* To double supplies to 200 mln a month by April
* To report U.S. trial results by end March
* Forecasts 2021 core EPS of $4.75 to $5.00
* Q4 sales beat expectations, profit in line
* African Union to use shot in countries without SA variant
(Adds quotation on production ramp-up from head of operations)
By Pushkala Aripaka and Ludwig Burger
Feb 11 (Reuters) - AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine is
not perfect, but will have a big impact on the pandemic, its
chief executive predicted on Thursday, as the drugmaker pledged
to double output by April and the African Union gave its backing
for the shot.
The two-dose inoculation, developed with Oxford University,
has been hailed as a "vaccine for the world" because it is
cheaper and easier to distribute than some rivals.
But its rapid approval in Europe and elsewhere has been
clouded by doubts over its most effective dosage and interval
between doses.
Data at the weekend also showed it was less effective
against a fast-spreading variant of the virus in South Africa,
prompting the country to pause rollout of the shot, and the
company has also been embroiled in a row with the European Union
over supply delays.
"Is it perfect? No, it's not perfect, but it's great. Who
else is making 100 million doses in February?" CEO Pascal Soriot
said on a conference call about the vaccine.
"We're going to save thousands of lives and that's why we
come to work everyday."
The company said it aimed to produce more than 200 million
doses per month by April, double this month's level as the world
tries to tame a pandemic that has killed 2.35 million.
Head of operations Pam Cheng said on the call that the group
was working to further expand global capacity and productivity.
AstraZeneca has set a target to produce 3 billion doses this
year, with India's Serum Institute making much of that aimed at
poorer nations.
On Wednesday, the company enlisted Germany's IDT Biologika
as a contract manufacturer, but the bulk of IDT's contribution
will only come onstream late next year.
AstraZeneca said it expected much-anticipated data from the
U.S. trial of the vaccine before the end of March, and that it
was confident the shot offered relatively good protection
against severe disease and death for the South African variant.
Its disappointing results were against milder cases.
However, after rising to become Britain's most valuable
company last summer, the company has now slipped to sixth, in a
move some analysts attribute to doubts over the vaccine.
"In a year or two we will look back and everybody will
realise we made a big impact," Soriot said.
POSTER CHILD
AstraZeneca's shares were up 0.95% in afternoon trade,
pairing some earlier gains, after the company forecast a pick up
in earnings growth this year on strong demand for its cancer and
other new therapies.
It has pledged not to make any money from its COVID-19
vaccine during the pandemic.
It has been a tumultuous week for the drugmaker after South
Africa put on hold giving the shot to its citizens, choosing one
developed by its U.S. rival Johnson & Johnson instead.
That came after the trial data raised concerns about the
AstraZeneca vaccine's effectiveness on mild symptoms from the
more infectious 501Y.V2 variant of the virus dominant in South
Africa, which has spread to 41 nations around the world.
Despite that blow, the World Health Organization endorsed
the British vaccine on Wednesday and the African Union said it
would target its use in countries that have not reported cases
of the variant.
Kenya and Morocco are also planning to administer it.
AstraZeneca said it expected 2021 revenues to rise by a low
teens percentage and core earnings of $4.75 to $5.00 per share,
as it beat expectations for fourth-quarter sales.
The earnings guidance equates to 18-24% growth, after 15% in
2020, but was a little lower than the $5.10 per share analysts
were expecting, as the company flagged more spending this year.
The COVID-19 vaccine is not included in the guidance and the
company said its sales would be reported separately from the
first quarter of 2021.
While public interest is focused on the vaccine,
AstraZeneca's core business of diabetes, heart, kidney, and
cancer medicines has been steadily growing, helping the company
to turn around years of decline.
"The company is arguably the poster child for big pharma
turnarounds," said Third Bridge senior analyst Sebastian Skeet.
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka and Ludwige Burger. Editing by
Josephine Mason and Mark Potter)