Novavax, Inc. (NVAX)
NASDAQ: NVAX · Real-Time Price · USD
7.76
-0.16 (-2.02%)
Apr 29, 2026, 1:54 PM EDT - Market open
← View all transcripts

Earnings Call: Q3 2021

Nov 4, 2021

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Novavax Third Quarter 2021 Financial Results and Operational Highlights Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Silvia Taylor. You may begin.

Silvia Taylor
EVP and Chief Corporate Affairs Officer, Novavax

Thanks very much. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you all for joining us today for our call to discuss our third quarter 2021 operational highlights and financial results. A press release announcing our results is currently available on our website at novavax.com, and an audio archive of this conference call will be available on our website later today. Joining me today is Stan Erck, President and CEO, who will discuss regulatory updates. Additionally, John Trizzino, Chief Commercial Officer and Chief Business Officer, will discuss our manufacturing and supply updates and the market opportunity for our COVID-19 vaccine. Dr. Filip Dubovsky, Chief Medical Officer, will discuss our clinical developments. Jim Kelly, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, will also join today's call to overview our financial results for the third quarter.

Additionally, Dr. Greg Glenn, President of R&D, will be available for the Q&A section at the end of today's call. Before we begin with prepared remarks, I need to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements during this teleconference, which are based on our current expectations and beliefs. For example, statements relating to future financial or business performance, conditions, or strategy, including expectations regarding revenue, operating expenses, cash usage, clinical development of our vaccine candidates, timing of future regulatory filings and actions, and other anticipated milestones are forward-looking statements. Novavax cautions that these forward-looking statements are subject to numerous assumptions, risks, and uncertainties which change over time, and actual results could differ materially from what is described in such statements. We encourage you to consult the risk factors discussed in our SEC filings for additional detail. I'd now like to hand the call over to Stan.

For those of you following the accompanying slides, please turn to slide three. Stan?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Thank you, Silvia, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. I'm excited to be here today following an incredibly exciting week for Novavax. This past week we reached a critical milestone. We received our first authorization for our COVID-19 vaccine in Indonesia. This milestone marks Novavax's first ever approval of our protein-based COVID-19 vaccine. This approval is based upon demonstrated strong efficacy and a favorable safety profile and represents a significant point in our transformation into a global commercial vaccine company. In addition to receiving our first authorization for NVX-CoV2373, we executed on our regulatory strategy in other global markets, with nine submissions now filed with regulatory agencies around the world.

I would like to acknowledge the tremendous efforts made by the entire Novavax team, express my gratitude for our partners and clinical trial sites for their continued support of our mission, and importantly, thank each of our clinical trial participants for their vital contributions made during an unprecedented global pandemic. Only through these collaborative efforts were we able to achieve this significant progress. On today's call, I will discuss these regulatory developments in more detail, as well as our key upcoming milestones. Other members of our team will discuss manufacturing and supply updates on clinical developments, and financial results for the quarter. With that, I'd like to begin today's call by discussing the tremendous progress we've made to date on the regulatory front. Please turn to slide four.

We now have our first regulatory authorization in hand with the granting of emergency use authorization for 2373 by Indonesia. Our COVID-19 vaccine will be manufactured and marketed by Serum Institute of India under the brand name of Covovax. The first authorization of our COVID-19 vaccine exemplifies our commitment. We completed Novavax's rolling submission to the WHO for emergency use listing of 2373. Our regulatory packages have been harmonized across our filings, which initially leverage our manufacturing partnership with Serum Institute. In the near future, we will supplement our submissions with information from additional facilities across our global supply chain and are confident that our clinical and manufacturing data form a strong package for review by regulatory agencies. All these regulatory packages are in addition to those we previously announced for filings in India and the Philippines, and of course, Indonesia, where we are already approved.

These filings, and in particular the WHO EUL listing, will enable our effort to provide doses for global equitable access. We remain diligent in our efforts to complete filings in additional geographies shortly. In the U.S., we expect to submit our complete regulatory package to the FDA before the end of this year. We've made tremendous progress on the regulatory front. We have harmonized all of our regulatory filing packages and submitted them to multiple agencies around the world, all to advance our shared goal of making our vaccine available as quickly and safely as possible to those in need. While we cannot predict how long regulatory agencies will take to approve these packages, we are prepared to work closely and diligently with all the regulatory authorities to facilitate approval.

