Pear Therapeutics Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection under chapter 11 to buy time to sell its assets. The company was the first-to-market for prescription digital therapies, with three PDTs gaining regulatory nods from the FDA: Reset for substance use disorder, Reset-O for opioid use disorder and Somryst for insomnia. Reset-A received breakthrough device designation in 2021. The Reset therapies are approved for use in conjunction with medication therapy or other outpatient therapy for substance use.
At least 64 biopharma companies have announced workforce reductions so far in 2023, resulting in 6,000 jobs lost in the industry. It is a clear indication of a continuing trend begun last year in which executives needed to rein in spending to keep innovative programs afloat.
Venus Concept Inc. is undergoing a bit of nip and tuck in efforts to improve the company’s cash flow position and obtain long-term stability. As part of the reconfiguration, the company plans to shed 18% of its workforce with layoffs starting on Feb. 6. In Israel and North America. The executive leadership team also experienced some plumping and extraction.
Royal Philips NV revealed plans to cut a further 6,000 jobs on top of the 4,000 announced in October as it sought to stabilize the business and improve its operational performance going into 2023. In total, the company will reduce its workforce by about 13%. Philip’s fourth quarter results came in ahead of consensus expectations, but the company still posted a loss of €105 million (US$108.2 million).
Sema4 Holdings Corp., Illumina Inc. and Pear Therapeutics Inc. joined a growing list of med-tech companies responding to what Pear CEO Corey McCann called a “challenging macroenvironment” by spinning off, selling or shuttering non-core lines of business and slimming payroll.
Just days after taking the helm of Royal Philips NV, CEO Roy Jakobs told shareholders that the company plans to “immediately reduce our workforce by around 4,000 roles globally” as a result of multiple challenges that contributed to poorer than expected third quarter results. The company posted a net loss for the quarter, missing consensus, which it attributed to continuing supply chain issues and the deteriorating economic environment.
Rubius Therapeutics Inc. is taking a giant step back so that it can attempt taking a few steps forward. The company said it’s restructuring to focus on taking its Rubius Erythrocyte Design (RED) cell therapeutics platform from what it considers a good thing and turn it into a better one. Rubius engineers red blood cells to become cancer fighters but a lack of progress and the lure of similar but new technology could lead to bigger and better results.
Novartis AG is making good on its plan to streamline the company so it can save $1 billion by 2024. The Basel, Switzerland-based company told BioWorld the restructuring that’s underway could impact 8,000 positions around the world, with 1,400 of them in Switzerland.