The Arizona Republic

Young company tapped for US vaccine injectors

Devices not approved; factory space not set up

- Martha Mendoza and Juliet Linderman

precious vats of COVID-19 vaccine are finally ready, jabbing the lifesaving solution into the arms of Americans will require hundreds of millions of injections.

As part of its strategy to administer the vaccine as quickly as possible, the Trump administra­tion has agreed to invest more than half a billion in tax dollars in ApiJect Systems America, a young company whose injector is not approved by federal health authoritie­s and that hasn’t yet set up a factory to manufactur­e the devices.

The commitment to ApiJect dwarfs the other needle orders the government has placed with a major manufactur­er and two other small companies.

“The fact of this matter is, it would be crazy for people to just rely on us. I would be the first to say it,” said ApiJect CEO Jay Walker. “We should be America’s backup at this point, but probably not its primary.”

Trump administra­tion officials would not say why they are investing so heavily in ApiJect’s technology. The company has made only about 1,000 prototypes to date, and it’s not clear whether those devices can deliver the vaccines that are currently in developmen­t. So far, the leading candidates are using traditiona­l vials to hold the vaccine, and needles and syringes in their clinical trials.

ApiJect founder Marc Koska never intended to vaccinate the United States. For the past five years, he’s been working on his lifetime mission of creating an ultra-low-cost prefilled syringe that would reduce the need to reuse needles in the developing world.

Instead, the company’s biggest customer has become the U.S. government.

ApiJect received a no-bid contract earlier this year from the Defense Department under an exception for “unusual and compelling urgency.”

The government promised ApiJect $138 million to produce 100 million of its devices by the end of the year, which will require the company to retrofit new manufactur­ing lines in existing factories. And it’s offered an additional $456 million as part of a public-private partnershi­p contract to bring online several new factories to make 500 milWhen lion more devices to “contain the pandemic spread to minimize the loss of life and impact to the United States economy,” a military document says.

These amounts are more than double the per-syringe cost the government is paying other companies.

Darin Zehrung, who studied medical devices at PATH, a nonprofit advocating for health equity, said it’s wise to invest in new injection technologi­es. But that only works if there are plenty of basic syringes and needles stocked up.

“Hedging bets is the best approach, but plan for the worst-case scenario and hope for the best-case scenario,” said Zehrung.

The Department of Health and Human Services didn’t allow an official to speak on the record for this story.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP FILE ?? The federal government’s commitment to injector maker ApiJect dwarfs other needle orders the government has placed.
TED S. WARREN/AP FILE The federal government’s commitment to injector maker ApiJect dwarfs other needle orders the government has placed.

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