Roche in talks for Tamiflu production in China (AP) Updated: 2005-10-31 15:47
Swiss drug company Roche is in talks with China about jointly producing its
antiviral medication Tamiflu, a move that could boost its global production amid
fears supplies will fall short of what is needed in case of a flu pandemic,
reports said Monday.
"We are talking with a number of Chinese authorities to see what is the best
way to address the issue at this point," the Hong Kong newspaper South China
Morning Post quoted Roche's chairman and chief executive officer Franz Humer as
saying at a weekend conference of business and city leaders in Shanghai.
"We are certainly in discussions," Humer said.
Roche Holding AG has been inundated with requests from other pharmaceutical
companies for licences to produce Tamiflu, the drug experts believe to be the
best defence against a possible flu pandemic.
The company's Shanghai office confirmed that like its branches elsewhere, "in
view of the increasing urgency of the situation," it was open to discussing
production with any potential partner with a capacity to make substantial
amounts of the drug that would meet quality, safety and regulatory
specifications.
"Roche is doing everything to increase its supply," the company said in a
statement, adding that it expects to have increased production as much as
ten-fold by mid-2006, on its own.
Roche's office in Shanghai refused to comment by telephone and did not
immediately respond to a written inquiry on Monday.
Reports in Chinese newspapers said Roche had not yet received any formal
applications from pharmaceutical companies in the Chinese mainland.
The reports also questioned the ability of companies inside China to make the
drug, given its complex production process.
Nearby Taiwan has announced plans to make large quantities of Tamiflu and is
seeking authorization from Roche, although its "National Health Research
Institute" says it is able to make the drug independently.
Health authorities are hoping to boost stockpiles of Tamiflu in case the
deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu spreading from Asia to Europe mutates into a form
that can pass easily to and between people, setting off a human flu pandemic
before a vaccine can be developed.
China has reported three bird flu outbreaks in poultry over the past month.
No human cases have been reported.
Roche, based in Basel, Switzerland, opened a research and development centre
in Shanghai a year ago and is building a factory that is expected to produce its
transplant medication CellCept and chemotherapy drug Xeloda for China by next
year.
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