India's Serum looks beyond COVID with new vaccines for malaria, dengue
Send a link to a friend
[March 11, 2024]
By Manas Mishra
PUNE, India (Reuters) - The CEO of the world's biggest vaccine maker,
Serum Institute of India, said the company has bolstered its
manufacturing ahead of launches over the next few years of shots against
diseases like malaria and dengue by repurposing facilities used to make
COVID-19 immunizations.
With COVID manufacturing scaled back as demand ebbs, the company is
using those facilities to instead manufacture its newer shots, which it
estimates will boost total production by two and a half billion doses,
CEO Adar Poonawalla said in an interview.
Serum produces AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine under the brand name
Covishield in India, and also makes Novavax's protein-based COVID shots.
It invested $2 billion during the peak of the global health crisis to
boost production.
The company currently sells about 1.5 billion total vaccine doses every
year, and estimates a total production capacity of as much as 4 billion
doses.
"And this is also important because if there is a pandemic again in the
future, we can vaccinate the whole of India in a matter of three months,
three to four months," Poonawalla said.
The company is in talks with other countries and governments to utilize
those facilities in the event of future outbreaks, he said, but did not
provide further details on the discussions.
Poonawalla said Serum has capacity to manufacture 100 million doses of
its malaria vaccine, and could scale up further depending on demand. It
has already produced 25 million doses ahead of a launch in the coming
months.

[to top of second column]
|

A man walks past the logo of the Serum Institute of India, inside
the facility in Pune, India, February 27, 2024. REUTERS/Francis
Mascarenhas
 The ancient mosquito-borne disease
still kills more than half a million people, mainly young children
in sub-Saharan Africa, every year.
Poonawalla said Serum would focus on exporting its
vaccines, such as the malaria shot, to other countries, rather than
sign technology transfer deals.
Serum is also testing a single-dose vaccine for dengue, another
mosquito-borne, painful and sometimes fatal disease, which it
developed building on research done by the U.S. National Institutes
of Health.
That vaccine is in early- to mid-stage trials in India and the
company expects to complete late-stage trials in the next three
years, the CEO said.
Japan's Takeda Pharmaceutical also makes a dengue shot, which is
available in countries like Indonesia and Thailand, as well as
Argentina and Brazil, which is currently dealing with a major
outbreak and not enough vaccine.
Other companies such as Indian Immunologicals are also developing
vaccines against the disease.
(Reporting by Manas Mishra in Pune, India; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |