South Africa Seeks Local Manufacturer For Gilead’s Twice Yearly HIV Prevention Injection
Written by: BizCommunity Editor Save to Instapaper
The Gilead logo. Image credit: Reuters/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
The government is working alongside international partners, including Unitaid and the United States Pharmacopoeia, to identify which local company could make the twice-yearly injection safely, effectively and affordably, and provide any support needed.
They will then recommend that company to Gilead.
Gilead, a US pharmaceutical company, granted six voluntary licences in 2024 to generic manufacturers across India, Egypt and Pakistan to produce and supply the drug to 120 low- and middle-income countries.
These included South Africa, although there was criticism that no South African drugmakers were included.
A licence for a South African company would be the seventh such deal, potentially boosting access to a drug many HIV/Aids experts have said could help bring an end to the 44-year-old pandemic by slashing the number of new infections.
Gilead said it has been open to adding a voluntary licence for local manufacturing in sub-Saharan Africa.
"Gilead will review the proposals and assess whether required quality standards can be met before any voluntary license is granted," the company said in an email.
Boosting access
Despite progress, the African region remains the epicentre of the HIV pandemic.
South Africa has the highest number of people affected at eight million – around one in five adults – living with the virus.
Several companies in South Africa already make HIV treatments or sterile injectables, like Aspen Pharmacare.
Paul Mashatile, chair of the South African National Aids Council (SANAC) and deputy president, said making the drug in South Africa would benefit the whole region.
“Africa can no longer rely on medicines produced elsewhere for diseases that affect us most,” said Kenyan President William Ruto, African Union lead on local manufacturing of health commodities.
In the past, low- and middle-income countries waited years for HIV drugs available in richer nations.
Lenacapavir is already available in some African countries through an initiative supported by The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the US government, but demand is expected to outstrip supply until the generic manufacturers start making the drug.
Those agreements also faced some criticism for excluding middle-income countries like Brazil.
A South African company could try to expand access there, too, Unitaid said.
“It’s an opportunity to open the door further,” said Unitaid’s director of programme, Robert Matiru, although he said a licence for a South African company was the key aim.
Get new press articles by email
We submit and automate press releases distribution for a range of clients. Our platform brings in automation to 5 social media platforms with engaging hashtags. Our new platform The Pulse, allows premium PR Agencies to have access to our newsletter subscribers.
Latest from
- New Bond To Fund Ecological Restoration And Water Catchment Protection In South Africa
- Africa’s Green Economy Summit Calls For Scaled Climate Finance And Net Zero Growth Across The Continent
- Why Businesses Are Outsourcing Payroll As SARS Submission Deadlines Put Teams Under Pressure
- Data Reveals How South Africans Choose Pizza And Other QSR Meals Across Major Fast Food Brands
- Why Photography Tours Offer The Perfect Holiday For Creativity Mindfulness And Travel Discovery
- Ronette Marx Talks Volspoed Modelling And Building Age Zero Aesthetics For International Women’s Day
- Capitec Introduces Pulse System To Improve Customer Support With Real Time Client Insights
- Insider Threats Rise In South African Organisations As Human Risk Becomes A Growing Security Concern
- Standard Bank Reports R23.2bn Half Year Earnings As Retail And Markets Income Strengthen
- Standard Bank Leads As South African Banking Brands Gain Global Strength In 2026 Rankings
- Ghost Elephants Documentary Explores Mystery Of Angola’s Elusive Giants With Werner Herzog
- Dimension Data Nigeria Secures SEC Approval For N20bn Bond To Boost Connectivity Infrastructure
- Vopak Extends Pre FEED Study As Eskom Uncertainty Delays Zululand Energy Terminal Decision
- Castle Lite Investigation Reveals Real Drinking Habits Through Documentary Study Of Abandoned Beers
- World Engineering Day Highlights Aurex Constructors Smart Engineering Drive In Renewable Energy
The Pulse Latest Articles
- Strategy Is Easy. Execution Is Everything (March 5, 2026)
- The Paradox Of Leadership: Ntombizone Feni’s First Year As Ceo (March 4, 2026)
- Beyond The Pit: Why Mining Partnerships Are Being Redefined (March 2, 2026)
- A Refreshing Reset For Your Tastebuds (March 2, 2026)
- Celebrating 125 Years Of Hansgrohe: Setting The Beat Of Water Since 1901 (February 25, 2026)
