LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s Prince Charles will formally open a new 1 billion pound ($1.3 billion) AstraZeneca research and development (R&D) facility on Tuesday, as the company aims to fuel the growth of its drug pipeline.
AstraZeneca has supplied two billion doses of its COVID-19 vaccine, developed at Oxford University, and is also looking to bring a preventative antibody cocktail against COVID-19 to market.
But while the company is setting up a separate division for vaccine and antibody therapies in light of the coronavirus pandemic, it has also beefed up other areas of research
Earlier this year, AstraZeneca completed the $39 billion purchase of rare-disease specialist Alexion.
“Our new Discovery Centre in Cambridge raises the bar for sustainable R&D and global collaboration across our industry,” Chief Executive Pascal Soriot said in a statement.
“It will allow us to break new boundaries in the understanding of disease biology, bring life-changing medicines to patients and power the next stage of our company’s growth.”
AstraZeneca, which has a large portfolio of treatments for diseases like cancer, heart disease and diabetes, said the centre would support research into specialised medicines and next-generation therapeutics, including gene-editing and cell therapies.
Prince Charles, son of Queen Elizabeth and heir to the throne, will take a walking tour of the centre and give a short address at the opening.
($1 = 0.7454 pounds)
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Mark Potter)