I'd now like to turn it over to John, who updates us across our global supply chain, 2373's anticipated role in the COVID-19 landscape, and an overview of our supply commitments for 2373.

John Trizzino
EVP, Chief Commercial Officer and Chief Business Officer, Novavax

Thank you, Stan. Moving to slide five. Today, we have a global infrastructure in place to support the manufacturing of 2373 with a supply chain of partners and Novavax's own facilities spanning the world. This expansive global supply chain includes our partnership with Serum Institute, the world's largest vaccine manufacturer by volume, a state-of-the-art, wholly-owned manufacturing site in the Czech Republic, also known as Novavax CZ, and in Sweden, Novavax AB, manufacturing at established vaccine makers, including SK bioscience in South Korea and Takeda in Japan, and additional manufacturing partners around the world that include Biofabri in Spain, Fujifilm in the U.S. and U.K., Mabion in Poland, and the National Research Council's Biologics Manufacturing Centre in Canada. Over the third quarter, we executed a number of agreements to expand our supply chain and ready our global network for commercialization.

These include collaborating with our partner, Takeda, to support their anticipated annual manufacturing capacity of 250 million doses of NVX-CoV2373. Expanding our partnership with Serum Institute to manufacture NVX-CoV2373, and entering into an agreement with Mabion for the large scale production of NVX-CoV2373 through the year 2026. We have made significant progress in mobilizing our supply chain over recent months. We are routinely producing high quality product at commercial scale at multiple sites around the world. As of the end of the third quarter, we achieved our goal of a manufacturing capacity of 100 million doses per month.

Looking to the months ahead, we expect to achieve a manufacturing capacity of 150 million doses per month by the end of the fourth quarter, with the expectation that we will have a manufacturing capacity in excess of 2 billion annual doses in 2022, inclusive of capacity from our partner, Serum Institute. This significant ramp up in manufacturing will allow us to not only deliver on our current supply agreements, but also support additional demand for our vaccine in 2022 and beyond. Now moving to slide six. In addition to dramatically increasing the number of available doses to immunize the world, we expect our vaccine will help address major obstacles during this pandemic and beyond, including global distribution challenges and vaccine hesitancy.

Storage at standard refrigeration temperatures allows our vaccine to use the existing vaccine supply chain and will increase access to hard to reach areas to improve vaccination rates across the globe. Recombinant protein vaccines are well understood and already in widespread use, having been used for decades. Additionally, we have a robust clinical data package demonstrating our vaccine's favorable safety profile and strong immunogenicity and efficacy against multiple strains of the coronavirus, all of which drives confidence in Novavax's vaccine's ability to help protect against the disease. Now turning to slide seven. As you can see on this slide, we have several supply and licensing agreements in place to ensure the widespread distribution of our vaccine, maintaining the mindset that access to vaccines should have no borders.

Our vaccine network will support our supply commitments globally, including up to over 400 million doses of 2373 through bilateral supply agreements, including doses to the European Commission through our APA executed during the third quarter. Our joint commitment with Serum Institute of 1.1 billion doses for the COVAX facility. In addition to supplying 2373 for primary vaccination, we expect the need for boosters will continue in the coming years, and we believe 2373 will play a very important role in this ongoing need. Over the coming months, we will be able to support supply to additional markets in need of boosters across high, middle, and low income countries. I'd now like to turn it over to Filip Dubovsky to discuss clinical developments across our pipeline during the third quarter.

Filip Dubovsky
EVP and Chief Medical Officer, Novavax

Thanks, John. Please turn to slide eight. What's displayed here is the high level NVX-CoV2373 clinical development plan. The safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of our vaccine is derived from these studies, and all these studies are part of our common clinical regulatory package that's included in our harmonized regulatory filings. This data has been provided to regulatory agencies on an ongoing basis and is currently being reviewed. Let's skip ahead to slide nine. This slide highlights our two pivotal phase III studies. The bulk of our safety and efficacy data is derived from these studies. One remarkable feature of our vaccine is the consistent efficacy we've seen. The primary vaccine efficacy estimates are within one percentage point of each other, and that's despite the fact these studies were conducted at different times in different populations during a time when different variants emerged.

