Deccan Chronicle

ICMR denied due credit for Covaxin

Bharat Biotech underplaye­d role of ICMR, NIV

- BALU PULIPAKA | DC

Earlier this year in May, Bharat Biotech claimed that the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) did not contribute or do anything much for the developmen­t of Covaxin, India’s first indigenous Covid-19 vaccine, other than providing a virus strain from the National Institute of Virology (NIV) in Pune. The Hyderabadb­ased biotech company also said the ICMR had “assisted” with animal tests of Bharat Biotech’s vaccine candidates that actually made the developmen­t of Covaxin possible.

Both the claims of Bharat Biotech, one of India’s major vaccine giants, to put it charitably, are disingenuo­us, prove research into documents, and conversati­ons with people in both the government-owned institutio­ns and other sources.

During a panel discussion organised by the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) and private television channels in May 2021, Dr Suchitra Ella, a top official of Bharat Biotech (holding the position of joint managing director), however, did acknowledg­e that NIV and ICMR “collaborat­ed” with the company for “animal studies” because private industry does not have access to such animals. But she denied on behalf of her company that there was “any technology transfer involved” from the NIV to Bharat Biotech.

Research shows that on the contrary, Bharat Biotech was completely dependent on the Indian Medical Research Council (ICMR) and National Institute of Virology (NIV) for animal testing of its candidate vaccines and all tweaking required in the vaccines to make them effective against the SarsCoV2 virus.

The vaccine maker headed by the Ella couple was also dependent on the ICMR when it requested for a special delivery of 30 pairs of Golden Hamsters to the RCC Laboratori­es, an associate company of Bharat Biotech, ostensibly to undertake toxicology studies of the vaccine.

Incidental­ly, it was another city-based research facility, the National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), also an ICMR lab, for the supply of Golden Hamsters, a rodent popular for animal testing studies of vaccines and drugs developed for human use. It was the NIN, Hyderabad, which supplied around 100 pairs of these animals to NIV, as well an additional 30 pairs to the Bharat Biotechown­ed RCC Laboratori­es.

Following the delivery of Golden Hamsters to the RCC Laboratori­es, there were fears within the ICMR network that the animals could be bred and resold to other research labs. Such was the worry that the prized lab testing animals could be bred and sold without permission from the ICMR, that the issue was flagged up the ICMR chain of command to reiterate that no such activity could be permitted.

It was reliably learnt that nothing more was heard about the fate of the 30 pairs of Golden Hamsters or the studies for the purpose for which they were specially requisitio­ned.

Sources said Bharat Biotech's near "dismissive attitude" towards NIV's contributi­ons to the developmen­t of Covaxin hides the fact that the company was at no time, in any position, to carry out either in vitro or in vivo tests on the SARS-CoV2 virus, a facility that only NIV, Pune, holds and has owing to its Bio-Safety Level 4 lab, which is mandatory for conducting any studies, or tests, on highly contagious organisms such as the Covid-19 causing virus.

It was at the NIV that scientists and researcher­s first establishe­d whether

SARS-CoV2 multiplies in Golden Hamsters.

The NIN scientists then proceeded to studying the virus in what are called 'challenge' studies of the virus and the vaccine candidates in mice, the hamsters, and finally in Rhesus Macaques - a common monkey in India which were caught in Maharashtr­a and then rushed to NIV for studying the virus in primates, the final step before starting human trials of a vaccine.

Sources said the worst of it all was how events at NIV unfolded, following the ICMR lab getting into the act to collaborat­e with Bharat Biotech, was that a substantia­l number of the NIV staff contracted

Covid-19 during the testing phase.

There is total silence on whether the company that prompted and sought collaborat­ion with NIV - in this case Bharat Biotech provided compensati­on for the Covid-19 hit NIV staff.

There has also been no clarity so far from ICMR whether Bharat Biotech, as per standing rules revised ICMR guidelines for sponsored and collaborat­ive R&D - has borne the

50 per cent of all cost incurred by an ICMR lab in such collaborat­ions, has been adhered to by the private sector partner.

The ICMR, previously in reply to an RTI query from a news magazine, said the estimated cost incurred by ICMR towards developmen­t of Covaxin was `35 crore.

However, sources said the figure put out by ICMR was a conservati­ve estimate and the actual cost when calculated properly in terms of NIV's human resources, intellectu­al investment, time and establishm­ent costs would be much more.

When contacted with seven specific queries relating to its collaborat­ion with Bharat Biotech, the NIV responded saying "a lot of the informatio­n is there from the publicatio­ns that have come out of this venture."

Prof. Priya Abraham, lab director, did not elaborate any further.

The NIV also did not respond to a query on the number of its technician­s and staff involved in the Bharat Biotech sought study of the SARS-CoV2 virus, or how many of its staff contracted Covid-19 during animal trials, or whether there were any fatalities among the staff in the process, and who compensate­d for the treatment costs of such individual­s.

THERE HAS also been no clarity so far from ICMR whether Bharat Biotech, as per standing rules - revised ICMR guidelines for sponsored and collaborat­ive R&D has borne the 50 per cent of all cost incurred by an ICMR lab in such collaborat­ions, has been adhered to by the private sector partner.

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