Overview

  • George Medicines develops innovative therapies that address major health challenges like hypertension.
  • Brandon Capital is the largest life sciences venture capital firm in Australia.
  • Brandon Capital is one of George Medicine’s key investors.
  • The Australian Government’s Biomedical Translation Fund program enabled Brandon Capital to invest in George Medicines.

About Brandon Capital

Brandon Capital is a specialist in investing in the life sciences sector. It leverages expertise from its network of medical research institutes (Brandon BioCatalyst) to help early-stage biomedical research companies develop new products for patients.

Brandon Capital identifies outstanding medical discoveries, primarily from Australian research institutes. It then starts new companies, funds their technological development and recruits expert management teams to build sustainable, innovative businesses.

To date, the firm has raised more than $1 billion in investment capital to help create over 50 early-stage companies.

Brandon provides risk capital, strategic guidance, mentorship and access to networks. This funding and expertise is crucial for startups to scale operations, develop products and expand into new markets.
— Brandon Capital Founding Partner, Stephen Thompson

About George Medicines and its hypertension ‘triple pill’

George Medicines develops innovative therapies that address major health challenges like hypertension. Hypertension affects around one in three Australian adults. Around the world, more than a billion adults aged between 30–79 years old have hypertension.

The company stands out in the sector for its commitment to providing access in countries where the burden of disease is highest and treatment gaps are widest.

We operate at the intersection of innovation, affordability and global impact. This positioning is relatively rare in our sector and central to our mission.
— George Medicines Executive Director, Anthony Rodgers

Through its founding relationship with the George Institute for Global Health, George Medicines has access to some of the world’s most comprehensive datasets and therapy area expertise.

Our vision is to transform the treatment of cardiometabolic diseases by developing and bringing to market single-pill, multi-mechanism combinations of existing medicines that can improve access and reduce the financial burden on patients and health systems.
— George Medicines Executive Director, Anthony Rodgers

This pragmatic innovation allows George Medicines to bring transformative, evidence-based therapies to market faster and more cost-effectively, without compromising scientific rigour or patient outcomes.

George Medicines’ hypertension triple pill is designed to help sufferers achieve greater control over their blood pressure. The therapy means patients can take a single pill that combines three medications at a lower dosage. Benefits include quicker blood pressure control, fewer clinic visits for dosage adjustments and reduced long term side effects.

In 2025, the triple pill was approved in the US by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It is the first and only triple combination for the initial treatment of hypertension. An agreement to commercialise the product in the US is in place, along with existing commercial licensing arrangements in Canada, Mexico, Colombia and Central America.

We continue to identify commercial partners in other territories, including Australia.
— George Medicines Executive Director, Anthony Rodgers
The Biomedical Translation Fund enabled Brandon to invest in and support the later stage development of the triple pill alongside syndicate partners to reach FDA approval, which occurs infrequently and is to be celebrated.
— Brandon Capital Founding Partner, Stephen Thompson

How investment from Brandon Capital helped

Brandon Capital has been a strategic partner for George Medicines through key stages of the development process, with support extending beyond financial backing.

The support enabled George Medicines to accelerate clinical development of the triple pill and focus on commercialising the product along with partnering aspects of the program.

We really see Brandon as an extension of our team. Their involvement has helped position George Medicines not just for scientific success, but for meaningful global impact.
— George Medicines Executive Director, Anthony Rodgers
The continued funding support from the Biomedical Translation Fund has proven essential in expanding the pool and size of the available capital to fund companies in clinical phase like George Medicines.
— Brandon Capital Founding Partner, Stephen Thompson

About the Biomedical Translation Fund

The Australian Government’s Biomedical Translation Fund supports innovation in healthcare, by contributing around half of the investment capital for funds like Brandon Capital’s Medical Research Commercialisation Fund to invest in biomedical discoveries that commercialise health and medical research outcomes.

The fund enables healthcare investment firms like Brandon Capital to support promising ventures that address unmet medical needs and can achieve significant global impact.

It also acts as additional motivation for superannuation funds – a significant source of capital in Australia – to help biomedical companies progress transformative ideas from clinical stage to commercial reality.

Brandon shared the vision of the Biomedical Translation Fund in its aims to take Australia’s biotechnology industry to the next level of maturity by supporting companies ready to take their products into clinical development.
— Brandon Capital Founding Partner, Stephen Thompson

The Department of Industry, Science and Resources administers the Biomedical Translation Fund on behalf of the Department of Health, Disability and Ageing.

The Biomedical Translation Fund program has validated our scientific approach and our mission. Being part of its portfolio has also helped raise our profile in the biotech and investor communities and opened doors for partnering and funding opportunities.
— George Medicines Executive Director, Anthony Rodgers
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