Boston Herald

Taking vaccine orders

AstraZenec­a admits strain still unproven

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LONDON — Drug maker AstraZenec­a said Thursday it had secured its first agreements for 400 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine it is testing, bolstered by an investment from the U.S. vaccine agency.

The Anglo-Swedish company reported it had received more than $1 billion from the U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority for the developmen­t, production and delivery of the vaccine, starting this fall.

The investment will accelerate the developmen­t and production of the vaccine, AstraZenec­a Chief Executive Pascal Soriot said. It had already joined forces with the British government and is in discussion­s with the Serum Institute of India and other potential partners to increase production and distributi­on.

“We will do everything in our power to make this vaccine quickly and widely available,” Soriot said.

Pharmaceut­ical companies including also Moderna and Sanofi are racing to develop and produce a vaccine against the new coronaviru­s as experts say it will be crucial to allowing countries to ease their lockdowns and restrictio­ns on public life.

In a statement as markets opened, AstraZenec­a said it has now secured manufactur­ing capacity for 1 billion doses and aims to secure further agreements to expand capacity further over the next months “to ensure the delivery of a globally accessible vaccine.”

The company also finalized its licence agreement with Oxford University for the vaccine, now known as

AZD1222.

The vaccine was developed by Oxford University’s Jenner Institute, working with the Oxford Vaccine Group.

Testing of the experiment­al COVID-19 vaccine began in healthy volunteers in Britain in April with over 1,000 people aged 18 to 55.

Data from the trial is expected soon and if results are positive, further trials will take place in other countries.

“AstraZenec­a recognizes that the vaccine may not work,” the statement said, “but is committed to progressin­g the clinical program with speed and scaling up manufactur­ing at risk.”

Lawrence Young, a professor of molecular oncology at the University of Warwick, said the developmen­t was important in planning for the equitable supply of the vaccine throughout the world. But he urged caution and said other vaccine candidates should be explored.

“It is … jumping the gun as we don’t know that this vaccine will work,” he said. “Early studies using the Oxford vaccine in monkeys showed that while vaccinatio­n reduced the severity of disease preventing pneumonia it failed to stop the animals from becoming infected,” with the virus that causes COVID-19.

 ?? AP FILE ?? LAYING THE GROUNDWORK: Drug maker AstraZenec­a, an Anglo-Swedish company with plants in San Francisco, Calif., above, and Longmont, Colo., below, has secured its first agreements Thursday for 400 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, bolstered by a $1 billion investment from the U.S. vaccine agency.
AP FILE LAYING THE GROUNDWORK: Drug maker AstraZenec­a, an Anglo-Swedish company with plants in San Francisco, Calif., above, and Longmont, Colo., below, has secured its first agreements Thursday for 400 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, bolstered by a $1 billion investment from the U.S. vaccine agency.
 ?? DENVER POST FILE ??
DENVER POST FILE

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