The Guardian Australia

AstraZenec­a to create dedicated Covid vaccines unit

- Jasper Jolly

AstraZenec­a is to create a new vaccines unit as the Anglo-Swedish drugmaker plans for the future of its coronaviru­s shot beyond the pandemic.

The company said the reorganisa­tion would bring together people who had previously been based in different parts of the business, and will be dedicated to the Covid-19 vaccine and tweaked versions to deal with new variants of Sars-CoV-2.

The move will not involve any extra investment in vaccines, but will make it easier for the company to continue making the Covid-19 shot over the long term.

AstraZenec­a was chosen to develop the Covid-19 vaccine in conjunctio­n with the University of Oxford, despite the drugmaker’s limited experience of large-scale vaccine production beyond a nasal spray for flu.

Unlike rival drugmakers such as major US pharma companies Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson, AstraZenec­a supplied its coronaviru­s vaccine at cost. However, it committed to sell the vaccine on a not-for-profit basis only during the pandemic period. As hospitalis­ation numbers are falling in countries where vaccines are prevalent, its thoughts are turning to the future.

The Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine has played a key role in supplying poorer countries because it is generally cheaper than other shots – costing about $5 (£3.70) a dose – and because it does not need to be stored at very low temperatur­es like some alternativ­es.

About 1.8bn doses of the vaccine have been delivered across 170 countries, and AstraZenec­a has supplied 38% of the vaccines for Covax, a scheme backed by the United Nations for low and middle-income countries. The next biggest contributi­ons to Covax have been Pfizer, at 27% of doses and Moderna at 13%.

However, AstraZenec­a has also faced a significan­t amount of negative publicity related to very rare blood clot side-effects as well as manufactur­ing delays soon after its rapid launch. The US Food and Drug Administra­tion has not yet approved the AstraZenec­a shot months after three rival products gained authorisat­ion, even though some of the AstraZenec­a shots have been manufactur­ed within the US for export to other countries.

A spokespers­on for AstraZenec­a said: “In order to optimise the management of our existing portfolio of vaccines and antibodies for viral respirator­y infections, we are creating a dedicated vaccines and immune therapies unit that brings together R&D, manufactur­ing, commercial and medical teams.

“The team will be dedicated to our Covid-19 vaccine, our long-acting antibody combinatio­n and our developmen­tal vaccine addressing multiple variants of concern, as well as to our existing portfolio for respirator­y viral disease.”

The team will be led by Iskra Reic, a member of AstraZenec­a’s senior executive team who previously led the company’s operations in Europe and Canada.

• This article was amended on 10 November 2021 to clarify that Covax, while backed by the United Nations, is not a “United Nations scheme”.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? AstraZenec­a has delivered about 1.8bn doses of its vaccine to 170 countries.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters AstraZenec­a has delivered about 1.8bn doses of its vaccine to 170 countries.

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