The company is a 50:50 joint venture between MSD Pharmaceuticals and UK-based Wellcome Trust.
"We are spending around Rs 300 crore over the next 4-5 years to develop low-cost vaccines. We are developing vaccines to treat rotavirus, cholera and meningitis," Hilleman CEO Davinder Gill told PTI here.
"For research, we are looking for partners namely pharma companies, vaccine speciality companies and Government agencies to collaborate and fund the project. We had received foundational grants from MSD Pharmaceuticals and Wellcome Trust, but now we wants to be financially independent," he said.
MSD Pharmaceuticals (also known as Merck Sharp & Dohme or MSD in many parts of the world) is an affiliate of Merck & Co Inc.
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"Normally, there is a large capital investment required for creating vaccines. We, however, have taken an approach that will allow the vaccines to be created at a lesser cost thus providing a boost to manufacturers, who can use synthetic platform technology," Gill said.
The company is developing a synthetic vaccine to fight meningitis in Asian, African and Latin American countries.
As per the development plan, Medicine in Need, a not- for-profit research organisation, will make available the company its formulation technology, while MSD would provide components of its existing rotavirus vaccine, he added.