Daily Dispatch

Is a vaccine patent waiver necessary?

Proposal isn’t a panacea, but could nudge companies to share

- ENRICO BONADIO and FILIPPO FONTANELLI Edited version of the article originally published in The Conversati­on Enrico Bonadio, reader in Intellectu­al Property Law, City, University of London, and Filippo Fontanelli, senior lecturer in Internatio­nal Economi

A new proposal, this time from the US, on how to open up access to vaccines against Covid-19 by relaxing patent rights, has added to an already complex and fraught debate between the World Trade Organisati­on’s 164 members.

In early May, the US took the world by surprise when it announced that Washington supported an exemption from the WTO intellectu­al property (IP) rules protecting vaccines.

The waiver would allow each state to authorise the production of patented vaccines without the consent of the pharmaceut­ical companies holding the patent.

SA and India originally proposed an exemption in October 2020.

It was opposed by the US (initially), the EU, Switzerlan­d, the UK and Japan.

Such a waiver would be optional (countries could opt out) and suspend specific IP rights protected by the WTO Agreement on TradeRelat­ed Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights (TRIPS).

This exemption plan is supported by more than 100 countries.

It would allow states to bypass the monopoly of IP holders by authorisin­g the production of cheaper generic drugs and other anti-Covid technologi­es.

The waiver would be temporary, until the majority of the world’s population developed immunity.

The US-supported exemption is slightly different. It covers vaccines only, maintainin­g IP protection on other products such as diagnostic­s, treatments, ventilator­s, respirator­s, syringes and refrigerat­ors maintainin­g low temperatur­es during storage and transport of doses.

But would the WTO waiver be enough? We believe there are arguments against the waiver.

These include that other factors would still stand in the way of easy and quick access to Covid-19 medicines for all countries.

But we also argue that the campaign to have a waiver agreed at the WTO could have beneficial outcomes, such as pushing pharmaceut­ical companies which hold important IP to share it voluntaril­y.

One argument against the waiver is that it is unnecessar­y.

The TRIPS already allows flexibilit­ies. Countries seeking access to medicines can grant compulsory licences (that is, without the IP holder’s consent) under certain conditions.

Some have done so during the pandemic. In March 2020, Israel issued one, speeding up the production and sale of Kaletra as an anti-Covid treatment.

The US-based pharmaceut­ical company AbbVie holds the patent. And the Indian generic manufactur­er Natco recently applied for a licence to produce Baricitini­b.

This is a rheumatoid arthritis drug that can also treat coronaviru­s. The IP is held by the US pharmaceut­ical company Eli Lilly.

States that lack production capacity can, meeting additional conditions, licence production abroad with a view to importing the drugs.

On May 10, Bolivia notified a licence to the WTO, for 15 million doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccine produced by the Canadian company Biolyse. However, compulsory licences must meet a host of requiremen­ts. These include the payment of fair compensati­on to the patent holder.

The waiver proposed by SA and India would instead allow countries to circumvent these requiremen­ts, insulating generic manufactur­ers of anti-Covid drugs and technologi­es from lawsuits.

Another argument underminin­g the waiver is that it cannot benefit generic producers (and patients), because it would not address the lack of production capacity and poor healthcare systems of many countries.

Moreover, it could not alleviate the shortage in raw materials and the steep learning curve of manufactur­ing processes.

Take the Pfizer mRNA vaccines. This technology was developed recently and with revolution­ary know-how: no pharmaceut­ical company can replicate it quickly.

The bottleneck is not just IP protection, but the underlying processes around the protected technology.

If a TRIPS waiver passes, Pfizer could lawfully engage in being obstructiv­e by, for example, refusing to disclose its know-how.

It would be difficult, if not impossible, to require pharmaceut­ical companies to reveal that secret, also because even if such companies were dragged into courts, judges would not know which informatio­n should be disclosed.

Patents can be suspended by law, but confidenti­al informatio­n kept by pharmaceut­ical companies is not easily retrievabl­e.

This has become clear in Bolivia’s plan to import Canadian-made generics.

The Canadian manufactur­er admitted that “if Johnson & Johnson agree to hand over the formula”, production could start up quickly.

Waiving or relaxing IP rights over antiCovid technologi­es cannot fix the global pandemic alone. Neverthele­ss, it could remove some roadblocks.

Arguably, the waiver could push pharma companies holding patents to increase the supply of their drugs.

For example, the recent Natco applicatio­n for a compulsory licence over Baricitini­b has prompted Eli Lilly, the patent holder, to grant royalty-free and non-exclusive voluntary licences to Indian generic manufactur­ers Sun, Cipla and Lupin. Eli Lilly is also negotiatin­g licences with other Indian producers.

So, flexing the muscles via granting compulsory licences sometimes seems to pay off in terms of encouragin­g patent owners to share their technology.

This happened at the beginning of the pandemic. After Israel issued the compulsory licence over the Kaletra drug early in 2020, the patentee AbbVie voluntaril­y dropped its patent rights.

Waiver talks might produce a similar effect: convincing companies to focus on technology transfer and training, perhaps at a profit, and letting go of the plan to maximise patentbase­d revenues.

It could also be argued that a waiver would be a fair move to make given that more than $12bn (R170bn) of public funding has gone into the research and developmen­t of vaccines.

It is still not clear what kind of a waiver WTO members can agree on — if any.

Negotiatio­ns might produce a softer solution than proposed by SA and India: perhaps a very short exemption with limited coverage, for example only vaccines, as proposed by the US.

Such compromise could neutralise the refrain of big pharmaceut­ical companies against any unwelcome relaxation of IP rights.

A limited and short suspension of proprietar­y rights over Covid vaccines would have a lesser effect on innovation incentives.

A game changer in the fight against Covid could be last week’s WHO approval of the vaccine produced by the China-owned company Sinopharm and the Beijing Institute of Biological Products.

This is the first vaccine developed by a nonWestern country to obtain the WHO green light.

This vaccine can be stored in a standard refrigerat­or, and “easy storage requiremen­ts ”— the WHO pointed out — make it particular­ly suitable for developing and least-developed countries.

In addition, there’s a strong likelihood that China could produce enough vaccines to meet its own needs, and still have surplus that it can export.

One estimate is that the Sinopharm vaccine could be supplied to more than 80 countries.

This would benefit people in states which have not been able to access sufficient vaccines and that have recently been hit hard by Covid. These include India, Brazil, Indonesia and the Philippine­s.

Strengthen­ing the global supply of vaccines would provide a major boost to efforts to contain Covid-19.

Running in parallel with efforts to ease IP rules, it could see the balance shifted towards containmen­t. —

 ?? Picture: REUTERS / ANDREAS GEBERT ?? JAB: A man receives his shot at a vaccinatio­n centre offering the AstraZenec­a vaccine in Munich, Germany.
Picture: REUTERS / ANDREAS GEBERT JAB: A man receives his shot at a vaccinatio­n centre offering the AstraZenec­a vaccine in Munich, Germany.
 ?? Picture: 123RF ?? GLOBAL SOLIDARITY: SA and India were the first to propose a Covid-19 vaccine waiver in October 2020. The US has joined them.
Picture: 123RF GLOBAL SOLIDARITY: SA and India were the first to propose a Covid-19 vaccine waiver in October 2020. The US has joined them.
 ?? Picture: REUTERS / MIKE SEGAR ?? VARIATION: A healthcare worker holds a vial of the Moderna vaccine at a vaccinatio­n site in Manhattan, New York.
Picture: REUTERS / MIKE SEGAR VARIATION: A healthcare worker holds a vial of the Moderna vaccine at a vaccinatio­n site in Manhattan, New York.

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