Western Daily Press

AstraZenec­a targets new variants as profits double

- HOLLY WILLIAMS business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

DRUGS giant AstraZenec­a confirmed it is focusing efforts on adapting its Covid-19 vaccine developed with Oxford University to new strains of the disease, as it revealed that annual profits more than doubled.

The group is also working on cutting the time needed to reach production at scale of the vaccine to between six and nine months.

The announceme­nt came as the company reported pre-tax profits of 3.92 billion US dollars (£2.83 billion) for 2020.

The haul marks a significan­t rise on the 1.55 billion US dollars (£1.12 billion) profits seen in 2019, despite offering its coronaviru­s jab on a notfor-profit basis.

But the vaccine helped boost revenues over the year, contributi­ng 2 million US dollars (£1.44 million) to total turnover of 26.6 billion US dollars (£19.21 billion) a rise of 10%.

Operating profits surged to 5.16 billion US dollars (£3.73 billion), up 81% with currency effects stripped out, as the firm hailed the success of fast-growing new medicines.

AstraZenec­a said it expects to deliver revenue growth in the “lowteens” over 2021, though it stressed the guidance does not include any sales or profit impact from the coronaviru­s jab or its current planned takeover of US group Alexion Pharmaceut­icals.

With regard to the vaccine, it said that, together with Oxford University, it is “focused on adapting C19VAZ to new disease strains if required and hopes to reduce the time needed to reach production at scale to between six to nine months, by utilising existing clinical data and optimising its establishe­d supply chain”.

The results showed fourth-quarter profits rocketed to 1.17 billion US dollars (£850 million) from 240 million US dollars (£173 million) a year ago.

Revenues for the final three months of the year rose 11% to 7.41 billion US dollars (£5.35 billion), though this was slightly lower than expected.

AstraZenec­a chief executive Pascal Soriot said: “The consistent achievemen­ts in the pipeline, the accelerati­ng performanc­e of our business and the progress of the Covid-19 vaccine demonstrat­ed what we can achieve, while the proposed acquisitio­n of Alexion is intended to accelerate our scientific and commercial evolution even further.

“Additional investment in new medicines continued to fuel our rapidly growing oncology and biopharmac­euticals therapy areas.”

The AstraZenec­a/Oxford vaccine team were given a boost on Wednesday when scientists advising the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) recommende­d the use of the jab in all adults. It came after a number of countries opted not to give the jab to those over the age of 65.

The vaccine developers have come under pressure recently, in particular over supply issues in the European Union.

Sebastian Skeet, senior analyst at Third Bridge, said: “On a human level, AstraZenec­a’s vaccine saga has been disappoint­ing – the clash with the EU, new data demonstrat­ing a lack of efficacy in preventing mild to moderate infection caused by the South African variant, and the decision by German authoritie­s to limit vaccinatio­ns in persons under 65 years old.

“However, the opposite can be said for AstraZenec­a’s core business. The company is arguably the poster child for big pharma turnaround­s, with CEO Pascal Soriot rebuilding the pipeline and establishi­ng the necessary growth drivers.”

 ?? Owen Humphreys ?? A member of staff prepares a dose of the Oxford/Astrazenec­a
coronaviru­s vaccine at a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n clinic at the NHS Nightingal­e Hospital
North East in Sunderland
Owen Humphreys A member of staff prepares a dose of the Oxford/Astrazenec­a coronaviru­s vaccine at a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n clinic at the NHS Nightingal­e Hospital North East in Sunderland

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