Pfizer to outsource some drug production, focus on
coronavirus vaccine
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[May 09, 2020] By
Carl O'Donnell and Michael Erman
(Reuters) - Pfizer Inc <PFE.N> said on
Friday it is in talks to shift more of its medicine production to
outside contractors as it prepares for large-scale production of an
experimental vaccine to prevent COVID-19, should it prove safe and
effective.
The U.S. drugmaker is tapping its network of around 200 outside
contractors, which includes Catalent Inc <CTLT.N>, Lonza Group AG <LONN.S>,
and Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc <TMO.N>, to play a bigger role in
producing some of its existing medicines, Mike McDermott, president of
global supply at Pfizer, told Reuters in an interview.
Pfizer did not specify which companies within its network it is in
active discussions with about shifting production.
That will help Pfizer shift a portion of production at four of its
vaccine manufacturing facilities, including one of its largest U.S.
factories, toward the coronavirus vaccine while preventing disruptions
in supply of its other products, he said.
"They have been hugely helpful in the past and will help us through
this," McDermott said.
Pfizer and German partner BioNTech SE (22UAy.F) said on Tuesday they
have begun delivering doses of their coronavirus vaccine candidates for
initial human testing in the United States. Trials in Germany had
already begun.
If successful, Pfizer said it hopes to receive emergency use
authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as early as
October. It could distribute up to 20 million doses by the end of 2020,
and potentially hundreds of millions next year, it said.
The shift to outside production of other medicines will primarily effect
vaccines and intravenous drugs. Pfizer currently produces around 1.5
billion doses of intravenously injected vaccines and drugs each year.
McDermott said Pfizer will also add additional shifts to its own
factories, hire more workers to take advantage of its unused production
capacity, and stockpile current products in preparation for the shift to
COVID-19 vaccine production.
Pfizer said earlier this week it was preparing four of its manufacturing
sites - three in the United States and one in Belgium - to produce the
vaccine, even before clinical trials shows which, if any, of the four
potential candidates being tested demonstrates efficacy in preventing
infection with the novel coronavirus.
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The logo of U.S. pharmaceutical corporation Pfizer Inc. is seen at a
branch in Zurich, Switzerland October 2, 2018. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
It will cost Pfizer at least $150 million to gear up its facilities for the new
vaccine, McDermott said.
Pfizer and BioNTech's vaccine candidates use messenger RNA (mRNA) technology,
which has long been talked about but has yet to produce an approved product. The
mRNA technology instructs cells in the body to make specific coronavirus
proteins that then produce an immune response.
It has the potential to be among the first vaccines against the virus that has
infected more than 1 million people in the United States and killed over 77,000.
Producing vast quantities of vaccines requires that Pfizer and BioNTech work to
rapidly scale up their suppliers' ability to make raw materials for mRNA
vaccines, McDermott said, adding that many are small biotechs.
It could also face potential shortages of more basic materials, he added, such
as the vials and syringes used to contain and administer vaccines.
Those materials "could become stressed in this environment, where you are trying
to produce your ... existing products and add in vaccines needed for hundreds of
millions or billions of people," McDermott said.
Contract manufacturers Lonza and Catalent are also working with other drugmakers
to help produce potential treatments and vaccines for the coronavirus.
Last week, Lonza said it was working with Moderna Inc <MRNA.O> to help it
produce its experimental mRNA vaccine being developed with U.S. government
backing.
Catalent agreed last month to help Johnson & Johnson <JNJ.N> manufacture its
coronavirus vaccine candidate.
Lonza, Catalent and Thermo Fisher did not immediately respond to requests for
comment about their work with Pfizer.
Pfizer also operates its own contract manufacturer, CenterOne, which provides
raw materials to other drugmakers.
(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell in New York and Michael Erman in Maplewood, N.J.;
Editing by Bill Berkrot and Daniel Wallis)
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