Apertus Pharmaceuticals
Apertus Pharmaceuticals is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Apertus Pharmaceuticals.
Apertus Pharmaceuticals is a company.
Key people at Apertus Pharmaceuticals.
Apertus Pharmaceuticals is a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) based in St. Louis, Missouri, specializing in active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) development, analytical services, formulation development, and small- to medium-scale cGMP manufacturing of prescription drugs, including sterile injectables, topical creams, liquids, tablets, capsules, suppositories, and DEA-regulated controlled substances (Schedules II-V).[1][2][3][5] With around 12 employees and annual revenue under $5 million, it serves pharmaceutical companies needing expertise in drug discovery, preclinical development, process optimization, analytical method validation, and domestic production of critical APIs like those for cancer drugs such as lomustine.[1][2][4] The company addresses supply chain vulnerabilities by enabling U.S.-based manufacturing, recently partnering with the API Innovation Center to onshore production of essential generic cancer drug ingredients, enhancing national health security amid drug shortages.[3]
Apertus Pharmaceuticals was founded in 2012 (with some sources noting 2011) by Dr. David Gindelberger (Chief Scientific Officer) and Dr. Rick Ryan (CEO), both Ph.D. chemists with deep expertise in pharmaceutical synthesis and commercialization.[2][4][5] Gindelberger, with a PhD in Organometallic Chemistry from UC Berkeley and prior roles at ExxonMobil, Materia (commercializing olefin metathesis catalysts), and as president of a custom manufacturing organization (CMO) serving clients like Sigma Aldrich, brought hands-on experience in lab setup, organic synthesis, and 21+ patents spanning controlled substances and formulations.[5] Ryan complemented this with leadership in API and formulation projects.[5] Starting with API development for local St. Louis labs, they rapidly expanded to analytical services, DEA registrations, and cGMP manufacturing capabilities for diverse products like magnetic nanoparticles and extended-release drugs, achieving FDA inspection success in 2020.[1][5]
Apertus rides the wave of U.S. pharmaceutical reshoring amid global supply chain disruptions, drug shortages (especially for oncology generics like lomustine), and national security mandates for domestic critical medicine production.[3] Its timing aligns with initiatives like Missouri's Advanced Manufacturing Resiliency Grant supporting API Innovation Center collaborations, countering overreliance on foreign APIs (90%+ from China/India) and bolstering health security.[3] Market forces favoring it include rising FDA scrutiny on quality, demand for controlled substances, and CDMO growth for small-batch innovators unable to scale in-house.[1][2] By enabling U.S.-made APIs and formulations, Apertus influences the ecosystem through partnerships that expand access to hospital/pharmacy supplies, foster supply chain resiliency, and support biotech startups in preclinical phases.[3][5]
Apertus is poised for expansion via strategic alliances like its 2024 API Innovation Center acquisition/deal, scaling domestic API output for high-demand generics and controlled substances while leveraging cGMP upgrades for larger clinical/commercial batches.[3] Trends like AI-driven drug discovery, personalized meds, and stricter U.S. reshoring policies (e.g., via grants/executive orders) will amplify its role, potentially growing revenue beyond $5M through oncology and DEA portfolios.[2][3] Its influence may evolve from niche CDMO to key ecosystem enabler, humanizing supply chains by ensuring reliable U.S. access to life-saving drugs—reinforcing its founding mission of specialized, compliant pharma services in a shortage-prone world.[1][3][5]
Key people at Apertus Pharmaceuticals.