Close
CDMO Safety Testing 2026
Novotech

No Rush In Indian Generic Drug Firms To Offer COVID Products

Note* - All images used are for editorial and illustrative purposes only and may not originate from the original news provider or associated company.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

– Access the Media Pack Now

– Book a Conference Call

Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Related stories

Sanofi and Snowflake Team Up to Deploy AI-Powered Field Agent Support Tool

Sanofi has partnered with cloud data platform company Snowflake...

Aragen Backs Renaissance Rare Disease Therapy Launch

Contract research, development, and manufacturing organization (CRDMO) Aragen has...

Eli Lilly and Haisco Pharmaceutical Enter $3Billion+ Deal

Eli Lilly has entered into a multi-program collaboration with...
- Advertisement -

Indian generic drugmakers are delaying more investments in COVID-related drugs after making gains in the last two years, according to certain pharmaceutical industry insiders.

BDR Pharmaceuticals’ managing director, Dharmesh Shah, stated that when COVID-19 cases start to decline, his company is not in a rush to introduce any new products. The number of daily COVID-19 cases in India decreased on Tuesday from 16,678 instances on Monday to 13,615 new cases in 24 hours. Despite having the ability to produce the antiviral medication Paxlovid, BDR Pharmaceuticals, from Mumbai, which is into API manufacturing, has chosen to wait and see, according to Shah. According to him, they will see whether there’s any need for it in the nation before introducing it. At this time, cases are modest and improving with standard therapy.

Remdesivir, a drug used to treat COVID-19 in hospitalised patients, was first produced by BDR Pharmaceuticals, one of the first companies in India to do so. But according to Shah, tonnes of the antiviral drug molnupiravir’s manufacturing material were lost.

They are not in a rush to launch things, he continued. They are dealing with the situation and will only dive if there is an emergency or if the nation suffers a surge, the statement reads. RC Juneja, executive chairman of Mankind Pharmaceuticals, added that the business is being cautious because it has already suffered losses and will need to get rid of a number of products that are about to expire.

As a result, Juneja stated, they have chosen not to engage further in COVID-related treatments or goods unless there is strong demand.

Never miss a pharmaceutical headline

The pharmaceutical industry moves fast – stay on top of it with our must - read briefings.

  • The top pharma and life sciences stories, straight to your inbox
  • The biggest news, features, interviews, and analysis
  • Dedicated coverage of the key developments driving the global pharmaceutical sector

Latest stories

Related stories

Sanofi and Snowflake Team Up to Deploy AI-Powered Field Agent Support Tool

Sanofi has partnered with cloud data platform company Snowflake...

Aragen Backs Renaissance Rare Disease Therapy Launch

Contract research, development, and manufacturing organization (CRDMO) Aragen has...

Eli Lilly and Haisco Pharmaceutical Enter $3Billion+ Deal

Eli Lilly has entered into a multi-program collaboration with...

Lilly Signs $1.26bn Sonefpeglutide Licensing Deal with Hanmi

Eli Lilly and Company and Hanmi Pharm have officially...

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

– Access theMedia Pack Now

– Book a Conference Call

Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Translate »