expected in the first half of 2026.

At the same time, Merck expanded upon the pair’s existing relationship by licensing a different one of Evaxion’s AI platform-based vaccines in a deal that also included up to $592 million in biobucks. Merck paid $7.5 million cash for preclinical asset EVX-B3, an upfront payment Evaxion said would stretch its cash runway into the first half of 2027.

The hand-back marks the second pharma walk-away of the day, following news that Boehringer Ingelheim turned down its chance to license Nxera Pharma’s phase 2-ready schizophrenia drug candidate. The two dismissals come amid a flurry of dealmaking that is buoying industry sentiment as it ushers in the new year.