You can see a very high point estimate of efficacy, 96%-100% against matched strains. These are strains whose sequences are most similar to that included in the vaccine. Additionally, the vaccine works well against variants, not only against Alpha, but as we have detailed earlier in our U.S. phase III study, against all variants that circulated at that time. Importantly, we have complete protection against severe disease, hospitalization, and deaths in all of our efficacy studies, and that includes, again, severe disease caused by variants. In the larger U.S. study, our vaccine efficacy was 100% against severe disease. In the smaller U.K. and South African studies, although we couldn't calculate an efficacy because of the low number of cases, all the severe cases were in the placebo group.

Finally, our efficacy in high-risk populations, such as the elderly and people with comorbid conditions, is almost identical to that of their overall population. Now let's skip forward to slide 10, talk about our progress in pediatrics. We expanded our US-based phase III study to include over 2,200 12- to 17-year-olds. All the primary vaccination series have been delivered. In fact, all the children have been crossed over, and safety and efficacy data collection is ongoing. We expect to have a regulatory package available for global submission in the first quarter. The subsequent pediatric clinical development plan has been agreed to by the FDA, MHRA, and EMA, and the studies will be initiated after this adolescent study reads out. Okay, let's move on to slide 11 and talk about boosting.

In our phase II study in the U.S. and Australia, we boosted select cohorts at 6 months and at 12 months, and the 12-month doses are just finishing up now. We've previously disclosed that a single dose at 6 months can increase wild-type neutralization as well as IgG antibody levels more than fourfold from their peak after receiving two doses. However, more importantly, using a stringent human ACE2 inhibition assay, this measures functional antibodies, we demonstrated that our vaccine can boost responses to Alpha, Beta, and Delta 6.6- to 10.8-fold over their peak. We believe this is the strength of our vaccine, likely linked to our adjuvant system. We saw excellent protection in the phase III studies against variants. Recently, Professor Snape from Oxford presented data that demonstrated that 2373 has a specific strength in inducing cross-variant neutralizing responses.

In our South Africa phase II study, we boosted all participants who initially received 2 doses of vaccine with a third dose at six months, and that safety data is maturing. The emergency data from the U.S., Australia, along with the safety data from our South Africa study, will serve as the basis of our regulatory filing supporting our boosting indication. Finally, let's move to slide 12, and I want to update you on the progress of our Australian NanoFlu twenty-three seventy-three combination study. As you may know, we recently published our NanoFlu phase III study this quarter in Lancet ID. The study met its primary endpoints, and we've been given a regulatory pathway for licensure by the FDA. The current study, the combination study, was designed to define the dosage levels and vaccination schedule for our quadrivalent flu HA antigen combined with our COVID antigen.

Enrollment is complete. All the first doses have been delivered, and the second doses are being currently administered. We believe that much like flu, COVID will continue to circulate. Our flu and COVID vaccines share immunologic attributes that make the vaccine attractive in providing protection against drifted flu strains as well as COVID variants. This data will be available in the first half of 2022. I'd like now to turn it over to Jim to provide an overview of our financial results for the third quarter. Jim?

Jim Kelly
EVP, CFO and Treasurer, Novavax

Thank you, Filip. Yeah, I'd like to start by saying how happy I am to join the Novavax team at such an important moment, and look forward to contributing to our rapid transition to becoming a global commercial company. This afternoon, we announced our financial results for the third quarter of 2021, and I'll provide you with a summary of the key highlights beginning on slide 13. Today, we reported total revenue for the third quarter of 2021 of $179 million, and ended the period with $1.9 billion in cash. This means we are well capitalized as we advance towards the commercial launch of 2373. Turning to our financial results on slide 14, we compare our third quarter 2021 results to the third quarter of 2020.

During the third quarter of 2021, we recorded a net loss of $322 million or $4.31 per share. This compares to a loss of $197 million or $3.21 per share in the prior year. Our third quarter 2021 revenue of $179 million and 14% growth compares to $157 million in the prior year. Our total revenue consists of government contract revenue, grant revenue, and royalty revenue. Government contract revenue of $98 million reflects our funding from the U.S. government under Operation Warp Speed, which increased by $55 million in the period as we saw an increase in our 2373 funded activities.

