Exclusive: EU in talks with Moderna, BioNtech, CureVac
to secure possible COVID vaccines - sources
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[July 17, 2020] By
Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union is
negotiating advance purchase deals of potential COVID-19 vaccines with
drugmakers Moderna, Sanofi and Johnson & Johnson and biotech firms
BioNtech and CureVac, two EU sources told Reuters.
The talks follow a deal reached in June by four EU states with
AstraZeneca for the upfront purchase of 400 million doses of its
potential COVID-19 vaccine, in principle available to all 27 EU nations.
The information on the ongoing talks was shared by the European
Commission, the EU executive arm, with EU health ministers at a meeting
in Berlin on Thursday, the sources said.
The multiple talks confirm the bloc's more assertive stance on procuring
potential COVID-19 shots and drugs after Washington's early moves in
securing promising treatments and vaccines.
"We are in talk with several companies on possible COVID-19 vaccines," a
spokesman for the EU Commission told Reuters on Friday, declining to
comment on specific firms as negotiations were confidential.
More than 150 possible vaccines are being developed and tested around
the world to try to stop the pandemic. Of 23 in human clinical trials,
at least three are in final Phase III testing - including candidates
from China's Sinopharm and Sinovac Biotech and AstraZeneca and Oxford
University.
The most advanced EU talks appear to be those with Johnson & Johnson and
Sanofi, confirming a Reuters report in June, because the EU is already
discussing details on the number of doses needed.
With U.S. giant Johnson & Johnson, the European Union is negotiating a
supply of 200 million doses of its potential vaccine, the sources said,
adding that additional supplies may also be available.
'ADVANCED TALKS'
The bloc is also planning to secure in the second half of next year 300
million doses of the potential vaccine developed by France's Sanofi in
cooperation with British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline Plc, the sources
said.
Asked about the negotiations, Sanofi told Reuters it was in "advanced
talks with the EU for the delivery of 300 million doses".
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A small bottle
labeled with a "Vaccine" sticker is held near a medical syringe in
front of displayed "Coronavirus COVID-19" words in this illustration
taken April 10, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic//File Photo
Negotiations were also ongoing, sources said, with U.S. firm Moderna, whose
experimental COVID-19 vaccine showed this week it was safe and provoked immune
responses in all 45 healthy volunteers in an ongoing early-stage study,
according to U.S. researchers.
The bloc is also in talks with German biotechnology firms BioNtech and CureVac
to buy in advance their potential vaccines, the sources said. Both firms, which
have already been offered EU funds to develop their shots, declined to comment.
BioNtech is developing a potential COVID-19 vaccine in cooperation with U.S.
pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, for which 100 million doses could be available by
the end of the year.
CureVac is a pioneer in the so-called messenger RNA approach, which is also
being pursued by BioNTech and Moderna.
RNA molecules are single-stranded versions of the DNA double-helix that can be
produced in a relatively simple biochemical process.
The EU-led talks are conducted by negotiators selected by a steering group in
which all 27 EU states are represented.
Once deals are struck, EU states can place orders with drugmakers to secure
precise amounts for their populations.
If doses of successful vaccines were not sufficient to cover the whole EU
population, shots would be distributed based on demographic and epidemiological
data, the Commission has repeatedly said.
A third EU source said the bloc was also renegotiating the deal struck with
AstraZeneca by Germany, France, Italy and the Netherlands, to make sure all EU
states had equal access to the doses secured in the initial deal.
The source said this discussion was backed by the four states which first signed
the deal.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Additional reporting by Matthias Blamont in
Paris, Caroline Copley in Berlin and Kate Kelland in London; editing by Nick
Macfie)
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