GSK
eyes 'step change' in shingles vaccine output in 2024
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[November 15, 2019]
WAVRE, Belgium (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline
said further growth from its shingles vaccine, which has boosted
earnings, would be reined in by limited capacity until 2024, but a new
bioreactor facility would then be ready to bring a "step change" in
production.
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GSK, Britain's largest drugmaker, had originally envisaged a gradual
launch in the United States, its biggest market, but regulators
unexpectedly recommended Shingrix not only for people reaching the
age of 50 but also to replace an established product.
A bioreactor in Belgium that makes so-called antigens - proteins
that trigger an immune reaction against the shingles virus - is
reaching its capacity limits. A second one is in the works at an
undisclosed location, but the complex facility takes time to build.
"The key project is the expansion of antigen bulk production which
will come online in 2024. That will be what will create the next
step change in our capacity," said Roger Connor, president of GSK's
vaccines business.
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Until then GSK is working on more than 20 other projects to eke out
higher production, aiming to increase the number of Shingrix doses
to a "high teens of millions" in 2019.
In 2024 "you'll see tens of millions of increase, rather than single
digit millions," Connor added.
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Mark Potter)
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