CRO Industry Pulse

U.S. Drug Companies Get Flu
Vaccine Funding
Updated Fri. May. 5 2006 9:25 AM ET
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- The government on Thursday
awarded more than $1 billion to five drug manufacturers
that are developing technology for speedier mass production
of vaccines in case of a pandemic.
The money comes from the $3.8 billion
that Congress approved last year. The goal is to be
able to distribute vaccine to every American within
six months of a pandemic striking.
Currently, flu vaccines are produced
in specialized chicken eggs, but that technique does
not allow for speedy mass vaccination.
"The hard truth is that, at this
moment, the capacity simply does not exist in the United
States to produce vaccines with sufficient speed and
quantity to reach everyone out there.
That's true of countries all over
the world, but that's about to change," said Mike
Leavitt, secretary for the Department of Health and
Human Services, before signing the contracts.
The companies are GlaxoSmithKline,
$274.8 million; MedImmune Inc., $169.5 million; Novartis
Vaccines and Diagnostics, $220.5 million; DynPort Vaccine
Co., $41 million; and Solvay Pharmaceuticals Inc., $298.6
million.
The contracts cover a five-year period.
Leavitt said vaccines are America's
best line of defense if there is a pandemic.
Such an outbreak can occur when people
have little immunity to a particular strain of flu that
spreads across the globe.
Leavitt often refers to the pandemic
of 1918 as an example of a worst-case scenario that
he says could kill up to 2 million Americans.
"There is no reason to believe
the 21st century will be different than centuries past,"
Leavitt said.
Health officials are concerned that
a form of influenza now spreading in birds could eventually
mutate and spread from person to person.
Leavitt said the contracts would help
the government meet other goals, including the diversification
of a domestic supply of vaccines so that the United
States would not have to rely on foreign production
during a pandemic.
He also said the technology could
help the country build up its stock of seasonal flu
vaccines as well.
Leavitt noted that the government
is also stockpiling masks, gloves and other equipment
that could be used in a pandemic and it has contracted
with drug manufacturers to provide for 4 million treatment
courses of a vaccine against the current H5N1 virus.
He said that researchers are also
working on the development of a new generation of vaccines
that would be broadly protective of a wide range of
influenza viruses.
"The challenges are substantial,
but if we can get there, it would take the threat of
a pandemic right off the table," Leavitt said.
David Stout, president of pharmaceutical
operations at GlaxoSmithKline, said that vaccine manufacturers
are about three to five years away from growing flu
vaccines in large laboratory vats rather than in individual
eggs.
The $274.5 million his company gets
will primarily go to research and clinical trials.
"What this funding does is accelerate
the speed in which we can do the work," Stout said.
Leavitt could not say how much of
their own money the drug companies would be investing
in cell-based technology, but he said the government's
funding would leverage a significant investment.
"They're not just simply taking
our money and doing research," he said.
"They are making substantial
commitments of their own in terms of people, capital
and resources."
The contract with DynPort Vaccine
could lead to greater funding down the road based on
the company's performance, HHS officials said.
The company, which is collaborating
with Baxter Healthcare Corp., described the contract
as valued at $242.5 million.
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