Merck and Baylor College of Medicine Collaborate to Advance a Vaccine Manufacturing Platform to Fight Covid-19
PR84093
DARMSTADT, Germany, May 27, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/--
-- Company will focus on process development and improvements for manufacturing
Baylor's Covid-19 vaccine candidates
Merck, a leading science and technology company, and Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA, today announced an extension of their ongoing
collaboration to advance a manufacturing platform to fight Covid-19, designed
to accelerate transition to Phase 1 clinical trials.
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"Vaccine manufacturing is extremely complicated, so we are collaborating on a
process development approach to accelerate manufacturing of Baylor's Covid-19
vaccine candidates," said Udit Batra, member of the Merck Executive Board and
CEO, Life Science. "To fight this pandemic, we will need to produce an
unprecedented amount of vaccine in a very short period of time, and we need as
many approaches as possible to be successful."
There are no standard manufacturing templates or processes due to the
complexity and diversity of vaccine modalities, which makes production a
challenge for every organization racing to develop a safe and effective
Covid-19 vaccine. Using key learnings from their ongoing collaboration on a
schistosomiasis vaccine, Merck, along with researchers at Baylor College of
Medicine and the Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, is
optimizing the production processes to advance two Covid-19 vaccine candidates,
including the CoV RBD219-N1 vaccine candidate expected to enter clinical trials
later this year. Merck will help to accelerate their sustainability for
large-scale manufacturing. This collaboration will focus on improvements to
production efficiency, yield, robustness, scalability and costs.
"Our initial collaboration with Merck built an important and critical framework
for us to quickly validate and ready the production of our portfolio of
neglected tropical disease vaccines for global access," said Dr. Peter Hotez,
dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine
and co-director of the Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine
Development, alongside Dr. Maria Elena Bottazzi.
"The expansion of our collaboration to include diseases of pandemic importance
will now allow us to accelerate the development of a scalable and affordable
manufacturing process of our Covid-19 vaccine candidates and enable them to
advance as quickly as possible to support vaccine production in low- and
middle- income countries," said Bottazzi, who leads the product development
activities and serves as associate dean of the National School of Tropical
Medicine at Baylor.
The Merck-Baylor teams will improve the manufacturing platform for the CoV
RBD219-N1 vaccine candidate, which was originally developed to target SARS in
2011-2016. Additionally, they will develop a new manufacturing platform for a
second Covid-19 vaccine candidate to shorten the time to enter into Phase 1
clinical trials. The goal for the partnership is to develop a suitable
manufacturing process and steps that would lead to a scale-up approach suitable
for pilot and later industrial production.
Researchers from the Texas Children’s Center for Vaccine Development first
formed a partnership with Merck's process development scientists and
biomanufacturing engineers in 2018 to advance vaccine development and
production and enhance the response to outbreaks, such as Covid-19. Because the
initial groundwork is laid through their existing process development platform
work, the team can quickly shorten the time to the clinic, realizing a key goal.
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Baylor College of Medicine and the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine
Development received funding from NAID for their earlier work in developing the
CoV RBD219-N1 vaccine candidate and recently to initiate development of the
second Covid-19 vaccine candidate. In addition, Baylor and Texas Children’s,
through their alliance with PATH, expect to advance the Covid-19 candidates to
support access to low- and middle-income countries.
About Merck
Merck, a leading science and technology company, operates across healthcare,
life science and performance materials. Around 57,000 employees work to make a
positive difference to millions of people's lives every day by creating more
joyful and sustainable ways to live. From advancing gene editing technologies
and discovering unique ways to treat the most challenging diseases to enabling
the intelligence of devices - the company is everywhere. In 2019, Merck
generated sales of EUR16.2 billion in 66 countries.
Scientific exploration and responsible entrepreneurship have been key to
Merck's technological and scientific advances. This is how Merck has thrived
since its founding in 1668. The founding family remains the majority owner of
the publicly listed company. Merck holds the global rights to the Merck name
and brand. The only exceptions are the United States and Canada, where the
business sectors of Merck operate as EMD Serono in healthcare, MilliporeSigma
in life science and EMD Performance Materials.
SOURCE: Merck
Your Contact: andreas.cezanne@merckgroup.com, Tel.: +49 6151 72-45946
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