The Astrazeneca logo is pictured on the World Artificial Intelligence Conference 2021 in Shanghai, China, July 7, 2021.
Costfoto | Future Publishing | Getty Images
LONDON — Pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca on Tuesday said it planned to extend its total revenue to $80 billion by 2030 — up 75% from $45.8 billion in 2023.
“We have now quite a lot of confidence on this 80 billion ambition due to portfolio and the breadth and scale of the portfolio that we see today,” AstraZeneca’s Chief Financial Officer Aradhana Sarin told CNBC’s Arabile Gumede on Tuesday.
AstraZeneca will give attention to its oncology, biopharmaceuticals and rare diseases businesses and expects to release an extra 20 medicines in the following six years.
“Lots of them have the potential to be $5 billion drugs,” Sarin noted. An organization statement detailed that this revenue figure might be hit annually for most of the latest medicines in peak years.
Europe-traded shares in AstraZeneca were last 0.66% higher at 9:35 a.m. London time, following the announcement.

AstraZeneca’s plans include developing medicines to treat at the very least half of potential cancers, and developing alternatives to classic treatments like chemotherapy and radiation.
“For the complete market to get replaced it is going to take time, but we predict we’ve the technology today to start out replacing them,” Sarin told CNBC.
Some cancer treatments developed by AstraZeneca have already been approved by the U.S. FDA, including the drug Enhertu, a so-called antibody drug conjugate developed with Japanese drugmaker Daiichi Sankyo, which goals to treat breast cancer patients.
AstraZeneca has also announced acquisitions of pharmaceutical firms, including cancer-treatment focused Fusion Pharmaceuticals Inc. On Monday, the corporate revealed plans to construct an antibody drug conjugate manufacturing facility in Singapore.
“That is the latest technology which is able to replace chemotherapy. That may be very complex manufacturing, which is why you would like an end-to-end which is why we decided to make this investment in Singapore,” Sarin said. Investments have also been made at other AstraZeneca sites, she added.
‘Post-covid era’
AstraZeneca became a household name throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, when it developed one in every of the primary shots against the disease in collaboration with the University of Oxford. The drug, often known as Vaxzevria, will likely be withdrawn from the market, given tapering demand and the emergence of other shots which can be tailored to specific Covid variants.
“For us, obviously, that is the post-Covid era,” Sarin told CNBC. “We supplied vaccines throughout the Covid pandemic more because, you understand, it was a public health crisis. It was not likely our business to be in Covid vaccines.”
AstraZeneca’s business has historically been focused on areas comparable to oncology and cardio-vascular health, and this may remain the corporate’s focus going forward, Sarin said. Drugs for diabetes and metabolic diseases may even play a job in AstraZeneca’s development, she indicated.
“We’re taking a look at some weight management drugs as well, potentially also combining them with drugs that help with comorbidities that quite a lot of the patients with weight management issues have,” she said.
AstraZeneca last yr entered a cope with Shanghai-based pharmaceutical company Eccogene for a weight-loss and cardio-metabolic drug, pushing into the race for weight management medication that’s currently dominated largely by Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Ozempic, in addition to Eli Lilly‘s Mounjaro.
But supply constraints could mean that competitors including Pfizer and Amgen could play an even bigger role out there this yr. Â