PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom

Special PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom
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The panel discussed the new era of diagnosing patients, understanding diseases, and accelerating precision medicine. (Supplied)
Special PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom
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The Kingdom can potentially be a center of excellence and a real hallmark providing the best practice globally, explained Kim Stratton. (Supplied)
Special PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom
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The strategic collaboration between Lifera and Contengene will provide Saudis with training opportunities. (Supplied)
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Updated 30 November 2023
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PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom

PIF’s Lifera, Centogene aim to deliver world-class multiomic testing in Kingdom
  • Strategic cooperation between Lifera and Centogene set to increase local and regional access to world-class multiomic testing in the Kingdom and the Gulf region
  • CEO of Centogene Kim Stratton: The vision is to have end-to-end diagnostics here in Riyadh and we will be the wet lab, setting up the wet lab, the wet lab capabilities

RIYADH: Centogene, a life science partner for data-driven answers in rare and neurodegenerative diseases based in Germany, and Lifera, a biopharmaceutical company owned by the Public Investment Fund, have announced Lifera Omics, their new joint venture.

Chairman of Lifera Ibrahim Al-Juffali, joined Kim Stratton, CEO of Centogene, and Peter Bauer, its chief medical and genomic officer, on the second day of the Global Healthspan Summit in Riyadh to discuss a new era of diagnosing patients, understanding diseases, and accelerating precision medicine.

Strategic cooperation between Lifera and Centogene was announced in June this year and is set to increase local and regional access to world-class multiomic testing in the Kingdom and the Gulf region.

Stratton said: “The vision is to have end-to-end diagnostics here in Riyadh and we will be the wet lab, setting up the wet lab, the wet lab capabilities. So that’s everything from sample entry to increasingly doing the diagnostic.”

Lifera Omics will look to transform the lives of people in the Gulf region by offering cutting-edge genomic and multiomic testing services to patients, health systems, biopharma companies, and research institutes.

Lifera Omics works by merging information from phenomics, genomics, transcriptomics, epigenomics, proteomics, and metabolomics to deliver a comprehensive clinical picture.

Bauer said: “It is a product from the patient back to the patient.”

The collaboration between Lifera and Centogene will also provide Saudis with training opportunities, while helping to nurture local and international talents.

Al-Juffali said: “We are going to have a team that is composed of local and international talents, and potentially be able to attract local talent, taking into consideration the diverse capacity of university research centers and educational institutions here that will be able to educate people interested in the field.”

Training will include opportunities for Saudis to travel to Germany.

Stratton said: “(This will) immerse (them) in the way we do (things). It is the incentive to help train them and then (they can) be taken back to Saudi so that they can train others.”

Lifera aims to create partnerships with leading local and international companies while attracting targeted investments to boost local capacity and drive domestic manufacturing in the sector.

Stratton said: “We should be able to attract pharma partners to come here to the region, and if you are developing a product for certain high-risk diseases here, we should be able to attract the clinical development of those products here.”

Investment aims at manufacturing lifesaving and essential pharma products, including insulins, vaccines, plasma therapeutics, monoclonal antibodies, cell and gene therapies, and innovative small molecules.


Saudi pharma firms fined $180,000 over product shortages

Saudi pharma firms fined $180,000 over product shortages
Updated 5 sec ago
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Saudi pharma firms fined $180,000 over product shortages

Saudi pharma firms fined $180,000 over product shortages
  • Violations cited by the SFDA included failure to report to the authority’s drug track and trace system
  • SFDA said that it imposed penalties on the 24 firms as outlined in its product guidelines

RIYADH: The Saudi Food and Drug Authority has imposed fines totaling SR678,400 ($180,000) on 24 pharmaceutical firms over failures to provide registered products in the local market.

Violations cited by the SFDA included failure to report to the authority’s drug track and trace system, failure to notify the authority of likely shortages or supply interruptions, and failure to maintain adequate stocks of products, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The SFDA said that it imposed penalties on the 24 firms as outlined in its product guidelines to pharmaceutical, and herbal and health product manufacturers.

According to the guidelines, pharmaceutical and herbal manufacturers, as well as warehouses, are required to maintain sufficient stocks of all registered products for six months, based on annual data reviewed by the SFDA.

Any stock shortages must be addressed within three months, unless the authority issues a decision to cancel the product registrations.

Pharmaceutical and herbal manufacturers, along with their representatives, must notify the SFDA of any anticipated shortages or interruptions in the supply of registered products at least six months from the expected time of the disruption.

Firms are also required to provide solutions to help address the shortage.

This aligns with the SFDA’s commitment to ensuring that pharmaceutical establishments adhere to its regulations guaranteeing the availability of medicine across the Kingdom.

Penalties can reach up to SR5 million, in addition to the potential closure of the facility or cancelation of its license.

The SFDA said violations can be reported by contacting the unified number 19999.


KSrelief Project clears 1,338 Explosives in Yemen

KSrelief Project clears 1,338 Explosives in Yemen
Updated 26 September 2024
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KSrelief Project clears 1,338 Explosives in Yemen

KSrelief Project clears 1,338 Explosives in Yemen

RIYADH: Saudi's aid agency KSrelief's Masam Project dismantled 1,338 explosives in various governorates of Yemen reported state news agency SPA on Wednesday.

