National Institute for Natural Products, Vaccines & Biologicals

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National Institute for Natural Products, Vaccines & Biologicals. 9BIO. 9BIO. Why Vaccines. “ Vaccines are weapons of mass protection” ~Heidi LARSON (UNICEF). Malaysian Budget Dialogue 2004. 21 May 2003 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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National Institute for Natural Products, Vaccines & Biologicals

9BIO

9BIO

Why Vaccines

“Vaccines are weapons of mass protection”

~Heidi LARSON (UNICEF)

Malaysian Budget Dialogue 2004

• 21 May 2003

• Announcement of “Stimulus Package” for new sources of growth and decreasing reliance on outside resources

• National Institute for Natural Products and Vaccinology (NINPVB) specified in items 43, 44, 45 under the MOH

STRATEGY

THE EXCHANGE & EXISTING VALUE CHAIN OF NATIONAL R&D

The EXCHANGE

RESEARCH

DEVELOPMENT

DESIGNENGINEERING

PRODUCTION

•Feedback on learning•Feedback on actions

GAPS

•Strategic Intent•Resource Allocation

GAPS

Weak Link

•Market•Technology

Commercialization phase

MARKET•Branding•Logistics•Packaging

INDUSTRY

National Institute for Natural Products Vaccines & Biologicals (NINPVB)

Public Sector Biotechnology R & D

Ideas to products

MarketplaceGovernment

Industry UniversitiesResearch

Institutions

Cutting edge technology

Shared responsibility

•Global trader•Malaysian Brand

MOH

About the NINPVB……

• Launched by the Minister of Health as the 7 National Institute of Health (NIH)

• August 2003

• Corporatised arm of MOH R & D

• National Vaccine Security

• Exploit and Commercialise R &D of NIHs

• Major focus : Vaccines, Natural Products• ( Herbal Medicines, Nuetraceuticals), Biologicals

STATUS IN THE NEW MILLENIUM

Vaccine supplies for Malaysia currently are still entirely from foreign manufacturers:

The implications on this entire dependence are as follows:

1. Global shortage of vaccines.Spread of vaccine preventable infectious diseases if vaccines supply not met

2. Allocation of vast amounts of funds to purchase vaccines and control infectious diseases endemic in Malaysia

3. Need to consider vaccines of regional interest ( SARS, Nipah, Dengue, Avian Flu, Chikungunya)

1. Global shortage of vaccines and

implications 

•This state of entire dependence on importation of basic childhood vaccines has serious implications in times of geopolitical emergencies

•It has been well documented that vaccine shortages have become global, affecting industrialized and developed countries alike, due to significant changes in the vaccine market and the industry’s focus on profitability ( eg OPV,measles)

• The lack or insufficient supply of vaccines will result in the rampant spread of vaccine preventable infectious diseases such as poliomyelitis, diptheria ,pertussis ,tuberculosis ,hepatitis B ,measles etc

• Increase the morbidity and mortality rates of these diseases

• Massive health costs and burden to the economy and overall productivity of the nation

2. Allocation of vast amounts of funds to purchase vaccines and control infectious diseases endemic in Malaysia

• The Ministry of Health Malaysia , the largest health care provider spends annually more than RM 16 million in vaccine costs

• The vaccine costs are expected to rise dramatically with the introduction of newer vaccines including combination vaccines such as MMR , HiB and inactivated polio vaccines

• The anticipated increase in vaccine expenditure to the Government with this new vaccine policy is about RM 32 million . Hence the annual costs of vaccination will be in the region of RM 48 million.

MOH: Responsibility to ensure adequate

supply of vaccines

• The MOH has the responsibility to ensure adequate supply of safe and efficacious vaccines for the nation

• The MOH needs to respond to constant emerging diseases which pose as a threat to the nation

• The MOH needs to be able to protect the population in the event of a biological weapon attack eg.Smallpox ,Anthrax

• Largest Healthcare provider

• Responsible for the provision of safe and efficacious vaccines as well as medicines to the population

• Define the requirements for registration and usage of vaccines and medicines

• Have clear regulations and guidelines (accordance to FDA ,EMEA, TGA practices )in place to achieve safe and efficacious use of vaccines and medicines

• Have technical expertise in ensuring products are of required standards

Strengths

• Vaccine producing capabilities from 1976 -1990

• Designated as the coordinator and focal point of R & D biotechnology in ‘halal’ vaccine production by OIC vaccine producing countries as part of the Self Reliance Vaccine Program among OIC

• ( Tunisia ,March 04)

• Drive and chair a Cabinet approved National Committee for Herbal Medicine R & D to ensure research and commercialisation of Malaysian Herbal Medicines

• Sets strategy for healthcare research

We are not alone…

• Neighbouring countries are already manufacturing their own vaccines

• Indonesia (PT Biofarma),

• India (Serum Institute of India, Bharat Biotech Int. Shanta Biotech Pvt Ltd),

• Hong Kong (Hong Kong Institute of Biotech Ltd),

• Korea ( Korea Green Cross),

• China

MISSION

• Play a key role in healthcare security against vaccine-preventable diseases as well as national/regional security against bioterrorism

• Bring to market, potential herbal medicinal products besides prioritizing research in natural products with medicinal potential

• Help to drive product development and technology commercialization in natural products , vaccines and biologicals

• Create a conducive environment for development of critical mass in R & D and inculcating entrepreneurship among researchers

• Drive and develop linkages and smart partnerships with industry and appropriate centres of excellence

• Serve as a national resource for knowledge and understanding of the medical use of vaccines & natural products and their applications in public health

NINPVB GLC

Vaccines Natural Products

Biologicals

PPP

• Childhood vaccines• Dengue, Nipah•Bioterrorism vaccines

•Hepatitis B•HIV•Breast cancer•Diabetes mellitus

•Diagnostic kits•Generic medicines•Personalised medicine

Design, Build, Equip, Maintain

Government majority shareholder

BUSINESS MODEL

Infrastructure

NINPVB

INTERIM LAB

FILL AND FINISH SUITE

MANU- FACTURING

R & D

Malaysia’s R & D vision

~By the year 2020, our global

competitiveness will be led by

new frontier technologies driven

by technological innovations

created by our institutions~

National Biotechnology Policy

• Brand Statement• Biotechnology for Wealth Creation and

Social Well Being

• Policy Statement• Innovation to create wealth by utilising and

advancing biotechnology for socio-economic benefits of the nation in accordance with established social and ethical norms

National Biotechnology Policy

• Vision:

• Position Biotechnology as the New Economic Engine to enhance prosperity and wellness of the Nation by 2020

Policy thrusts

• Agricultural Biotechnology Development

• Healthcare Biotechnology Development

• Industrial Biotechnology Development

• Financial Industrial Development

• Legislative and Regulatory Framework Development

• Strategic Development

• Government Support and Commitment

• R & D Technology Acquisition Development

• Human Capital Development

Position Biotech Economic Engine

National Biotechnology Policy

Improve Prosperity, Healthcare&

Wellness by 2020

Higher GDP, high value employment& Knowledge workers

Stronger R & D capacityLeading Global companies

Investment requirementsPublic and Private (2006-2020)

RM 30 billion60% (RM 18 billion) private

Biotechnology contribute To 5 % of GDP by 2020

>28,000 jobs( 2% of national job markets)

Thank you

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