J&J partners with CSIR-IMTECH on TB treatments
The Indian subsidiary of US healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) announced a new partnership with the Institute of Microbial Technology (IMTECH), part of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), to unlock the potential of Indian science and help accelerate the discovery of innovative new tuberculosis (TB) treatments.
Under the Memorandum of Understanding, scientists from J&J’s global public health team will work closely with scientists from CSIR-IMTECH, based in Chandigarh, India, on a research and development program to explore potentially more effective, safer, all-oral treatment regimens to tackle multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB), as well as new molecular entities to treat all TB patients.
“We are united with India in our determination to make TB history,” said Paul Stoffels, chief scientific officer, Johnson & Johnson, who joined Dr Harsh Vardhan, Minister for Science and Technology, at an event in New Delhi, to announce the Memorandum of Understanding. “While we have made great advances in recent years with the approval of new TB medicines much more needs to be done. By bringing together some of India’s brightest minds with our scientists, we increase the potential to achieve major research breakthroughs that can lead to innovative new treatments for the millions of people in India and around the world who suffer from TB,” Dr Stoffels noted.
The new research program will capitalize on the
CSIR-IMTECH’s world-class expertise in microbial
technology and research and the proven research and development
capabilities of J&J’s Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies
to strengthen the collective potential of our research efforts.
20 years of TB research at J&J
Today’s announcement builds on nearly 20
years of TB research and development by J&J, which led to
the approval of bedaquiline, the first new TB medicine in nearly
50 years, and adds to existing partnerships at central and state
levels in India to increase awareness, diagnosis and care, and
broaden access to bedaquiline.
In March 2016, Janssen India and the Revised National
Tuberculosis Control Program (under the aegis of the Director
General of Health Services) announced a Conditional Access
Program (CAP) to provide bedaquiline free-of-charge for 600
patients across six sites in India.
In April 2017, it
was confirmed that the CAP would be expanded to additional TB
patients across 156 sites. Janssen India has also partnered with
authorities in Mumbai, Telangana, Patna and Nagpur to increase
awareness of TB and improve access to diagnosis, treatment and
care.
“Johnson & Johnson companies have been serving the healthcare needs of India for seventy years now; and this partnership forms an important part of our commitment to the government’s ‘Make in India’ program, supporting Indian drug development for a disease that affects more than 2.8 million people in our country,” added Sanjiv Navangul, managing director, Janssen India.
Source:
The Pharma Letter