Company type | Public |
---|---|
Nasdaq: VXRT | |
Industry | Biotechnology |
Founded | 2004 |
Founder | Sean Tucker |
Headquarters | South San Francisco, California |
Key people | Steven Lo (CEO) |
Products | Oral vaccines |
Revenue | US $7.38 million (2023) |
US -$82.4 million (2023) | |
Number of employees | 109 (2023) |
Website | vaxart |
Footnotes / references [1] |
Vaxart, Inc. is an American biotechnology company focused on the discovery, development, and commercialization of oral recombinant vaccines administered using temperature-stable tablets that can be stored and shipped without refrigeration, eliminating the need for needle injection. Its development programs for oral vaccine delivery (Vector-Adjuvant-Antigen Standardized Technology known as VAAST) include prophylactic, enteric-coated tablet vaccines for inhibiting norovirus, seasonal influenza, respiratory syncytial virus, and human papillomavirus. It was founded in 2004 by Sean Tucker.[2] Originally incorporated as West Coast Biologicals, Inc. in California in 2004, the company later changed its name to Vaxart, Inc. in July 2007, after reincorporating in Delaware. A significant development in the company's history was the reverse merger with Aviragen Therapeutics, Inc. on February 13, 2018, which led to Vaxart becoming a wholly-owned subsidiary of Aviragen. Post-merger, the company continued as Vaxart, Inc.[3]
Vaxart's development portfolio includes a range of oral vaccines targeting infectious diseases such as norovirus, COVID-19, and seasonal influenza, as well as therapeutic vaccines like those targeting HPV. The company has achieved significant milestones in its vaccine development, including completing Phase 1 trials for its COVID-19 vaccine candidate and embarking on Phase 2 studies. Vaxart’s vaccines are designed to elicit not only systemic immune responses but also mucosal and T cell responses, which may enhance protection against specific diseases and offer potential benefits for certain cancers and chronic viral infections. The tablet form of these vaccines represents a significant advancement in vaccine administration, potentially improving patient acceptance and resolving distribution challenges.[4]