China's CanSino in mRNA vaccine deal with AstraZeneca
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[August 09, 2023]
By Casey Hall
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -CanSino Biologics has agreed with AstraZeneca to
provide "contract development and manufacturing services" to support the
Anglo-Swedish drugmaker's messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine programme, the
Chinese company said on Tuesday.
In a filing to Shanghai's stock exchange, CanSino said it would
manufacture and supply unspecified mRNA products to AstraZeneca. It did
not disclose the value of the deal.
AstraZeneca said the deal would support investigational mRNA vaccines in
its early pipeline.
"AstraZeneca is working on next-generation technologies to develop
vaccines and monoclonal antibodies for infectious diseases where there
is high unmet need," the company said, adding it would share more
details as the candidates progress.
In China, which has relied on locally produced COVID-19 vaccines rather
than allowing mRNA products from foreign manufacturers to be imported,
mRNA vaccines are still not widely used.
The country approved in March its first homegrown mRNA vaccine against
COVID, developed by CSPC Pharmaceutical Group.
CanSino has been working on its own mRNA COVID vaccine, and said in
February it was in discussion with Chinese regulators around the
protocol for a late-stage study for its COVID mRNA booster vaccine,
CS-2034.
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A vial and a syringe are seen in front
of a displayed AstraZeneca logo, in this illustration taken,
November 27, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
AstraZeneca is the largest foreign
drugmaker in China and is doubling down on the world's No.2
pharmaceutical market amid slumping sales of its COVID vaccine.
At an event in China in May, its China president pledged to "build a
local, transnational company that loves the Communist Party and
loves the country".
The cooperation deal comes only a month after China's Commerce
Minister Wang Wentao told foreign pharmaceuticals firms including
AstraZeneca at a roundtable meeting that they can expect "more
development opportunities".
It also comes after vaccine maker Moderna, which has said that it
was keen to sell its mRNA vaccine to China, announced a deal last
month to develop and manufacture mRNA medicines in the country.
(Reporting by Casey Hall; Additional reporting by Ludwig Burger in
Frankfurt; Editing by Miyoung Kim, Mark Potter and Himani Sarkar)
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