The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Forming an alliance

Pot producer Tilray links up with pharma firm Sandoz Canada

- BY ARMINA LIGAYA

Licensed medical marijuana producer Tilray Inc. has formed an exclusive alliance with Sandoz Canada, in what it says is the first collaborat­ion between a cannabis producer and a local affiliate of so-called Big Pharma.

Tilray, headquarte­red in Toronto with production facilities in British Columbia, has signed a binding letter of intent with the Quebec-based affiliate of Sandoz Internatio­nal GmbH, part of global healthcare company Novartis.

As part of the agreement announced Monday, Tilray will become the exclusive collaborat­or with Sandoz Canada on cannabis-based medical products which are non-smokable or non-combustibl­e such as gel caps and sprays for the domestic market.

Subject to future regulatory changes, the aim is to distribute on a wholesale level these cobranded products to Canadian hospitals and pharmacies, said Tilray’s chief executive officer Brendan Kennedy.

There is still much skepticism towards the medical marijuana industry, and this collaborat­ion with a recognized pharmaceut­ical company will help alleviate that, he said.

As well, patients and physicians may feel more comfortabl­e with cannabis-based products in forms such as pills and creams that are familiar.

“That was part of the opportunit­y we saw... To distribute Tilray products that have the Sandoz logo that pharmacist­s, physicians and patients are used to seeing in their pharmaceut­ical packages. I think that will give physicians confidence and trust in our brand and our product,” he said in an interview.

This agreement is the latest example of widening acceptance of cannabis as medicine, as Canada moves to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use later this year.

For example, Sun Life Financial Inc. has added medical marijuana as an option for its group benefits plans as of March 1 after queries from its employer clients, marking a shift for the industry.

Several benefits plan sponsors already cover medical cannabis costs for their employees including Loblaw Companies Ltd., the Ontario Public Service Employees Union and the University of Waterloo’s student union.

Patients and doctors appear to be warming up as well.

According to the latest figures from Health Canada, there were 235,621 registered medical marijuana patients at the end of September 2017, up 35 per cent from 174,503 at the end of April 2017.

The total number of medical practition­ers who have ever provided a medical document for a client who registered with a licensed marijuana producer was 10,433 at the end of September, up from 9,726 three months earlier, when data was first gathered.

Meanwhile, the pharmacy industry has been positionin­g itself to distribute medical cannabis.

Shoppers Drug Mart has lined up supply agreements with four licensed producers, including Tilray, and Shoppers parent company Loblaw has filed for a producers license which would allow it to distribute the drug. Other pharmacies such as PharmaChoi­ce has also signed marijuana supply agreements.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Tilray President Brendan Kennedy is photograph­ed at head office in Nanaimo, B.C., in 2017. Licensed medical marijuana producer Tilray Inc. has formed an exclusive alliance with Sandoz Canada.
AP PHOTO Tilray President Brendan Kennedy is photograph­ed at head office in Nanaimo, B.C., in 2017. Licensed medical marijuana producer Tilray Inc. has formed an exclusive alliance with Sandoz Canada.

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