

Image: The bio-tech company, Vaxxas will use it's new site in Brisbane to serve as its headquarters. Image: Wikimedia Commons
By CHRISTINE LAI
Vaxxas, an Australian biotechnology company that is leading vaccine patch technology has opened its doors to a new site in Hamilton which will serve as its global headquarters.
The Queensland biotech company expects to manufacture millions of needle-free vaccine patches at its new Brisbane plant over the next three to five years. Vaxxas’s vaccine patch technology can deposit a vaccine through the surface of the skin in seconds.
According to the information available on its website, the biotech company has stated its focus on initial applications in infectious disease and oncology. It has also established collaborations with renowned global organizations involved in vaccine commercialization, such as Merck/MSD, the United States Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
The Vaxxas Biomedical Facility covers an area of 5,500 square meters (equivalent to 60,000 square feet) and will support the company’s operations to scale up and produce HD-MAP vaccines for upcoming late-stage clinical trials and the release of their first commercial products. Economic Development Queensland worked alongside Vaxxas to progress designs and approval for the global headquarters facility.
Vaxxas uses HD-MAP technology platform, which administers vaccines to immune cells directly below the skin’s surface through a patch. The platform uses an ultra-high-density array of projections that are not visible to the naked human eye and are integrated into a small applicator device, with a patch that is placed on the skin. Benefits to this vaccine patch application include faster and increased immune response with lower doses, eliminating the need for refrigeration, and broad accessibility with the potential for self-administration.
Deputy Premier Steven Miles called the news of the manufacturing facility beneficial for Queensland and its continued development of global research and innovation hub due to the investment by Palaszczuk’s Government.
“The Palaszczuk Government is committed to supporting homegrown biomedical start-ups to scale up successfully and ensure we keep this innovation and our best and brightest researchers on home soil,” Deputy Premier Miles said.
