Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Pfizer bets on biotech flu vaccine in US$ 425 mn Biontech alliance

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Pfizer has agreed to pay German biotech firm Biontech up to US$ 425 million in an alliance to develop more effective influenza jabs, the latest among several major pharma companies to bank on a promising new genetic approach.

Privately-held Biontech will receive US$ 120 million upfront plus up to US$305 million depending on certain developmen­t achievemen­ts as well as tiered royalties on futures sales in the double-digit percentage range, the two companies said in a statement yesterday.

Mainz-based Biontech, valued at US$ 2.3 billion in a January financing round, is specialisi­ng in so-called messenger RNA (MRNA) molecules that instruct human cells to produce therapeuti­c proteins or to launch an immune response.

The emergent field has seen drugmakers such as Astrazenec­a , Eli Lilly and Sanofi partner up with biotech firms.

“MRNA vaccines offer a novel approach to code for any protein or multiple proteins, and the potential to manufactur­e higher potency flu vaccines more rapidly and at a lower cost than contempora­ry flu vaccines,” said Kathrin Jansen, the head of Pfizer’s vaccine research and developmen­t unit.

Flu jabs are currently produced from chicken eggs based on the previous flu season’s viral strains. The alliance partners hope to offer a vaccine that can be quickly adjusted to the latest viral mutations, which can also be a major advantage in case of a pandemic threat from avian flu.

Pfizer will take over testing on humans and commercial­isation of Biontech’s flu vaccines once the German firm, which is Europe’s largest unlisted biotech firm by staff numbers, has completed the first clinical study.

Having raised US$ 270 million from investors early this year, Biontech is also developing personalis­ed immunother­apies for cancer and is eyeing a future public listing.

The company competes in the race for MRNA therapies with groups such as Massachuse­tts-based Moderna Therapeuti­cs, Belgium’s ETHERNA and domestic rival Curevac. Curevac’s work on jabs to prevent malaria and influenza won more financial backing from its investor the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in a February agreement.

Biontech, for its part, has previously attracted alliance partners including Roche’s Genentech, Eli Lilly, Sanofi, Genmab and Bayer Animal Health.

As part of the upfront payment, Pfizer will acquire a “smaller” stake in the German company. Precise terms were not disclosed.

Biotech investors Thomas and Andreas Struengman­n, who sold their generic drugs business Hexal to Novartis in 2005, will remain majority shareholde­rs in Biontech.

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