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Rabu, 15 September 2021

'Abysmal': Canadian COVID vaccine maker slams feds on lack of support - BNN

The chief executive of a Canadian biotechnology firm that specializes in messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines is slamming the federal government’s performance on the domestic COVID-19 vaccine front.

“The Canadian government has been abysmal on this file. They’ve done the absolute minimum possible to support Providence and other Canadian biotech,” said Brad Sorenson, president and CEO of Providence Therapeutics, in an interview Monday.

“They’ve sent hundreds of millions of dollars to foreign pharmaceutical companies trying to get them to set up branch plants in Canada and have overpaid significantly for vaccines. We could’ve been supplying vaccines to the world and we could’ve been adding to the solution as opposed to driving up prices and adding to the problem,” he said.

His comments come on the same day that Providence Therapeutics announced a licensing deal for the rights to its mRNA COVID-19 vaccine with Chinese biopharma firm Everest Medicines Ltd.

Everest will pay Providence US$100 million in cash for access to the mRNA technology.

The terms of the deal also include up to US$100 million in profit sharing and up to an additional US$300 million in stock if Everest develops other products using the mRNA platform.

Sorenson blasted the federal government for what he described as a lack of support in the crucial initial months of the pandemic to develop COVID vaccines domestically, and said instead, the feds allowed billions of dollars to flow out of the country to foreign vaccine makers. 

“In March of 2020, we were one month behind Moderna,” he said. “Moderna received a billion dollars in support from Warp Speed and you can see where they’re at now. Providence received no support from the Canadian government until almost a year later and even then, we received $10 million which is nominal at best.”

Operation Warp Speed was a program launched by the former Trump administration in May last year to fund American biotech firms with the aim of developing a COVID vaccine as quickly as possible.

Spokespeople from the health, procurement and finance ministries were not immediately available for comment.

Providence’s vaccine is currently in Phase 2 trials. The company expects to enter Phase 3 trials and seek authorization by the end of the first quarter or early second quarter next year, if there are no delays along the way.

Sorenson said his company’s deal with Everest is a vote of confidence in its mRNA technology.

“Our vaccine stacks up extraordinarily well against our peers in the class of mRNA vaccines,” he said. “And now we’re seeing commercial validation as other countries and other companies see the results – they’re stepping up and they’re doing something about it.”

He said Providence has the infrastructure in place to begin ramping up manufacturing in Canada, despite the lack of domestic support.

“There’s no excuse for what the Canadian government did. They completely dropped the ball. It’s just inexcusable,” he said.

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'Abysmal': Canadian COVID vaccine maker slams feds on lack of support - BNN
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