Evonik Increases Global Supply of Pharma-Grade Plant-Derived Cholesterol for mRNA Vaccines and Gene Therapies

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Evonik has increased its global supply of plant-derived cholesterol used for mRNA vaccines and gene therapies.

Evonik, a specialty chemical company based in Essen, Germany, has increased its supply of plant-derived cholesterol, a crucial component for the manufacturing of messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines and gene therapies. The production of the cholesterol will meet the increased market demand as it is used in COVID-19 vaccines.

Plant-derived cholesterol is an essential excipient for the lipid-based delivery of large molecules such as mRNA as well as other gene therapies, such as cancer immunotherapy, according to the company. The benefit of using plant-derived cholesterol is the minimized risk of undesired immunological responses and inconsistent quality, which are possible risks when using animal-derived cholesterol.

Evonik’s increased manufacturing capacities for the cholesterol will support the growth of its portfolio of system solutions for advanced drug delivery.

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“As one of the few suppliers of high-quality, non-animal-derived cholesterol for the pharmaceutical industry, we are proud to provide innovators with a critical excipient for a wide range of innovative nucleic acid therapeutics,” said Dr. Thomas Riermeier, head of Evonik’s Health Care business line, in a press release. “Increasing our supply of PhytoChol is a timely step to further fuel the development of mRNA and gene therapies as well as biopharmaceutical cell culture applications.”

Source: Evonik