Moderna aims for 3 billion doses in 2022

By | April 29, 2021

It also said it is increasing its expectations for 2021 vaccine production to between 800 million and 1 billion shots, raising the bottom of its range from 700 million.

The final number of inoculations will depend on how many are lower-dose formulations for boosters and immunisations for children.

“As we look forward to next year, we just see so much need for primary vaccine, we are hearing it all over the world, and also boosters,” Moderna President Stephen Hoge said in an interview.

“So depending upon… how much the ordering that happens is third doses or pediatric doses at 50 micrograms, we could see up to 3 billion doses,” he added. Moderna had previously said it expected to make 1.4 billion shots in 2022.

Moderna also said new data suggests its shots can be stored safely for up to three months at refrigerator temperatures, making it easier to get them to hard to reach areas that may not have access to freezers. “That might be a breakthrough that really matters in 2022 in Africa and across lower and middle income countries,” Hoge said.

Wealthy governments have been trying to stock up on COVID-19 shots from Moderna and Pfizer Inc/BioNTech SE after safety concerns and production problems temporarily sidelined vaccines from AstraZeneca Plc and Johnson & Johnson.

India has recorded more than 300,000 cases and more than 2,000 deaths each day in the past week. Fewer than 10 per cent of its more than 1.3 billion citizens have received one dose and only around 20 million are fully inoculated against the virus.

Moderna expects to double output at a drug substance plant in Switzerland and boost production in a Spain-based facility more than two-fold. US plants will also raise output by more than 50 per cent.

Moderna’s two-dose vaccine uses messenger-RNA technology that programs cells to build immunity to the novel coronavirus.

The US drugmaker said it would begin making investments this year and that production boosts would start in late 2021 and carry into early 2022.

The company would need regulatory sign-off to start shipping vaccine at the higher, refrigerator-level temperatures.

So far, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca have been the only major global drugmakers with authorised COVID-19 shots that can be stored without a freezer.

Both companies have faced production problems and reports of severe side effects that have slowed uptake of their vaccines.

Australian Associated Press

Western Advocate – Health