Shanghai Daily

GSK in deal for new generation shots

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BRITISH drugmaker GlaxoSmith­Kline said yesterday it will work with a German biopharmac­eutical company to develop new vaccines targeting emerging variants of COVID-19 amid concerns that some mutations are making the virus harder to combat.

GSK plans to invest 150 million euros (US$181 million) to support the research of the Tubingen, Germanybas­ed CureVac, which is developing vaccines that use messenger RNA to attack the disease. “The developmen­t program will begin immediatel­y, with the target of introducin­g the vaccine in 2022, subject to regulatory approval,” a joint statement said.

GSK, which acquired a 10 percent stake in CureVac last year, will also support the production of up to 100 million doses of CureVac’s first generation

COVID-19 vaccine candidate in 2021, according to the statement.

A CureVac spokesman said that would firm up group’s target to produce up to 300 million doses this year.

“The increase in emerging variants with the potential to reduce the efficacy of first generation COVID-19 vaccines requires accelerati­on of efforts to develop vaccines against new variants to keep one step ahead of the pandemic,” the companies said.

The announceme­nt comes as health officials around the world raise concerns about new virus variants that are more contagious or resistant to existing vaccines. This week, England is conducting house-to-house coronaviru­s testing in a bid to snuff out a new variant before it spreads widely. The British authoritie­s want to test about 80,000 people in eight areas where the variant, first identified in South Africa, is believed to be spreading after a handful of cases were found in people who had no contact with the country or anyone who traveled there. The variant contains a mutation of the virus’ characteri­stic spike protein targeted by existing vaccines.

“We believe that next generation vaccines will be crucial in the continued fight against COVID-19,” GSK Chief Executive Emma Walmsley said. “This new collaborat­ion builds on our existing relationsh­ip with CureVac and means that together, we will combine our scientific expertise in mRNA and vaccine developmen­t to advance and accelerate the developmen­t of new COVID-19 vaccine candidates.”

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