Merit and Getinge to start work as NHS Medicines Manufacturing Centre gets the green light

Published: 13-Nov-2024

Construction expert Merit has been appointed for the design and fit-out of the sterile medicine facility, while Getinge has been chosen to provide the necessary high-tech isolator equipment

A new NHS Medicines Manufacturing Centre has been approved in North East and North Cumbria.

Following a meeting of the Joint Investment Sub-Committee (JISC), plans for the new regional facility got the green light.

The manufacture of sterile medicines in the NHS plays a vital, but often unseen part in the delivery of safe and high-quality patient care. Known as ‘aseptic’ services, NHS Foundation Trusts across the region already have their own production units but these are all working at, or nearing, capacity. 

The new NHS Medicines Manufacturing Centre will serve the region’s entire hospital network and support existing aseptic units. It will produce large volumes of chemotherapy treatment, as well as other ‘ready to administer’ injectable medicines, including intravenous antibiotics.

It will also manufacture ‘pre-labelled’ medicines to help support local hospital teams as patients are discharged home.

The new facility will work in a 'hub and spoke' model alongside existing aseptic units

Based at Seaton Delaval, the new facility will work in a 'hub and spoke' model alongside existing aseptic units in the region’s hospitals and aims to greatly increase capacity. It will safeguard the supply of vital drugs for patients in the region for the next 20 years by creating an in-house and sustainable supply chain within the NHS.

The region’s NHS plans to start operating from the new Medicines Manufacturing Centre in spring 2026 once full approval is granted from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

Contractors appointed

Following a competitive tendering process, local construction company Merit has been appointed to design and ‘fit out’ the new facility, whilst specialist supplier, Getinge, will provide the high-tech isolator equipment used to manufacture the medicines.

Work is ongoing with Merit to finalise the detailed design and with Getinge, who will supply the specialist isolator equipment. Building work will start on-site in Seaton Delaval this autumn.

Work is ongoing with Merit to finalise the detailed design and with Getinge, who will supply the specialist isolator equipment

Tony Wells, CEO at Merit, a North East-based specialist off-site construction firm, said: "We are looking forward to getting started on this exciting project and using our vast experience in the design of sterile manufacturing facilities. Merit’s FLEXI POD solution is ideal for this project, bringing enormous advantages in terms of speed, quality, a sustainable centric design, and affordability."

Once the new regional facility is up and running, it will release capacity in local hospital units allowing them to focus on more complex, bespoke medicines close to patients.

There will also be major benefits for staff and patients, by freeing up valuable nursing time on hospital wards to allow staff to provide other clinical care, rather than having to prepare injectable medicines themselves.

NHS leaders, working together through the North East and North Cumbria Provider Collaborative, secured the £29.7m of national NHS funding thanks to a successful joint bid between the region’s NHS Foundation Trusts back in November 2022.

The £29.7m cash injection for the region’s NHS comes following a national review of NHS pharmacy aseptic services which took place in 2020

The £29.7m cash injection for the region’s NHS comes following a national review of NHS pharmacy aseptic services which took place in 2020.

It is part of £75m allocated to NHS England’s Infusions and Special Medicines Programme to develop a number of pathfinder hub sites across the country for the production of aseptic medicines. The North East and North Cumbria Medicines Manufacturing Centre is the largest of these sites representing a significant benefit to the region. 

Chair of the region’s Provider Collaborative and Chief Executive of South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust, Mr Ken Bremner MBE, said: "Our existing aseptic units across the region will continue to play a vital role, but this new facility now means we can achieve much better manufacturing efficiencies by working on a much bigger scale. It will allow us to greatly increase our capacity for medicines production, create a sustainable model for the future and help us save time and money that we can reinvest in patient care."

Chief Executive of the Integrated Care Board (ICB) for the North East and North Cumbria, Samantha Allen, said: "Making sure we have our own supply of ready-made injectable medicines manufactured in-house by the NHS, for the NHS, is great news for patients. We know pressure in this area will only increase as medicines and treatments continue to advance and this will futureproof the supply chain for many years to come for people here in our region. It really is a major feat for health and care in the region and great news for our overall economy." 

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