Pfizer partner BioNTech ready to boost vaccine capacity for 2021
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Pfizer partner BioNTech ready to boost vaccine capacity for 2021

Pfizer partner BioNTech ready to boost vaccine capacity for 2021

The companies will probably know by January or February whether and how many additional doses can be produced

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Pfizer partner BioNTech is pursuing all its options to make more Covid-19 vaccine doses than the 1.3 billion the companies have promised to produce next year, according to the German company’s chief executive officer.

The companies will probably know by January or February whether and how many additional doses can be produced, Ugur Sahin said on Monday. “I am confident that we will be able to increase our network capacity, but we don’t have numbers yet,” he said in an interview.

Efficacy results of more than 90 per cent and approvals around the world have set off a race between countries for additional supplies of the precious shots, with the US seeking to exercise an option for a hundred million. Most of the doses anticipated for next year – enough to immunise 650 million people — have already been spoken for.

More than 2 million people in six countries have already gotten their first shot of the standard two-dose regimen, according to data collected by Bloomberg.

BioNTech is seeking more of the raw materials it needs for its mRNA vaccine, more clean rooms and more cooperation partners, Sahin said.

The company also needs additional space to formulate the shots, put them into containers and prepare them for shipping, he said. Pfizer is producing vaccine at three sites in the US and one in Europe, while BioNTech has two manufacturing sites in Germany.

The vaccine’s EU approval and an inoculation campaign set to start there on December 27 promise to further draw on stocks. The partners have already begun shipping shots to the UK, where Health Secretary Matt Hancock on Monday tweeted that some 500,000 people had gotten their first dose.

New Strain Tests
The shot will probably be effective against the new SARS-CoV-2 strain that has emerged in the UK, Sahin said. Lab tests of the vaccine’s performance have already been done against 20 mutant versions of SARS-CoV-2; the same tests will now be done against the new UK version, and should take about two weeks, he said.

Most vaccines target the spike protein, which allows the virus to enter cells.

“This virus has multiple mutations, but as far as we know, 99 per cent of the spike protein is not mutated,” he said. “Let’s do the experiment and get the result. That’s always the best answer, but I would emphasise just to stay calm.”

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