Business Standard

Panacea, Refana join hands for Covid vaccine

- SOHINI DAS

Panacea Biotec, a New Delhibased vaccine maker, has formed a 50:50 joint venture (JV) with Nasdaq-listed Refana to develop, manufactur­e, and market a potential cure for the virus.

Panacea’s shares jumped 20 per cent on Wednesday, closing at ~202.8 on the BSE. The firm is set to make 500 million doses of the vaccine, which will then be supplied to the JV (based in the Republic of Ireland). This will be a wholly inactive virus-based vaccine, which, according to Managing Director Rajesh Jain, is a robust and “time-tested technology”.

“We chose this over others because it is a robust, timetested technology, and there are no chances of failure in terms of efficacy. In fact, this

approach has a much higher probabilit­y than any other modern vaccine being touted,” he claimed.

Jain further added that it was easy to scale up in terms of production, and convenient to transport the same. The raw material will be made at the firm’s Punjab facility, while the final vaccine will be made at Baddi (Himachal).

Half the 500 million doses will be made available in India.

Panacea will start production of the trial batch by September.

Under the collaborat­ion, Panacea will be responsibl­e for product developmen­t and commercial manufactur­ing, with the JV undertakin­g clinical developmen­t and regulatory submission­s globally. Both Panacea and Refana will undertake sales and distributi­on in their respective territorie­s. “Wholly inactive viral vaccines have a higher probabilit­y of being safe,” said Jain. The coverage of this vaccine, according to Jain, would last for several years.

Phillip Schwartz, chief scientific and medical advisor to Refana Inc, said: “Utilising proven models of viral pathogenes­is and parallel conduct of multiple pre-clinical and clinical studies, Refana believes it can significan­tly accelerate the vaccine developmen­t.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India