This included three anti-personnel explosives, 35 anti-tank explosives, and 1,300 unexploded ordnances.

Since the project's inception, a total of 462,289 explosives have been cleared.

The Masam project is dedicated to clearing explosives in Yemen.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, through KSrelief, remains committed to ridding Yemeni lands of all explosives.

This ongoing threat has tragically resulted in the loss of lives and caused injuries to innocent children, women, and the elderly.


KSrelief delivers Gaza humanitarian Aid to Jordan

KSrelief delivers Gaza humanitarian Aid to Jordan
Updated 26 September 2024
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KSrelief delivers Gaza humanitarian Aid to Jordan

KSrelief delivers Gaza humanitarian Aid to Jordan

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSrelief delivered a new shipment of aid for the Gaza Strip to the Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization (JHCO) in Amman reported state news agency SPA on Wednsday.

The Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization (JHCO) in Amman is preparing aid packages to send to Gaza via Jordanian land crossings.

The aid included 10 trucks loaded with 1,280 shelter bags and 3,537 baskets of essential food items, aimed at securing the daily needs of those affected by the crises.

 


At UN open debate, Saudi FM says violators of international law must be held accountable without favor

At UN open debate, Saudi FM says violators of international law must be held accountable without favor
Updated 26 September 2024
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At UN open debate, Saudi FM says violators of international law must be held accountable without favor

At UN open debate, Saudi FM says violators of international law must be held accountable without favor

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister said restoring respect for international conventions and norms comes through the application of international law and international humanitarian law, and holding violators accountable without being selective.

Prince Faisal bin Farhan said the absence of serious international action to stop the ongoing Israeli military escalation is conclusive evidence of the shortcomings of the multilateral international system and the weakness of international political will.

“The Kingdom believes that peace is the foundation that paves the way for cooperation and development, and is the protector of their sustainability,” Prince Faisal said during the “Leadership for Peace” open debate on the sidelines of the 79th UN General Assembly in New York.

Prince Faisal said the meeting comes at a time when the pace of conflicts and crises is escalating, common challenges and threats are multiplying, and the crisis of confidence in the multilateral international system and its ability to achieve the hopes of peoples for a future of peace and development is growing.

“These circumstances require us to evaluate the state of international multilateral action and the reasons for its decline in resolving crises and addressing common challenges,” he added.

Prince Faisal said Saudi Arabia “will continue to support the multilateral international system, seek to develop it, enable its purposes, and restore confidence in its institutions. It is also committed to strengthening collective action to achieve common security and development.”


AlUla dates auction bears fruitful results

AlUla dates auction bears fruitful results
Updated 25 September 2024
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AlUla dates auction bears fruitful results

AlUla dates auction bears fruitful results

RIYADH: Farmers at AlUla Dates Auction in northwestern Saudi Arabia are moving date boxes from the bottom to the top to encourage buyers to trust the quality of the goods exhibited and the cleanliness of their harvest.

One farmer said that a batch of dates he sold earlier retailed for roughly SR3 (80 cents) less than the projected price for a kilogram, but he was pleased to later sell another type of dates for SR7 ($1.87) more a kilogram.

Many farmers transport ripe dates at the end of summer to the market square while specialized transport companies manage exports to major cities and outside of the Kingdom.

Saud Al-Anzi, another farmer, pointed to two piles of date boxes on either side of the market, one of which had been sold at auction while the other awaited its turn.

He anticipated a fair price of about SR10 a kilogram for his premium variety, known as “berni,” but the auction surprised him shortly afterwards with a price about SR4 higher.

Omar Al-Balawi, the general supervisor of AlUla Dates Auction, told Arab News that the auction was established to root the market value of AlUla dates and enhance their competitiveness after farmers previously traveled long distances to other markets, especially in Madinah, which is about 350 km from their farms in the northern province of the Madinah region.

He said that several gains have been achieved for both farmers and buyers, raising the quality of the varieties and ensuring fair prices.

AlUla Date Auction is continuing its events as part of the “Date Season” during the Fridays and Saturdays of September and October, having been extended for an additional two weeks to allow distant farms in the province to participate in the auction and provide an opportunity for their dates to ripen.

The Royal Commission for AlUla, in collaboration with several government and private entities, organized the auction at Al-Iskan playground south of AlUla until Nov. 9.

The auction allows AlUla farmers to showcase their date products to buyers and investors from within and outside the Kingdom.

The auction establishes competitiveness for AlUla dates in local, regional and global markets, in line with AlUla Vision, which aligns with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 aimed at enhancing the Kingdom’s role to become the largest exporter of dates worldwide.

As part of the festival, AlUla Date Auction 2024 Award will be held for participating farmers in the festival auction, where the first-place winner will be awarded SR75,000 ($20,000), the second 50,000 ($13,300), and the third 30,000 ($8,000).

Winners will be selected on specific criteria related to the quantity and total value of sales.