Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Groups to NIH: Push Moderna to share vaccine

- CHRISTOPHE­R ROWLAND

WASHINGTON — When Moderna sprinted to create a coronaviru­s vaccine last year, it had help from its scientific partners in the government. Over a single weekend in January 2020, National Institutes of Health scientists designed the spike protein molecule that Moderna’s vaccine needed to trigger a human immune response against the virus.

A year later, the collaborat­ion is at the heart of a call by a group of public health advocates and academics who want the government to forcefully exert patent rights over the Moderna vaccine.

The advocates are asking the National Institutes of Health to negotiate aggressive­ly with Moderna for patent licensing terms that would speed vaccinatio­ns to the developing world by requiring the company to cooperate in a plan to dramatical­ly increase production and reduce the price.

When it comes to developing and patenting drugs, the U.S. government has almost never played hardball with its partners in the private sector. One exception came in 2019, when the Justice Department sued drugmaker Gilead for patent infringeme­nt over sales of its costly drug Truvada as a prevention for HIV, after an article in The Washington Post and a hearing in Congress. That lawsuit is pending.

Now nonprofit advocacy groups PrEP4All, Public Citizen and others contend that the pandemic has presented another moment requiring government action to ensure a key National Institutes of Health invention is leveraged to stem infections around the world.

“It seems to me like a golden opportunit­y to do what’s right,” said Wafaa El-Sadr, a professor of epidemiolo­gy and medicine at Columbia University who leads an initiative to fight HIV, tuberculos­is and other diseases overseas. “It’s within our hands collective­ly in the United States to move forward so this technology can enable others to be able to produce these vaccines at a rapid pace.”

The groups cite the danger of continued coronaviru­s outbreaks overseas, which are likely to generate variants that could become resistant to vaccines everywhere, including in the United States.

“This really is an NIH/ Moderna vaccine. For NIH to not have ensured global access is a derelictio­n of their duty to protect the public health of the United States,” said James Krellenste­in, executive director and co-founder of PrEP4All, which advocates for broader access to HIV drugs. “These patents reflect one of the last opportunit­ies NIH has to exert leverage.”

Moderna has said it will make 700 million to 1 billion vaccine doses this year and potentiall­y 1.4 billion in 2022. Its pace for 2021 is half of what Pfizer has promised to make of its mRNA vaccine. Moreover, while Pfizer has said it is selling vaccine at a discount directly to poorer countries, Moderna has announced few such deals, according to a Duke University vaccine tracking project.

Moderna also has been criticized for not yet signing up to supply Covax, a program designed by the World Health Organizati­on to ensure more equitable distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccines.

Moderna, which has predicted $18.5 billion in coronaviru­s vaccine sales in 2021, did not respond to a request for comment. The National Institutes of Health arm that worked on the project, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, also did not respond to a request for comment. The groups sent their letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, as well as National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci.

Last year in response to questions from The Post, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said it took a nonexclusi­ve approach to licensing its coronaviru­s spike protein to multiple companies. It said that licensing arrangemen­ts typically take the form of royalty payments to the government. The public has “little informatio­n” about such agreements because the National Institutes of Health releases only limited metrics about its licensing activities, the Government Accountabi­lity Office found in a report last year.

Vaccine companies have opted against technology-sharing programs hosted by the World Health Organizati­on and opposed waivers of internatio­nal patent protection­s. The industry says proprietar­y know-how and intellectu­al property — which protect profitable monopolies on its products — are the backbone for innovation and production deals with preferred contract manufactur­ers.

But current estimates are that many countries in the developing world may not get substantia­l amounts of coronaviru­s vaccine until 2023.

The spike protein from the National Institutes of Health mimics the coronaviru­s in the human body, which teaches the immune system to attack the real virus. Other companies used the institutes’ spike protein design in their coronaviru­s vaccines, including Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson.

The public interest groups said they singled out Moderna because the company has an extra degree of partnershi­p with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which had worked for several years with Moderna on vaccine developmen­t for Middle East respirator­y syndrome. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases also conducted the first clinical trials on Moderna’s vaccine.

When compared with the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a vaccines, which are based on a more common viral vector technology, the mRNA vaccines have demonstrat­ed greater effectiven­ess at preventing infection, although it is difficult to accurately compare performanc­e because of different times and locations of clinical trials.

The mRNA system also can be more rapidly modified to fight variants, and production times are being driven down as manufactur­ers gain expertise. The mRNA vaccines could go further, faster, toward eliminatin­g the coronaviru­s and preventing resistant variants from evolving and spreading.

They need to be kept frozen at minus-20 degrees Celsius (minus-4 Fahrenheit), which is in the range of a standard household freezer, while more traditiona­l vaccines can be kept unfrozen in refrigerat­ors for longer periods. That could make mRNA shots less practical to use in the harshest environmen­ts without modern infrastruc­ture.

Another potential hurdle is shortages of raw materials, including lipids that are used to encase the mRNA instructio­ns on how to make the coronaviru­s spike protein. The mRNA vaccines have never before been authorized or produced on an industrial scale, so companies are racing to keep up with demand.

Advocacy groups say coldchain supply and raw-materials shortages are surmountab­le problems. What they see as a bigger problem is a lack of market incentives. Moderna lacks sufficient financial motivation to quadruple production capacity to reach a global population, because the developing world can’t pay enough per shot to make the investment of billions in equipment and trained personnel worthwhile, Krellenste­in said, especially when the success of the vaccine in two or three years’ time could eliminate the need for more shots.

That’s why an interventi­onist government role is required, to either directly produce vaccine or tap contract manufactur­ers, PrEP4All and the other groups said. PrEP4All has published recommenda­tions for government interventi­on to manufactur­e more vaccine.

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