Living Cell Technologies Limited
CAN: 104 028 042
ASX: LCT
OTCQX: LVCLY
ASX ANNOUNCEMENT
Dr Ken Taylor appointed Chief Executive
8 July 2014 – Sydney, Australia & Auckland, New Zealand – Living Cell Technologies Limited today announced that Dr Ken Taylor has been appointed Chief Executive. Ken was
appointed NTCELL Program Director in February and became Acting Chief Executive in April. He has been successful
resuming patient recruitment in the Phase I/IIa clinical trial of NTCELL® in Parkinson’s disease.
Dr Taylor joins LCT following a prestigious international career in both academia and business. He completed a
postdoctoral fellowship in Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
in Maryland, USA, and subsequently held a joint appointment in neurosciences at Princeton University and the Squibb
Institute of Medical Research in Princeton, New Jersey. He joined Roche Australia and was soon promoted to the role of
Medical Director, Australia; before becoming Managing Director of Roche New Zealand. In 1990, he was appointed Managing
Director of the Roche UK affiliate and then transferred to Syntex in Palo Alto, California to convert the corporate
pharmaceutical company to the Roche Bioscience Research Center. Prior to joining LCT, Dr Taylor was CEO of Antipodean
Pharmaceuticals where he managed the Phase I and II studies of its lead compound in Parkinson’s disease. He holds
Honours and Doctorate degrees in pharmaceutical chemistry and pharmacology from the University of Otago School of
Medicine and completed a business management program at IMD in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Mr Roy Austin, Chairman of LCT, said “I am delighted to appoint Dr Taylor to the Chief Executive position because he
brings such a depth of relevant scientific, regulatory and leadership knowledge and experience to the job.”
Dr Taylor said, “It is a very exciting time to be leading LCT with NTCELL for Parkinson’s disease in the clinic and the
potential of our patented cell therapy to treat other neurological diseases such as Huntington’s, Alzheimer’s and motor
neurone diseases.”
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For further information: www.lctglobal.com