Grant revenue of $41 million comes primarily from our CEPI funding agreement and fell by $73 million, as that agreement is more oriented towards start-up activities which are now coming to a close. Finally, royalty revenue of $40 million reflects the Novavax share of sales of our licensed partners. In this case, SK Bioscience made sales of 2373 antigen component to the Korean government during the period. Total expenses for the third quarter of 2021 were $486 million and are primarily weighted towards our R&D activities in support of 2373, both in total for the quarter, and are the primary cause of the year-over-year growth. Following an expected regulatory approval of our vaccine. Certain types of expenses that have previously been expensed as R&D will be capitalized to inventory and expensed as cost of goods sold when product is delivered.

As noted earlier, we ended the third quarter with $1.9 billion in cash and cash equivalents as compared to just over $800 million at year-end 2020. The primary sources of our increase in cash year to date are the $1.2 billion in payments received under advanced purchase agreements and over $560 million from the sale of common stock in the first quarter. I would now like to turn the call back to Stan to discuss our strategic priorities for the months to come.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

And I thank you, Jim, and welcome on board. Please turn to slide 15. It was a tremendous quarter for us at Novavax. Behind the scenes, our over 1,300 employees worked tirelessly to prepare for the delivery of 2373 globally. Over the coming months, obtaining regulatory authorization for our COVID-19 vaccine remains our top priority. This involves continued collaboration and discussion with regulatory agencies with whom we've already completed submissions. In other geographies, we will finalize our packages for filing. We also expect to submit our complete regulatory package to the FDA by the end of 2021. Our first authorization by a regulatory agency is expected to be followed by others over the coming weeks. We are turning swiftly to the work at hand to get product ready to ship on a global basis.

Timing and location will of course depend on the timing of various regulatory approvals. We expect to be able to ship doses to Indonesia and hopefully others before the end of the year. That will scale up quickly in the first quarter as we match our APA and COVAX orders with these regulatory approvals. We will initiate our shipments from Serum as the first authorized production center and supplement our regulatory filings with data from our other sites, importantly, including our Czech facility and our partner SK bioscience in Korea. Our goal is to reach a cadence of production that will allow Novavax and our partners to have a manufacturing capacity of over 2 billion doses in 2022.

As we've indicated before, we will fulfill our commitments to higher income countries from our APAs signed over the last year, and we expect to supply low and middle income countries in partnership with Serum to meet our commitments to COVAX. We believe that our vaccine is ideally suited to address the needs of these countries. In the coming months, we will continue to evaluate 2373's use beyond a two-dose primary vaccination regimen through our ongoing boosting study, and expect to collect data that further supports 2373's vast potential to serve as a booster. Through our favorable reactogenicity and safety profile, consistently high levels of efficacy, and well understood technology, we are confident that 2373 will be an important tool in combating COVID-19 in the years to come.

In parallel, we will develop other areas of our robust pipeline. As discussed earlier by Filip, we believe our COVID NanoFlu combination vaccine will be a key component of our pipeline, and we look forward to advancing this candidate through clinical development. We also remain optimistic about areas for future development within our pipeline, including for RSV. Moving into the end of 2021, our mission will continue to drive us forward. We never rest in our quest to protect the health of people everywhere. With that, I will now turn it over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Kelechi Chikere of Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Kelechi Chikere
Equity Analyst, Jefferies

Yes, thank you. Again, congrats on all the progress here. Just a couple of questions on my end. First, with the filings that you had over the last couple of weeks, a new development was that you're leveraging SII's manufacturing. Can you help us understand the reasoning and rationale behind that? I guess more importantly, what are the gating steps and how quickly will you be able to supplement those applications and potential approvals with manufacturing data from your own sites? I have one follow-up question there.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yeah. This is Stan. Thanks for the question. The reason for our reliance upon Serum as a partner for this is that they have. We've been working with them for two years in a variety of areas, and so we know them really well. They have added capacity specifically for Novavax production over the past year that's staggering. Well over, you know, we're targeting 2 billion capacity. Just at Serum, they'll have that next year. They have fill finish capacity that's virtually unlimited. We can make many hundreds of millions of doses per month in their facility. All of that came together over the past several months and really helped us to get to the point where we could file with nine different regulatory filings in the past couple weeks.

