The company was formed in 1997 at the University of Bath as a start-up pharmaceuticals business.[3] In 1999 it acquired Co-ordinated Drug Development and the Centre for Drug Formulation Studies.[4] The company moved from the university campus to a site at Chippenham in 2002.[3] In 2004 it was listed on the Alternative Investment Market.[3] In 2006 it acquired Innovata Biomed plc, another developer of pulmonary products,[5] and then moved onto the full list of the London Stock Exchange.[4] It acquired Activaero, a German manufacturer in the same sector, for £108million in March 2014.[6] In June 2016 Vectura completed a £441million merger with Skyepharma, a maker of devices such as asthma inhalers; it was announced that the merged company would continue to be known as Vectura.[7]
The former Skyepharma manufacturing plant at Lyon, France, makes various oral products including tablets. After Vectura decided to concentrate on inhaled products, in June 2021 the company supported a buy-out of the site by its management, with finance from Bpifrance.[8]
In July 2021, American tobacco company Philip Morris International made an offer to buy Vectura Group for £1 billion.[9]The Carlyle Group, an American private equity firm, also submitted an offer which was £44m lower.[10] The board subsequently accepted the offer from Philip Morris International[11] and, in September 2021, the company confirmed that circa 75% of shareholders had supported the takeover.[12]
Consequences of tobacco industry ownership
The takeover by Philip Morris was widely condemned.[13][14] Because Vectura is now part of the tobacco industry, the company, and people who work for it or in collaboration with it, are subject to policies that exclude the tobacco industry.[15]
Vectura, a company that for over 20 years has worked to treat lung disease, is now part of the tobacco industry. This is inappropriate, unethical and should have been prevented. The society’s policy in relation to the tobacco industry remains clear.[13]
We give official notice that our organizations and members cannot condone new interactions and links with any company wholly owned by a tobacco company such as Phillip Morris International. This is in accordance with our rules, ethical codes, and the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (the UN Tobacco Control Treaty) guidance.[16]
ATS prohibits tobacco companies and those who have received funding from tobacco companies from involvement with the ATS in a number of ways, from publishing in ATS journals, to presenting at our international conference. We believe it’s critical that a separation be maintained between tobacco companies and respiratory health groups. These polices, based on the extensive evidence of misconduct over many years by the tobacco industry, reflect the total lack of confidence we have in any claims from the tobacco industry of efforts to improve health.[17]
The headquarters and development facility at Chippenham, on a mixed industrial site on the outskirts of the town, employs around 250 as of 2022[update].[19] There are also development sites at Cambridge, Muttenz (Basel, Switzerland) and Gauting (Germany).[3] There are plans for a new research & development building at the Bristol and Bath Science Park, not far from Chippenham, which could open in 2025.[20]