Marin Independent Journal

AIDS inequities shadow effort to help global poor

- By Sheryl Gay Stolberg

WASHINGTON >> A devastatin­g virus was laying waste to nations that lacked medicines available to Americans. The pills were patented and pricey. Poor countries lacked refrigerat­ion to store them, the thinking went, and patients would not be able to follow the complex dosing regimen.

The year was 2002, the virus was HIV, and the president, George W. Bush, secretly sent his top health advisers to Africa to investigat­e what activists were calling “medical apartheid.” In the 20 years since, the United States has led the way in building a global infrastruc­ture for HIV testing and treatment, saving an estimated 21 million lives.

Now, with that history in mind, global health agencies and the Biden administra­tion are working to bring coronaviru­s tests and expensive antiviral pills to low- and middle-income nations. This week, President Joe Biden will emphasize “global test to treat” at his second internatio­nal COVID-19 summit, a virtual gathering of world leaders aimed at injecting new energy into the internatio­nal pandemic response.

Until now, the response has been focused largely on vaccinatio­ns, which remain a high priority. But Biden will also use the summit to call on wealthy nations to donate $2 billion to purchase COVID treatments and $1 billion to purchase oxygen supplies for low- and middleinco­me countries, according to a senior administra­tion official involved with the planning.

In the United States, where antiviral pills to combat COVID are widely available, Biden's “test to treat” initiative lets many patients go to pharmacies, get tested for COVID and receive a free prescripti­on on the spot if they test positive. In lowand middle-income nations, such efforts will most likely be much more limited until generic pills arrive, probably in 2023.

But the global effort faces some of the same obstacles and inequities that existed two decades ago.

Rich nations, including the United States, have gobbled up much of the supply. Global health agencies do not have the money to buy the antivirals or tests, which are crucial because the medication needs to be started early in the course of infection. Drug companies, trying to protect their patents, are limiting the supply of generic alternativ­es in many middle-income countries, including an entire swath of Latin America.

All of this is playing out against the infectious disease equivalent of a ticking time bomb.

“We all expect a major new surge from omicron or a new variant in the global south from June to September, and if that happens, we are not going to be ready with test and treat,” said Dr. Bill Rodriguez, who runs the testing arm of the ACT Accelerato­r, the Geneva-based consortium coordinati­ng the global response. “It feels extremely similar — painfully, ironically, tragically similar — to what happened with HIV.”

On Monday, ahead of the summit, the consortium, which is backed by the World Health Organizati­on, is set to convene a discussion of global health experts and declare access to testing and treatment an “equity issue,” officials said.

Biden may well show up at his own summit emptyhande­d. The White House has asked Congress for an additional $22.5 billion in emergency coronaviru­s aid, including $5 billion for the global response, but Senate Republican­s are refusing to authorize any funding unless it is offset by cuts to other programs. A $10 billion compromise proposal includes no money for the global response, and it is unclear when or whether that plan will come up for a vote.

“Here we are with another virus that's creating havoc all over the world,” said Gayle Smith, who ran the State Department's global COVID response under Biden and is now chief executive of the One Campaign, an advocacy organizati­on. “Maybe it's not as lethal as HIV, but it's still pretty bad. And we've got therapeuti­cs. How are we going to think about this? Are we going to take the lessons learned and have a plan?”

One of the biggest hurdles is the rapid decline of COVID testing around the world. The WHO-backed consortium recently reported that just 20% of the 5.7 billion tests conducted globally have been in low- and middle-income nations. Low-income countries accounted for less than 1% of the testing. The reasons are twofold: Countries lack money to buy the tests, and demand has dropped in regions where COVID rates are now low.

“What really worries me is the testing part of this,” said Dr. Bruce Aylward, a top WHO official and the consortium's coordinato­r. “If you're not testing, you can't sequence; you can't isolate; you can't treat. Everything else unravels.”

Paxlovid, the more powerful of the two COVID antiviral pills approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, is so plentiful in the United States that pharmacies are struggling to use up their supplies. The Biden administra­tion has committed to purchasing 20 million treatment courses for Americans.

The WHO recently issued a “strong recommenda­tion” that Paxlovid, which is made by Pfizer, be given to patients at high risk of hospitaliz­ation and called for its “wide geographic distributi­on.” The WHO has given a far weaker “conditiona­l recommenda­tion” to the other drug, molnupirav­ir, which is made by Merck and is not nearly as in demand.

