
Protherics Plc
Protherics Plc
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2009 - 2018Partners:UCL, Moorfields Eye NHS Foundation Trust, Biovex Ltd, Prometic Biosciences Ltd, HEL Consultants Ltd +81 partnersUCL,Moorfields Eye NHS Foundation Trust,Biovex Ltd,Prometic Biosciences Ltd,HEL Consultants Ltd,General Electric (United Kingdom),UCB Celltech (UCB Pharma S.A.) UK,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,Onyvax Ltd,Plasticell Ltd,Moorfields Eye NHS Foundation Trust,MEDISIEVE,TAP Biosystems,Biovex Ltd,HEL Consultants Ltd,Avecia Biologics Ltd,Novacta (United Kingdom),Onyvax Ltd,PHE,MSD (United Kingdom),Amgen (United Kingdom),Merck and Co Inc,LONZA BIOLOGICS PLC,Liminal BioSciences (United Kingdom),Glaxo Smith Kline,Novacta Biosystems Ltd,MEDISIEVE,Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,Novacta Biosystems Ltd,Nat Inst for Bio Standards and Control,UCB UK,Procter & Gamble (International),Procter & Gamble (United States),UCB UK,HEL Consultants Ltd,Axordia Ltd,Pfizer (United Kingdom),GE HEALTHCARE LIMITED,Novo Nordisk (Denmark),Axordia Ltd,Protherics Plc,Onyvax Ltd,Pall Corporation (United Kingdom),National Institute for Biological Standards and Control,PEL,BioPharm Services,HEL Consultants Ltd,Pfizer Global R and D,Merck & Co Inc,Astex,Pfizer Global R and D,Novo Nordisk A/S,Lonza (United Kingdom),Axordia Ltd,Avecia Biologics Ltd,Plasticell (United Kingdom),Protherics Plc,Unilever UK,Nat Inst for Bio Standards and Control,MSD (United States),BIA Seperations,Public Health England,BTG International (United Kingdom),Unilever UK,UCB Pharma (United Kingdom),DHSC,Otsuka (United Kingdom),Unilever (United Kingdom),Plasticell Ltd,Prometic Biosciences Ltd,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,Glaxo Smith Kline,BIA Seperations,AstraZeneca (United Kingdom),PEL,TAP Biosystems,Unilever UK,LONZA BIOLOGICS PLC,BioPharm (United Kingdom),BIA Seperations,Sartorius (United Kingdom),Pfizer Global R and D,Avecia Biologics Ltd,HEALTH PROTECTION AGENCY,Procter & Gamble (United States),GE (General Electric Company) UKFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/G034656/1Funder Contribution: 6,484,430 GBPThe broad theme of the research training addresses the most rapidly developing parts of the bio-centred pharmaceutical and healthcare biotech industry. It meets specific training needs defined by the industry-led bioProcessUK and the Association of British Pharmaceutical Industry. The Centre proposal aligns with the EPSRC Delivery Plan 2008/9 to 2010/11, which notes pharmaceuticals as one of the UK's most dynamic industries. The EPSRC Next-Generation Healthcare theme is to link appropriate engineering and physical science research to the work of healthcare partners for improved translation of research output into clinical products and services. We address this directly. The bio-centred pharmaceutical sector is composed of three parts which the Centre will address:- More selective small molecule drugs produced using biocatalysis integrated with chemistry;- Biopharmaceutical therapeutic proteins and vaccines;- Human cell-based therapies.In each case new bioprocessing challenges are now being posed by the use of extensive molecular engineering to enhance the clinical outcome and the training proposed addresses the new challenges. Though one of the UK's most research intensive industries, pharmaceuticals is under intense strain due to:- Increasing global competition from lower cost countries;- The greater difficulty of bringing through increasingly complex medicines, for many of which the process of production is more difficult; - Pressure by governments to reduce the price paid by easing entry of generic copies and reducing drug reimbursement levels. These developments demand constant innovation and the Industrial Doctorate Training Centre will address the intellectual development and rigorous training of those who will lead on bioprocessing aspects. The activity will be conducted alongside the EPSRC Innovative Manufacturing Research Centre for Bioprocessing which an international review concluded leads the world in its approach to an increasingly important area .
