With U.S. now in hand, BioNTech CEO looks for more vaccine production
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[December 12, 2020] By
Michael Erman
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The chief executive of
Germany's BioNTech SE said the biggest challenge facing it and partner
Pfizer Inc now that their COVID-19 vaccine is authorized for use in the
United States will be to scale up manufacturing to meet huge demand.
"We need to solve the manufacturing challenge," Ugur Sahin told Reuters
in an interview. "It is very clear that more doses are needed. And we
are dealing with that question - how to produce more doses."
The companies have said they will produce up to 1.3 billion doses of the
vaccine next year.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized the vaccine for
emergency use on Friday, after Britain became the first country to begin
deploying the shot outside of clinical trials earlier in the week.
Sahin said he expects the companies will receive conditional approval
from the European Medicines Agency by the end of the month and can begin
rolling out vaccine in European countries early next year.
One way he hopes to boost supply would be by bringing on earlier than
projected the 750 million-dose-a-year plant BioNTech bought from
Novartis AG in Marburg, Germany.
BioNTech had said it would begin making the vaccine there in the first
half of 2021, and Sahin said they are working to get it up and running
on an expedited timeline.
"The baseline plan is 1.3 billion doses," Sahin said. "And we are
working on an extended plan. I can't tell you at the moment what is
possible and how much we can expand the scale but we will try to do it
significantly."
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Ugur Sahin, CEO and co-founder of German biotech firm BioNTech, is
interviewed by journalists in Marburg, Germany September 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer
Supply of the vaccine will be limited at first in the United States, which has a
population of roughly 330 million. The U.S. government has ordered 100 million
doses of the two-dose vaccine and could negotiate for more.
Pfizer board member and former FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in an
interview with CNBC the company had offered to sell the United States more doses
as recently as last month but had been turned down.
In data released this week, Pfizer and BioNTech said their vaccine began
conferring some protection to recipients even before they received the second
shot. It seemed to begin to show some efficacy around 12 days after the first
shot.
Sahin said he was surprised by the data: "We know that the immune response is
heavily boosted after the second dose."
He said the companies have not decided yet whether to evaluate a single-dose
version of the vaccine.
"This will be a discussion that we will certainly have with our partners
Pfizer," he said.
(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Lincoln Feast and William Mallard)
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