Frederick County Biotech Community

Everything Biotech in Frederick County, Maryland

Archive for October 22nd, 2007

Fort Detrick preps for new workers

Posted by Jim H on October 22, 2007

An excerpt from Sunday’s FNP about the new Ft Detrick Facility

 Fort Detrick preps for new workers

Nearly 1,500 new jobs are forecast for Fort Detrick in the next few years and Frederick needs to prepare for them.

About 8,000 people pass through the base gates each day.

A panel of representatives from agencies were on hand Friday at the Frederick County Workforce Development board meeting to discuss growth the Federal Base Realignment and Closing, or BRAC, recommendations will bring to the military research base at the heart of Frederick.

Fort Detrick is the largest employment site in the county, made up of about 40 different government entities. It will become the National Interagency Confederation for Biological Research, as well as continuing as a U.S. Army garrison.

“Most people don’t know who is on the fort and how to access jobs,” said Darlene Carver, chairwoman of the workforce board.

There are websites such as americajob.com that shows available job postings in the government. The meeting Friday was a step toward making those job opportunities listed through the local workforce office.

Another 1,500 jobs in Frederick is a good thing. I hope the roads can handle it!

Posted in Expansion, Funding Available, Government Funded research, Rants | 1 Comment »

The Anchor Draggers

Posted by Jim H on October 22, 2007

So much of the Biotech Community in the County is dependent upon the big Anchors in the county: MedImmune (or should I say AstraZeneca), Lonza, Invitrogen, SAIC, NCI.

I wonder if this is going to have any impact on the Frederick Facility, from the UK Business Times:

AstraZeneca hands production to Far East in effort to cut costs
Robin Pagnamenta

AstraZeneca has begun to outsource production of some of its bestselling medicines to low-cost manufacturers in the Far East.

As part of a restructuring drive designed to cut $900 million (£440 million) of the drugs group’s costs by 2010, the drugs giant is to begin purchasing Lactam, a key chemical ingredient used to make Seroquel, its blockbuster schizophrenia drug, from contract manufacturers in China.

Seroquel, which had sales of $3.4 billion in 2006, is AstraZeneca’s second top-selling product after Nexium, its $5.2 billion-selling stomach acid treatment. The decision forms part of a broader strategy gradually to outsource key manufacturing activities and focus on drug development and marketing. Lactam is expected to be the first of many key ingredients for blockbuster drugs produced by contract manufacturers.

In the first stage, AstraZeneca is expected to stop production at plants in Macclesfield, Cheshire, and Plankstadt, Germany, and also trim other drugmaking operations in Sweden.

Britain’s second-largest drugmaker operates 27 manufacturing sites in 19 countries but it is in the process of cutting 7,600 jobs, or 11 per cent of its 66,000-strong global workforce, including 700 jobs in Macclesfield.Plants in Bristol and Dunkirk, France, are likely to continue in the medium term but thousands more manufacturing jobs are likely to go over the next few years as a result of the changes. The shift towards outsourced manufacturing could prove controversial amid recent questions about quality control in China.

A spokeswoman said that the company was only in the “start-up phase” of sourcing Lactam from China. “There are still many steps involved, including internal assurance that standards are met, followed by submissions to appropriate regulatory agencies for approval,” she said.

To assist with the move towards more outsourced production, AstraZeneca has opened a new Chinese sourcing centre near Shanghai to help it to identify low-cost producers and to manage the transition from in-house to outsourced production. It already operates another sourcing office in Bangalore, India. Contract manufacturers in both countries, as well as other regions such as Eastern Europe, are expected to play a growing role in the years ahead.

At present AstraZeneca purchases most of the basic raw materials and chemicals for drugs and then uses its own factories to conduct more advanced stages of active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) production, as well as the formulation of medicines, preparation of pills, capsules and injectables and then final packaging and distribution. However, it is planning to gradually cease in-house production of API, the building blocks of conventional medicines. Ultimately it is looking to outsource other, more advanced manufacturing and logistics activities.

The transformation will take several years because of complex regulatory issues and the need to ensure quality control and complete reliability of supply.

The company said that it would consider further outsourcing opportunities as they arise “where there is a sound business case”. Certain products such as Lactam are easier to outsource than others. Some of AstraZeneca’s more sophisticated drugs require 32 separate, individual chemical processes to manufacture.

A number of other drugmakers, including Pfizer and Merck, of the United States, and Novartis, of Switzerland, are considering similar steps as they struggle to improve efficiency.

Pharmaceutical companies traditionally have been more conservative in their attitudes towards drug manufacturing and the supply chain than in other industries, but this is starting to change as they face increased cost pressures and competition from generic drugmakers.

Makes you wonder how much of our County is falling into Europeans hands, with Lonza now running the Walkersville facility out of Switzerland?

Posted in Business, General, Public/Private Companies, Rants, Rumors | Leave a Comment »