Global health experts say both companies have absorbed the lessons of AIDS — but only to a point.

They have each agreed to allocate several million courses of treatment — a total of 7 million courses in all — to UNICEF for distributi­on in most low- and middle-income countries, which account for more than half the world's population. But UNICEF will not be able to buy the drugs unless it can raise the money to do so or countries supply the funds. And 7 million courses is hardly enough to address the need, experts say.

The cost to UNICEF of Paxlovid — including Pfizer's insistence that UNICEF keep how much it pays confidenti­al — remains a sticking point, said Dr. Philippe Duneton, who runs the therapeuti­cs arm of the WHO consortium. In announcing its “strong recommenda­tion” for Paxlovid, the WHO took the highly unusual step of publicly scolding Pfizer for a “lack of transparen­cy,” which makes it difficult to know which countries have the drug and what they are paying.

“We need to have better visibility in terms of price,” Duneton said.

Manufactur­ers often prefer that the details of their sales agreements be secret so as not to weaken their hand with other potential buyers. Pfizer's chief executive, Albert Bourla, reported last week that Paxlovid had been a “key growth driver” for the company, which is using a “tiered pricing approach” in which low- and lowermiddl­e-income countries will get Paxlovid at a notfor-profit price.

In response to an inquiry from The New York Times, Pfizer issued a statement saying that it was “deeply disappoint­ed by the sentiment expressed by our partners,” adding, “We have in good faith heard and responded to many of their concerns.”

So far, 36 companies from 12 countries have signed up to make generic Paxlovid. Companies in India are already making generic versions of both Paxlovid and molnupirav­ir. The expectatio­n is that both drugs will ultimately be available in about 100 low- and middle-income countries, covering about half the world's population. The companies will not receive royalties from the sales while the WHO's declaratio­n of the pandemic as a global health emergency remains in effect.

“Given the severity of the pandemic and given the fact that vaccines had a very uneven penetratio­n rate, we felt that this was a very important contributi­on the company could make,” said Paul Schaper, executive director for global public policy at Merck.

But those generics will not be available until next year. In the meantime, doctors and activists around the world say vulnerable patients are dying as antiviral pills, monoclonal antibodies and even oxygen remain out of reach. In countries with low vaccinatio­n rates, the need is especially urgent.

In Uganda, Dr. Sabrina Kitaka, a pediatrici­an who also advises the government on COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, said many children with underlying conditions — sickle cell disease, diabetes, advanced HIV disease — have had complicati­ons from COVID-19. She has lost young patients who would have been eligible for Paxlovid, which is approved in the United States for children 12 and older who weigh at least 40 kilograms, or about 88 pounds.

“Paxlovid will be the game changer,” Kitaka said. That is especially true “for patients who become critically ill and end up in the ICU,” she added.

In the Dominican Republic, Pfizer is fighting a petition for the government to compel the company to share its patents for Paxlovid with generic makers. Similar petitions have been filed in Colombia, Chile and Peru.

“Both Merck and Pfizer have reserved for themselves all the high-income countries and virtually all of the upper-middle-income countries and even some lowermiddl­e-income countries,” said Brook Baker, a law professor at Northeaste­rn University who has submitted a legal brief in support of the Dominican Republic petition.

In Brazil, regulators have authorized both Paxlovid and molnupirav­ir. The country and Pfizer are negotiatin­g a purchase agreement so Paxlovid can be offered for free through Brazil's public health system.

But a quarter of Brazilians have private insurance and may already have access to the drug, said Felipe Carvalho, coordinato­r of the Doctors Without Borders Access Campaign in Latin America.

“We have a world divided between treatment for the rich and treatment for the poor, still today,” Carvalho said, adding, “We are still struggling 20 years, 30 years after the HIV-AIDS crisis to convince companies to do the right thing.”

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA — CHICAGO TRIBUNE — TNS ?? SureCare Pharmacy manager Oscar Uribe displays a package of Pfizer Paxlovid pills, a treatment for COVID-19, in the Brighton Park neighborho­od of Chicago on Jan. 13.
CHRIS SWEDA — CHICAGO TRIBUNE — TNS SureCare Pharmacy manager Oscar Uribe displays a package of Pfizer Paxlovid pills, a treatment for COVID-19, in the Brighton Park neighborho­od of Chicago on Jan. 13.

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