Catalent
plans $100 million expansion at vaccine plant in Italy
Send a link to a friend
[July 21, 2021]
By Michael Erman
(Reuters) - Catalent Inc plans a $100
million expansion of its plant in Anagni, Italy, where the contract drug
manufacturer is currently filling millions of vials of COVID-19 vaccines
for AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson.
|
Catalent expects the expansion will allow it by April 2023 to be
able to make the drug substance for complicated biologic drugs,
including COVID-19 vaccines or therapies like monoclonal antibodies.
"In Europe there is a shortage of capacity of bioreactors for
biologic (drugs)," Mario Gargiulo, Catalent's Region President of
Biologics in Europe said in an interview.
"We thought that this was the right place to create this capability,
a capability that can be used for a public health emergency like
COVID-19."
The company plans to install two 2,000-liter single-use bioreactors
at the Anagni plant, as well as the infrastructure required for
another six 2,000-liter single-use bioreactors.
Catalent acquired the Anagni plant from Bristol Myers Squibb in
January 2020 and quickly signed deals to fill and finish the
AstraZeneca and J&J vaccines there. Gargiulo says that by the end of
October 2022, the site will have put 1 billion doses of vaccine into
vials.
[to top of second column] |
He said that Catalent does not
have any deals yet to make COVID-19 vaccine
drugs at the plant, and does not know whether
there will be a need for the capacity by early
2023.
However, he said Catalent has contracts to fill
and finish vaccine that could be renewed through
the end of 2023, so there was certainly a
possibility the capacity will be required.
"I would say that we would be (supply)
constrained with the vaccines for the next
couple of years, at least," he said.
(Corrects spelling of plant's location)
(Reporting by Michael Erman; editing by Richard
Pullin)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content
|