Business Day

Pharma industry pushes for Africa to get licence to make generic HIV injection

- Tamar Kahn Health & Science Correspond­ent kahnt@businessli­ve.co.za

An industry associatio­n representi­ng SA pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers has criticised the Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) for failing to grant licences to African generic drug makers to make cheap copies of ViiV Healthcare’s long-acting cabotegrav­ir injection, which prevents HIV infections.

Africa bears a disproport­ionate share of the world’s HIV/Aids burden, and the AU is pushing hard for the continent’s pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers to play a bigger role in making products for combating HIV. Its drive to improve Africa’s security of supply gained fresh momentum during the coronaviru­s pandemic, as countries with domestic Covid-19 vaccine manufactur­ing capacity prioritise­d their own citizens when shots were in short supply, leaving African nations at the back of the queue.

Pharmaceut­icals Made in SA (Pharmisa) chair Stavros Nicolaou said the dearth of African manufactur­ers in the deal announced last week by the MPP was at odds with recent policies flighted by the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Pepfar) and the vaccine alliance Gavi emphasisin­g the strategic importance of strengthen­ing Africa’s pharmaceut­ical industry. The MPP signed sublicence­s with Indian generic manufactur­ers Cipla, Aurobindo and Viatris subsidiary Mylan.

“The fact that there is not one African manufactur­er among them is puzzling, to say the least,” said Nicolaou. “The MPP has done fantastic work to improve access to HIV, TB and malaria treatments. But it is really difficult for African manufactur­ers to get licences from them.”

Only four African companies are among the dozens of drug makers awarded sub-licences flowing from the agreements signed by the MPP with 18 patent holders on products for HIV, tuberculos­is, malaria, cancer and Covid-19.

Three of these companies are South African: Adcock Ingram, which has licences for nine HIV products; Biotech, with a licence for a Covid-19 antibody test; and CPT Pharma, with one for a Covid-19 treatment. The fourth, Kenya’s Universal Corporatio­n, has a licence to make generic HIV treatments. Africa’s biggest generic drug manufactur­er, SAbased Aspen Pharmacare, has secured voluntary licences directly from patent holders.

MPP spokespers­on Sophie Thievenaz said one African company had bid for a licence to make generic cabotegrav­ir, but did not meet the selection criteria. “Aurobindo and Viatris will manufactur­e in India. Cipla will manufactur­e in India and has plans to manufactur­e in SA as well,” she said.

Cabotegrav­ir, administer­ed every two months, was registered by the SA Health Products Regulatory Authority in 2022. While studies have shown it is more effective than daily pills to prevent HIV, whether it will be affordable and readily available in countries hard hit by the virus remains an open question.

Thievenaz said the price of generic cabotegrav­ir had yet to be determined, but the MPP expects competitio­n among producers to help drive down prices to levels middle-and lowincome countries can afford.

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