* 2nd bioreactor to remove bottleneck in 2024
* Plans to produce "high teens" of mln doses in 2019
* New facility would add tens of mln of doses per yr
* China market for now a distant opportunity
(Adds role of vaccines for GSK, details on China launch)
By Ludwig Burger
WAVRE, Belgium, Nov 15 (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline
said further growth from its shingles vaccine, which has boosted
earnings, would be reined in by limited capacity until 2024, but
a new bioreactor facility would then be ready to bring a step
change in production.
GSK, Britain's largest drugmaker, had originally envisaged a
gradual launch in the United States, its biggest market, but
regulators unexpectedly recommended Shingrix not only for people
reaching the age of 50 but also to replace an established
product.
A bioreactor complex in Belgium that makes so-called
antigens - proteins that trigger an immune reaction against the
shingles virus - is reaching its capacity limits. A second
facility is in the works at an undisclosed location, but it
takes time to build.
"The key project is the expansion of antigen bulk production
which will come online in 2024. That will be what will create
the next step change in our capacity," said Roger Connor,
president of GSK's vaccines business, speaking at the unit's
main site in Wavre, near the Belgian capital of Brussels.
Until then GSK is working on more than 20 other projects to
stretch higher production, aiming to increase the number of
Shingrix doses to a "high teens of millions" in 2019.
In 2024 "you'll see tens of millions of increase, rather
than single digit millions," Connor added.
With 5.9 billion pounds ($7.55 billion) in 2018 sales,
vaccines account for almost a fifth of group sales but the unit
will play a bigger role after the planned separation of GSK's
consumer products unit, which has been folded into a joint
venture with Pfizer.
Sales from Shingrix more than doubled to 1.28 billion pounds
($1.64 billion) during the first nine months of the year, but
analysts have warned that the pace was unsustainable due to
production limitations.
Shingrix has won over regulators in North America, Europe
and China with trials where it prevented 90% of Shingles cases
in the immunised group.
Caused by the varicella-zoster virus behind chickenpox, the
disease can trigger rashes and severe pain in the elderly.
The Chinese market is roughly on par with the United States,
but limited capacity means it is a distant opportunity, Connor
said.
GSK reckons that 115 million Americans aged 50 and older are
eligible to receive Shingrix, but so far only 9-10 million of
them have received at least one of the two doses that are needed
for immunisation.
"We will have to start preparing other markets at the right
time, depending on when we believe the U.S. is going to peak and
what level of penetration of the 115 million will be achieved,"
said Connor.
"This will all determine when the next launches can be
supported, including China," he added.
($1 = 0.7815 pounds)
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Mark Potter and Louise
Heavens)