I mean, this has been stupendous progress. Serum has been there with us. The follow on to your question is, what about the rest of our plants? We have data. You know, we're collecting data that we will submit once we get regulatory approval in various territories, and we will supplement those filings with data from Korea, from Czech Republic, from Spain, et cetera, so we can get them all involved. Our global capacity network is really potent.

Kelechi Chikere
Equity Analyst, Jefferies

Got it. Thank you. That's really helpful. I guess you alluded to this in your answer. Can you provide any color on how much vaccine or how much of the current capacity is actually coming from Serum Institute of India versus your own sites?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Actually, we don't split that out by manufacturing.

Kelechi Chikere
Equity Analyst, Jefferies

Okay.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Sorry.

Kelechi Chikere
Equity Analyst, Jefferies

No problem. All right. Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question is from Vernon Bernardino of H.C. Wainwright.

Lo Lai
Equity Research Associate, H.C. Wainwright

Good evening, Vernon. Thank you for the update. This is Lai Lo, and I'm calling on behalf of Vernon. We just had a question on, I guess we wanted to get more color on the timeline of how long would it take for the WHO and EUL review. I just also wanted to confirm that the SII will actually manufacture the vaccine. That's it for me.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Well, I think I answered the second part of the question, that SII will be the initial manufacturer. They've already made many tens of millions of doses that are waiting to be shippable. They're sitting. My team has physically gone over there and touched them, and so it's. They're there. I forgot. What was the first part of the question?

Lo Lai
Equity Research Associate, H.C. Wainwright

We just wanted some more color on how long would it take for the WHO and the EUL review?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

You know, we can't forecast how long it's gonna take the various regulatory agencies to opine on this. My opinion is it's gonna be soon. I think, because we can judge their interest and their speed by how many questions they ask, and they've been in very active discussions with us. I think we're gonna follow with a number of positive regulatory actions following this Indonesia, I think in soon.

Lo Lai
Equity Research Associate, H.C. Wainwright

Perfect. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Mayank Mamtani of B. Riley Securities.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director, Group Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotechnology Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Good afternoon. Thanks for taking our questions, and obviously congrats on a ton of recent progress. Maybe just staying with the Serum question. Are you able to comment on the economic arrangement you may have, you know, for the developed markets specifically if Serum is a manufacturer? And also, are you able to comment on, you know, COGS, if vaccine doses are coming from Serum versus the Novavax facility? And then I have a follow-up.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yeah. One of the reasons we partnered with them a year ago is because we recognized their capabilities for making large quantities of vaccine. They in fact, their model is to make vast amounts of vaccine at very low cost. They've tied that to their target markets, which is all of the low and middle income countries of the world. That's been their target. Our deal with them is that we agreed to license to them so that they can make product. They have an exclusive license in India to make and sell product. In the low and middle income countries of the world, we share profits on that.

They'll make the product and distribute it, and we'll share products, profits, and we have not disclosed what the ratio of that is. We've also signed an agreement with them if we want for them to make product for higher, high income markets. We have a CDMO agreement with them. They would supply us finished product, whether in one of two ways, either from antigen, the spike protein that they make at Serum, or from spike protein that we make at our various sites around the world.

We'll have the choice of working, of having Serum fill it and produce the entire product for us, or just take our manufacturing network and make our own product all the way through fill, finish, and distribute it in high-income countries. It's complicated, but it's a very effective way to reach our strategy of going from zero to 2 billion overnight.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director, Group Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotechnology Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Thanks. That's helpful color. On the other side of the planet, on the U.S. FDA filing, you know, as we think about the specific requirements, you know, you're working through, like, can you maybe detail, is it about the product itself that it has to come from facilities, maybe non-Serum facilities? Or is it just, you know, the release assays that have been agreed upon that the FDA has a different criteria, you know, be it a percentage of material that, you know, sort of, meets a particular potency or safety level? Just, can you help us understand, you know, how much of what you have today could be also applicable to the U.S. FDA filing?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yeah, no. We made a concerted effort to harmonize all of our filings. We're gonna file the same thing in the U.S. as we filed elsewhere. We are in the process of dealing with the FDA. We've had communication with them this week. We're gonna set up a meeting sometime in the foreseeable future, we don't know what date yet. We don't have a date yet, but sometime in the very near. From that we can give more clarity on the dates that we expect to file the complete package and ask for an EUA. That will be coming later this month.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director, Group Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotechnology Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Great. My final question was on the pediatric study data timeline. I think you commented on the regulatory package in one Q, but just can you clarify since that crossover finished a while ago, can someone comment on the data timeline?

