Takeda
eyeing early 2022 rollout of Novavax's COVID-19 shot in Japan -CEO
Send a link to a friend
[October 29, 2021]
By Rocky Swift
TOKYO (Reuters) - Takeda Pharmaceutical Co,
the Japanese partner for Novavax Inc's COVID-19 vaccine, is preparing to
seek regulatory approval for a roll out in Japan early next year, its
top executive said on Friday.
|
Novavax delayed filing for U.S. approval to the end of this year,
and Politico reported this month that the Maryland-based company has
faced production and quality problems. The drugmaker filed to
British regulators on Wednesday.
"We will need to assess whether the package that has been filed in
the UK, for example, will satisfy the Japanese authorities," Takeda
CEO Christophe Weber said in an interview ahead of the Reuters Total
Health conference, which will run virtually from Nov. 15-18.
"I think this is what will happen in the coming weeks and months,"
he said, adding he believed it would be ready in time to help with
Japan's booster shot programme, which is set to start by the end of
this year.
Takeda is setting up to make the vaccines "as soon as the product is
approved," he said.
Takeda has said it can make 250 million doses of Novavax's
protein-based vaccine at its Hikari plant in western Japan, and has
contracted to sell 150 million to the Japanese government.
Japan has largely depended on the mRNA-type shots of Pfizer Inc/BioNTech
and Moderna Inc in its vaccination effort, which has fully
inoculated 71% of its population.
Takeda has been a major part of that push, acting as the importer
and distributor of 50 million Moderna doses this year, with
contracts for the same amount next year.
[to top of second column] |
COVID-19 vaccine expenditures
in Japan could reach about 1.37 trillion yen
($12.1 billion) in the next five years,
according to health data firm IQVIA Holdings,
and Takeda has a sizable first-mover advantage.
But numerous hurdles remain. Takeda and Moderna
recalled 1.63 million doses in Japan after the
discovery of metal contaminants in some vials, a
problem traced back to a production partner in
Spain.
"Manufacturing processes are always very complex
in the case of vaccines," Weber said. "That's
why there's been so many supply issues with
vaccines since the beginning of COVID-19,
because it's not an easy process."
($1 = 113.5900 yen)
(Reporting by Rocky Swift; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
[© 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 |