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2012Partners:Prometic Biosciences Ltd, GlaxoSmithKline PLC, Pfizer, Avecia (United Kingdom), BIA Seperations +78 partnersPrometic Biosciences Ltd,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,Pfizer,Avecia (United Kingdom),BIA Seperations,AstraZeneca (United Kingdom),PEL,TAP Biosystems,Wyeth USA,Nat Inst for Bio Standards and Control,UCB UK,Avecia Limited,Pfizer (United States),UCB UK,Biovex Ltd,Prometic Biosciences Ltd,SGUL,General Electric (United Kingdom),UCB Celltech (UCB Pharma S.A.) UK,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,MEDISIEVE,GlaxoSmithKline R&D Ltd,GlaxoSmithKline,MEDISIEVE,BPL,Protherics Plc,UCL,TAP Biosystems,Biovex Ltd,Bio Products Laboratory (United Kingdom),PHE,Amgen (United Kingdom),Liminal BioSciences (United Kingdom),Eli Lilly and Company Limited,Novo Nordisk (Denmark),Pall Corporation (United Kingdom),General Electric Company,National Institute for Biological Standards and Control,PEL,Protherics UK Limted,BioPharm Services,Novasep SAS,Novasep SAS,Wyeth USA,Pfizer Global R and D,Novo Nordisk A/S,Eli Lilly (United States),Protherics UK Limted,Intercell Biomedical Ltd,Protherics Plc,Nat Inst for Bio Standards and Control,Eli Lilly (United States),Public Health England,BTG International (United Kingdom),MSD (United States),BIA Seperations,Merck and Co Inc,Eli Lilly (United States),LONZA BIOLOGICS PLC,Pfizer (United Kingdom),GE HEALTHCARE LIMITED,Pfizer Global R and D,Merck & Co Inc,Intercell Biomedical Ltd,Lonza (United Kingdom),BPL,UCB Pharma (United Kingdom),DHSC,General Electric (Sweden),Eli Lilly (United Kingdom),LONZA BIOLOGICS PLC,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,Eli Lilly and Company Limited,General Electric Company,Intercell Biomedical Ltd,BioPharm (United Kingdom),BIA Seperations,Sartorius (United Kingdom),Pfizer Global R and D,Pfizer Global R & D,Protherics UK Limted,GE (General Electric Company) UK,GlaxoSmithKIineFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E001599/1Funder Contribution: 5,913,160 GBPIt is now widely accepted that up to ten years are needed to take a drug from discovery to availability for general healthcare treatment. This means that only a limited time is available where a company is able to recover its very high investment costs in making a drug available via exclusivity in the market and via patents. The next generation drugs will be even more complex and difficult to manufacture. If these are going to be available at affordable costs via commercially viable processes then the speed of drug development has to be increased while ensuring robustness and safety in manufacture. The research in this proposal addresses the challenging transition from bench to large scale where the considerable changes in the way materials are handled can severely affect the properties and ways of manufacture of the drug. The research will combine novel approaches to scale down with automated robotic methods to acquire data at a very early stage of new drug development. Such data will be relatable to production at scale, a major deliverable of this programme. Computer-based bioprocess modelling methods will bring together this data with process design methods to explore rapidly the best options for the manufacture of a new biopharmaceutical. By this means those involved in new drug development will, even at the early discovery stage, be able to define the scale up challenges. The relatively small amounts of precious discovery material needed for such studies means they must be of low cost and that automation of the studies means they will be applicable rapidly to a wide range of drug candidates. Hence even though a substantial number of these candidates may ultimately fail clinical trials it will still be feasible to explore process scale up challenges as safety and efficency studies are proceeding. For those drugs which prove to be effective healthcare treatments it will be possible then to go much faster to full scale operation and hence recoup the high investment costs.As society moves towards posing even greater demands for effective long-term healthcare, such as personalised medicines, these radical solutions are needed to make it possible to provide the new treatments which are going to be increasingly demanding to manufature.
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