Industry responds to call to arms to build British diagnostics industry at scale
The UK’s top pharmaceutical and diagnostic companies are teaming up
to rapidly develop and rollout millions of coronavirus tests in the
coming months as part of the next phase of the government’s five
pillar national testing strategy to identify if people have the
virus. A number of existing suppliers and UK-based global companies
have already responded positively to the government’s call to
action on the testing national effort. Pharmaceutical giants like
AstraZeneca and...Request free trial
The UK’s top pharmaceutical and diagnostic companies are teaming up
to rapidly develop and rollout millions of coronavirus tests in the
coming months as part of the next phase of the government’s five
pillar national testing strategy to identify if people have the
virus.
A number of existing suppliers and UK-based global companies have already responded positively to the government’s call to action on the testing national effort. Pharmaceutical giants like AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) have been creating new national business collaborations, to help deliver on the government’s plan to carry out 100,000 coronavirus tests a day by the end of April. Their work primarily focuses on tests to identify whether people currently have the virus, and will be targeted on frontline healthcare and other essential workers who have the virus before deploying the tests to the wider population. New developments from businesses working to scale-up testing programmes include:
Health Minister Lord Bethell said: “We are rapidly scaling up the national effort to boost testing capacity for coronavirus to protect the vulnerable, support our NHS and, ultimately, save lives. “I am proud that we have already had an impressive response from companies of different scales and from different sectors coming forward with a commitment to work together, share expertise and resources to establish a large British diagnostics industry which can help us achieve 100,000 tests a day by the end of April. “We will do everything we can to tackle this virus and we are pooling all the resources from our world-leading life sciences industry, top universities and clinical leaders to overcome this together.” As part of the government’s national testing strategy, the expertise and resources of the UK’s world-leading life sciences industries are being pooled to build a large-scale British diagnostics industry as quickly as possible. To support this, an online portal has launched on GOV.UK providing companies with specifications for our most urgent requirements, and the NHS Business Services Authority has set up a new engagement team allowing companies an easier, more focussed route to offer their support. Companies with proposals able to deliver on these specifications quickly and at scale may also be able to access a range of support from government, including accelerated regulatory approval, centralised procurement support if appropriate and in some cases, development grants. The government has set up a testing taskforce with over 100 companies and Health Secretary Matt Hancock today set out four challenges to industry in a webinar to help build on progress as we scale up our testing capability:
One such group has already launched to meet the fourth of these challenges. A business consortium, UK Rapid Test Consortium (UK-RTC), including Oxford University, Abingdon Health, BBI Solutions and CIGA Healthcare has launched, in order to design and develop a new antibody test to determine whether people have developed immunity after contracting the virus. So far, the antibody tests that have gone through the validation process have not proven accurate enough to be rolled out for public use, which is why the government is also backing efforts to develop a home-grown test. Only tests which are accurate will be rolled out to ensure people are not put at risk and we will continue to work closely with UK and international partners to develop a reliable test as soon as possible. Professor John Newton, the Government’s adviser on testing, who is co-ordinating the programme, said: “ “I’m delighted to be overseeing this absolutely crucial project to help us achieve 100,000 tests a day by the end of April. “We have already launched from scratch an entire new network of testing labs across the UK and, with the support of industry, we can go even further, both in support of our existing work and in developing new tests.” [ENDS] Notes to Editors The government’s national testing strategy is split into five pillars: The first pillar is testing for those with a medical need in PHE labs and NHS hospitals. These are PCR tests, where a swab sample is taken and analysed in a lab to find out if you have coronavirus. (2 April Announcement).
In the second pillar of the plan, we have launched a partnership with universities, research institutes and companies to begin rollout of a network of new labs and testing sites across the UK, to provide thousands more PCR swab tests a day for critical key workers, starting with NHS front line staff and social care workers, so those who test negative for coronavirus can return to work as soon as possible (27 March announcement).
The third pillar in the Government’s testing plan is antibody testing: these tests are designed to detect if people have had the virus and are now immune.
The fourth pillar is surveillance. We aim to conduct some of the biggest surveys in the world to find out what proportion of the population have already had the virus. This is done using a high accuracy antibody test operated by Public Health England at their Porton Down science campus. We will use these tests to help strengthen our scientific understanding and inform us all on the big choices we have to make about social distancing measures and how we exit from this crisis. The fifth pillar is the most ambitious. We want to build in a short space of time, the large-scale diagnostics industry that this country currently lacks. Just as our top end manufacturers have joined the national effort to build ventilators, so our life sciences companies will do the same for testing. UK pharmaceutical giants which don’t have a tradition of diagnostics, are now working with our world leading but smaller diagnostics companies, to build a large-scale British diagnostics industry at scale. This new national effort for testing will ensure we can get tests for everyone who needs them. |