After more than three decades at Neurocrine, CEO Kevin Gorman will retire later this year, handing the reins of the $13 billion neuroscience drugmaker over to Kyle Gano, a longtime business partner.
The CEO transition was announced Tuesday, with Gorman informing the board of his retirement plans on May 24. Gano, currently Neurocrine’s chief business development and strategy officer, will take over as CEO on Oct. 11 when Gorman retires.
Gorman’s lengthy tenure at Neurocrine included a classic boom-and-bust arc in biotech, but also an unlikely resurgence to reach the company’s current stable footing.
Founded in 1992, Neurocrine excited investors in the early 2000s with blockbuster hopes for a Pfizer-partnered sleep drug. By 2005, Neurocrine was worth $2.4 billion and had nearly 600 employees before the FDA twice rejected that drug in 2006 and 2007. Gorman became CEO in 2008 amid multiple rounds of layoffs, a plunging stock price and a dwindling balance sheet.
Gorman kept the business alive by selling its San Diego headquarters just before the real estate market crashed, scrounging enough money together to find clinical success with Orilissa, an endometriosis drug that was licensed and now sold by AbbVie. Neurocrine launched its own drug, Ingrezza, to treat tardive dyskinesia in 2017.
Gano, who has spent over two decades at Neurocrine, will be charged with leading the next chapter, particularly as the biotech recently filed for approval for another drug candidate to treat congenital adrenal hyperplasia, or CAH.
“This is an important year for our organization, as we look to help even more patients with tardive dyskinesia and Huntington’s disease through Ingrezza, while potentially bringing crinecerfont to CAH patients in 2025 – all while advancing our pipeline,” Gano said in a statement. “I look forward to continuing to work closely with our leadership team and the Board to capitalize on our momentum and advance our vision to be a true global leader in neuroscience.”
Stifel analyst Paul Matteis called Gano a “good choice” as Gorman’s successor, writing in a note to investors it felt like “somewhat of a natural transition point” for the change as Neurocrine prepares for a possible launch of its CAH drug.
Gorman plans to end his tenure with Neurocrine as a $13 billion biotech with over 1,400 employees, and Ingrezza sales expected to surpass $2 billion in 2024. The company ended March with $1.9 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities.
“The best days of Neurocrine are in front of us by far, I have no doubt about that,” Gorman said at the close of the biotech’s first-quarter earnings call this month.
— Andrew Dunn
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