Filip Dubovsky
EVP and Chief Medical Officer, Novavax

Yeah. The analysis is ongoing, and it's made slightly more complicated by our current regulatory filings globally. We need to balance that work out, but we are confident we'll be able to get the data pulled together and submit it as a variation of our initial file in the first quarter.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director, Group Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotechnology Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Great. Thanks for taking our questions.

Operator

The next question comes from Charles Duncan of Cantor Fitzgerald.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Yes. Hi, thanks for taking my question and, congratulations, Stan and team for all the recent progress. Very good to see. Had a question regarding the EUA filings that I'm sure you won't be able to answer in great detail, but, beyond being able to talk about when you might see approvals, I'm wondering if you can characterize next steps and whether or not there would be some kind of interim information that can be press released besides an actual approval as Indonesia kind of came out from out of the blue.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

We are expecting multiple authorizations this year. For each of these, we are trying to allocate product, both that we have in inventory in the U.S. and Europe and South Korea, and an inventory that's being built up at Serum. That allocation process will be complicated because until we know not only when we get the authorization, but the timing of all of these different orders. From Gavi, we need to know, you know, where they want product when and over the coming quarters, and the same thing from our APAs.

We are building inventory and, over the coming weeks, we'll be figuring out how to allocate those, to label them for different geographies. Does that answer your question? I'm not sure I did.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Yeah. I apologize, Stan. I think I wasn't clear. What I was asking is if you would anticipate any part of the regulatory process to be visible to, you know, to the public for any one of these emergency use authorizations over the course of the next some period of time before an actual grant of an authorization.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

I don't think we're gonna have much visibility before the actual grant of an authorization. The process is they do the review. They've had the ability to review the clinical safety data for some time now because those have been submitted to the regulatory agencies. The remaining analysis should be focusing on the CMC section. We can only know, of course, it's not announceable, how interested they are by the number of questions we get and the responses we get back and whether they think they've got all the answers to the questions. There's not gonna be any information going forward about the EUA until it happens.

All I'm suggesting to you is I'm optimistically forecasting that they're going to be working on this quickly. Just from week to week we're gonna see results of that.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Okay. Very good. That's helpful. If I could turn to Filip or Greg regarding a couple of clinical questions. First of all, I'm wondering if you have ever seen any cases of myocarditis that you think go beyond that which is seen with the virus with an infection generally. If you could provide some kind of theoretical basis for not seeing any cases or foreseeing cases and perhaps even contrast with other technologies.

Filip Dubovsky
EVP and Chief Medical Officer, Novavax

We don't really comment on specific safety signals we've seen or not seen in any of our studies. What we can, what we all know is that myocarditis is often caused by viral infections and, you know, those occur sporadically throughout the planet, so they do crop up in any database you look at. Our data is reviewed by not only our internal-external safety committee as well as by the NIH DSMB and they haven't identified any safety signals for us yet.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Okay. Very good. Last question regarding homologous versus heterologous boost. Wondering if you could provide, you know, a little bit of perspectives on homologous boost seems like should work given the data that you've shown so far in six months. The sense that maybe heterologous boost may be a paradigm that you wanna evaluate in the future, and is there at least a theoretical basis for thinking that 2373 could be useful on top of, say, past RNA primary boost?

Filip Dubovsky
EVP and Chief Medical Officer, Novavax

Yeah. We've outlined the details of our homologous boosting just today. We think there's a path forward, and we see an obvious way to get a label indication for that. We also see huge value in boosting on top of other people's vaccines. We have a safety profile that I think will justify doing that, and a posology which makes it convenient to move the vaccine around the world and use in that regard. You know, how well it performs, you know, will really be data-driven. We plan to do some studies in the near future to help define that, including studies we're designing to provide enough data to give us a label indication.

There will be some data coming out from the U.K. studies, as everyone on this call knows, that may shed some light into it. Those studies aren't designed in such a way to be able to provide our label claims, and that's really our goal. As far as the theoretical side of things, there isn't a ton known about what it looks like to boost on top of other platforms. There's more known about what it looks like to boost on top of viral platforms versus mRNA. I think we'll have to wait for the data to come out.

