Watsupptoday Desk
The United States government will pay Johnson & Johnson over $1 billion for 100 million doses of its potential coronavirus vaccine, as it stocks up on vaccine and drugs in an attempt to tame the pandemic.
The latest contract is priced at roughly $10 per vaccine dose produced by J&J, or $20 per dose, including a second $1 billion from the U.S. government promised to J&J in March. That would be roughly in line with the $19.50 per dose that the U.S. is paying for the vaccine being developed by Pfizer Inc and German biotech BioNTech SE .
J&J is studying both one and two-dose regimens of its vaccine. Pfizer and BioNTech�s candidate would require two doses per person treated. The drugmaker said on thrusday it would deliver the vaccine to the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) on a not-for-profit basis to be used after approval or emergency use authorization by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
The U.S. government may also purchase an additional 200 million doses under a subsequent agreement. J&J did not disclose that deal�s value.
As the race for vaccines and treatments for COVID-19 intensifies, the U.S. government has been signing deals to buy them through its Operation Warp Speed program. Other drugmakers who have signed deals include Sanofi SA and Regeneron Inc.
This is J&J�s first deal to supply its investigational vaccine to a country. Talks are underway with the European Union, but no deal has yet been reached.
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