While the British drugmaker works on the widely watched coronavirus
vaccine hopeful, AZD1222, its main portfolio of treatments for
cancer, diabetes and heart diseases scored a win after its drug,
Imfinzi, was approved for use in Europe to treat an aggressive form
of lung cancer.
The company's shares gained as much as 1.5% to trade at 84.6 pounds
by 0807 GMT, outperforming the benchmark FTSE-100 index, after
Oxford Biomedica announced the expanded agreement and on news of the
EU approval for Imfinzi.
Cambridge-based AstraZeneca's vaccine is among the leading
candidates in the global race for a successful vaccine and it has
entered late-stage trials in the United States, the company said on
Monday, as it targets 3 billion doses of the vaccine, globally.
Oxford Biomedica said in a statement that AstraZeneca would give it
15 million pounds ($20 million) upfront to reserve manufacturing
capacity at Oxford Biomedica's plant and that it could get an
additional 35 million pounds under a new 18-month deal.
The company was spun off in 1995 from the University of Oxford,
which developed the vaccine before licensing it to AstraZeneca in
April.
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It was among AstraZeneca's initial partners when they teamed up to produce the
vaccine and focus on UK and European supply. Tuesday's deal could be expanded
further by another 18 months into 2022 and 2023, Oxford Biomedica said, sending
its share price up 2.1% to 862 pence.
"Our previously announced partnership with the UK's Vaccine Manufacturing
Innovation Centre (VMIC) has supported our ability to make additional facilities
available for this supply agreement," said Oxford Biomedica's Chief Executive
John Dawson.
The company, however, did not specify how many doses of AstraZeneca's vaccine it
expects to produce under the expanded deal, which is for "large-scale commercial
manufacture," according to its statement.
(The story corrects para 3 to say EU (not U.S.) approval for Imfinzi.)
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka and Aakash Jagadeesh Babu in Bengaluru; editing
by Patrick Graham and Susan Fenton)
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