What I do feel confident about is that if you were to stack up any homologous or heterologous three-dose regimen compared to what we've shown in the phase II study from U.S. and Australia, I'm pretty confident we would come out on top or in parity with that. I have to say that there's something pretty unique about what we're seeing about our ability to induce cross-variant neutralizing antibodies, and that may be part of the story. People shouldn't just think about magnitude of immune response, but quality of immune response as well.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Okay, very good. That's helpful. Again, congrats on all the recent progress. Appreciate you taking my questions.

Operator

The next question is from Eric Joseph of JP Morgan.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Hi, good evening. Thanks for taking the questions. I just wanted to circle back on plans to supplement the current filings with CMC packages from your own supply chain. Could this happen before or is it more likely to happen after the anticipated decisions, authorization decisions for regions filed over the past week? As a follow-up to that, with you know, if it's primarily serum that's making COVAX effectively over the nearest term, how should we be thinking about dose allocation between you know, your commitments with COVAX, the COVAX facility, and higher income countries? I guess, is there any prioritization of doses to COVAX first? And then I have a follow-up.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yeah, good. This is Stan. Thanks for the question or the questions. The supplementary filings will be filed as soon as we can. I think that if you can imagine that our team has filed nine applications, regulatory submissions, and we've got a few more countries to go, that's going to consume them. But we'll get the supplements in either around the time that their approval or just after. I think that we're talking weeks here. I don't think we're talking months, so I don't think there's gonna be a much difference. Going back to your allocation, how it's gonna work with Serum. Serum is gonna make the bulk of the production over the next few months.

We are going to allocate, we're gonna focus on COVAX and make sure that they get their allocation. It won't be 100% of our product out of there, but it will be a large portion for the first few months. Then it'll shift over to our APAs in large quantities, I think in the second and third quarter. This quarter, next quarter, our mission is to get a lot of product out to low- and middle-income countries as soon as we can get WHO, EUL and Gavi, and that will take a little time. During, you know, there'll be some time when we can ship to other countries as well.

It's a mix right now and as these regulatory submissions get authorization, we'll see how product flows. The scale of the product at Serum is, and our plants, is fairly dramatic, and it's not gonna really make a difference what plant it comes from.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay. Just with the decision here to you know use Serum's CMC package here, I guess is there like precedent with a Serum-made vaccine that gives you confidence in

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Sure.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Chance of approval in higher income countries like Europe, et cetera?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Sure. AZ. They've made over 1 billion doses of AZ's vaccine and they've got an approval globally for that. So there's lots of precedent. By the way, they also got inspected by the U.K. and specifically for Novavax production at their plant and got a GMP certificate that allows them. Their plants are probably some of the most modern plants in the world. They're highly regarded by the regulatory agencies that's seen them.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay. AZ also have their own, you know, supply chain where you could have comparability there. I guess, is there any clinical data using a Serum-made product that is, I guess, is-

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yes. Yeah, they.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Included in the overall mission package?

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yes, they did it. Well, Phil can describe the trial.

Filip Dubovsky
EVP and Chief Medical Officer, Novavax

Yeah. They conducted a phase II, phase III study comparing a material that they manufacture with material that we manufacture. That's part of the regulatory dossier.

Eric Joseph
Executive Director and Biotech Equity Research Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay, great. Thanks for taking the question.

Operator

This will conclude our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Stan for any closing remarks.

Stan Erck
President and CEO, Novavax

Yeah. I'm reflecting on this conversation and we'll go off script for a minute. We've really accomplished something as a company in the 12 years that I've been here that is just changing the entire company. The energy that's coming out of the company after all these regulatory filings and we're getting the first, you know, your first product approval is a big deal. The company's pumped and we're on our way to really being a changed company over the coming 12 months. I wanna thank you to everyone for joining today's call. We're excited by our progress made to date and believe we are positioned for success in the months to come. We look forward to reporting on exciting milestones.

This says in the coming months. I'm gonna be reporting on exciting milestones in the coming weeks and months ahead of us as we move closer to delivering our vaccine globally. With that, thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. The conference has now concluded. Thank you all for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your lines. Have a great day.

Powered by