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Serbia

Tech Transfer Deals See Argentina And Serbia Produce COVID Vaccine

The Russian Direct Investment Fund says it has 20 technology transfer and production agreements in place in 13 countries across the world.

Coronavirus Notebook: UK Seven-Vaccine Booster Trial Begins, Australia Plans mRNA Production Capacity

The company manufacturing Russia's Sputnik V vaccine in Brazil has produced the first batch, but has withdrawn a request to run clinical trials there. France is preparing to immunize the over-18s, and Australia has begun evaluating Vir/GSK’s sotrovimab for use in COVID-19 patients.

Czechs Start Reimbursement For Telehealth Since Pandemic Plus Picture In Eastern Europe

The practice of telehealth got the impetus it had long needed during the pandemic, as experiences in Czechia and neighboring economies in eastern Europe show in a regional roundup by Kinstellar.

US Capitol Capsule: US anti-bribery actions 'next shoe' in China scandal?

Drug makers embroiled in the recent bribery allegations in China are likely sweating over whether the next shoe to drop will be US charges under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), given the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not been shy in going after publicly traded biopharmas the agency determines has violated the law.

Stada celebrates workforce cuts after selling Russian plants

German generics firm Stada has sold two of its Russian production plants, Makiz Pharma in Moscow and Skopin Pharmaceutical Plant, Ryazan, in a partial management buy-out. The disposals have cut Stada's workforce by 386 employees, a fact that the company trumpeted as having enable it to meet ahead of schedule "a significant restructuring goal" of its 2010 "Build the Future" programme: it has now cut its personnel by 10%, or around 800 full-time positions, ahead of the target of the end of 2013.

Self-reporting limits Pfizer's corrupt practices penalties as US widens industry net

Pfizer has paid $60.2 million in fines and disgorgement of profits plus interest over violations of the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). But the pharma giant avoided criminal prosecution and long-term government oversight of itself and its US executives by reporting bribes in several European and Asian countries to the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) before an employee or third-party could allege illegal activity.

Sorbent's lead heart failure product shows Phase II promise

The private US biopharmaceutical company Sorbent Therapeutics has presented promising Phase II data for its lead drug candidate, CLP1001, at a late-breaking clinical trials session at the ESC Heart Failure Congress in Belgrade, Serbia.

Merck's raltegravir combination beats efavirenz combo in treatment-naive HIV

Merck has presented previously unreported data showing that combination HIV therapy containing its integrase inhibitor, Isentress (raltegravir), confers better efficacy than that containing efavirenz (Bristol-Myers Squibb's Sustiva) in treatment-naïve adult patients.

Stada suffers €97m collateral damage as Serbian state fails to pay its own wholesaler

The likelihood that Serbian pharmaceutical wholesalers will default on their debts has led German wholesaler Stada, which has a leading position in the market, to book a one-off pre-tax special impairment of €97 million for the third quarter. In particular, Stada is owed money by the country's largest wholesaler, Velefarm, which is majority owned by the state and just under 20% owned by Stada itself.

Nine-month sales growth in Russia offset Stada's decline in Serbia

Stada, one of the largest Germany-based wholesalers, increased its sales by 3% to €1.2 billion in the first nine months of this year. The company attributed its modest performance mainly to liquidity problems of its subsidiaries in Serbia, one of its most important individual markets. These problems resulted from hospitals' non-payments and/or delayed payments to wholesalers.