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Letter Urging HHS to Increase NIH-Moderna Vaccine Access

NIH-Moderna letter

Dear Secretary Becerra, Dr. Collins, and Dr. Fauci:

We write about the soon-to-issue-patent, U.S. Patent No. 10,960,070 (“the ’070 patent”),1 that protects the use of proline-substituted coronavirus spike proteins stabilized in their prefusion conformation as a vaccine immunogen. The mRNA-1273 vaccine, co-developed by NIAID and Moderna, utilizes this technology for its immunogen.2 The ’070 patent is owned by the United States Government, reflecting the critical contributions that NIAID and NIH made to the invention of this technology.3

This government-owned patent is an important policy tool that the U.S. government could use to facilitate scale up of production of mRNA-1273 and ensure rapid, equitable global access.

Currently, at best, only one billion doses of mRNA-1273 will be produced in 20214, far short of global demand.

The U.S. government has not licensed the patent to Moderna.5 It is imperative that the NIH uses any licensing agreement to include provisions to help increase global access to this lifesaving technology, rather than just a monetary royalty.

Specifically, the licensing agreement should:

1.     Empower the U.S. government to authorize manufacturing of mRNA-1273 – including by government-owned production facilities.

Currently, Moderna has only contracted with a single contract manufacturing organization (CMO), Lonza Group AG, to produce drug substance for mRNA-1273. By contracting with other CMOs to produce drug substance and help perform other manufacturing steps, more doses of mRNA-1273 could be produced. Such provisions should include the ability for the

U.S. government to compel transfer of know-how from Moderna to other CMOs to facilitate scale up for all production steps of the manufacturing process.

 

2.     Require technology sharing with the World Health Organization to help ramp up global production.

The Director-General of the World Health Organization has urged countries to share vaccine technology and know-how openly to help build global manufacturing capacity.6 Moderna has so far ignored requests from developing country manufacturers to share technology.7 Requiring Moderna to work with the WHO’s COVID-19 technology access pool can help unlock additional production.

 

3.     Include requirements for accessible pricing universally.

Moderna is currently charging between US$10 and US$40 a dose for mRNA-12738, despite it costing less than $3 a dose to manufacture9. This high price, coupled with Moderna’s lack of planned market entry for many low- and middle-income countries, may prevent those most in need from accessing mRNA-1273. Licensing the ’070 patent gives the U.S. government leverage to increase global access by requiring accessible pricing to mRNA-1273.

Assertion of U.S. government-owned intellectual property to increase access to pharmaceutical products is not unprecedented. In 2019, the federal government sued Gilead Sciences for its infringement of government owned patents protecting the use of Truvada and Descovy for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) – and per the complaint itself, is using that litigation to increase access to PrEP.10 That lawsuit is ongoing.

U.S. taxpayers have invested over $2.5 billion in the development of mRNA-1273.11 Now it is time for our government to ensure that this critical lifesaving technology be made available to all. This could contribute to saving millions of lives globally. It also will help protect public health here at home. Global vaccination with highly effective vaccines, like mRNA-1273, is our best defense against the development of vaccine-resistant variants of SARS-CoV2.

 

Thank you.

Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, comments or concerns. We would like to meet with you and your teams as soon as possible regarding this issue.

 

Sincerely,

PrEP4All

Public Citizen

I-MAK

HealthGAP

Health Justice Initiative

AVAC

 

Linda P. Fried, MD, MPH

Dean and DeLamar Professor of Public Health Mailman School of Public Health

Professor of Epidemiology and Medicine Columbia University

 

Cheryl G. Healton, DrPH, MPAi Dean, School of Global Public Health

Professor. Health Policy and Management New York University

 

Ayman El-Mohandes, MBBCh, MD, MPH

Dean, Graduate School of Public Health & Health Policy City University of New York (CUNY)

 

Monica Gandhi MD, MPH

Professor of Medicine and Associate Division Chief (Clinical Operations/ Education) Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases, and Global Medicine

University of California, San Francisco

 

Adaora A. Adimora, MD, MPH

Sarah Graham Kenan Distinguished Professor of Medicine, Professor of Epidemiology The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

 

Chris Beyrer MD, MPH

Desmond M. Tutu Professor in Public Health and Human Rights Professor of Epidemiology, Nursing and Medicine

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Senior Scientific Liaison, COVID Vaccine Prevention Network, Co-VPN

 

Steffanie Strathdee, PhD

Associate Dean of Global Health Sciences, Harold Simon Professor

Department of Medicine

University of California, San Diego

Co-Director, Center for Innovative Phage Applications & Therapeutics (IPATH)

 

Kenneth Mayer M.D.

Infectious Disease Attending and Director of HIV Prevention Research Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Professor of Medicine Harvard Medical School

 

Wafaa El-Sadr, MD, MPH, MPA

University Professor of Epidemiology and Medicine Columbia University

 

Carlos del Rio, MD Executive Associate Dean

Emory School of Medicine & Grady Health System Distinguished Professor

Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Emory University School of Medicine Professor

Hubert Department of Global Health-Rollins School of Public Health Co-Director

Emory Center for AIDS Research Co-PI

Emory-CDC HIV Clinical Trials Unit and the Emory Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit

 

John P. Moore, PhD

Professor of Microbiology and Immunology Weill Cornell Medical School

 

Gregg Gonsalves, PhD

Assistant Professor, Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases Yale School of Public Health

Associate Professor (Adjunct) and Research Scholar Yale Law School

Co-Director, Yale Global Health Justice Partnership Affiliated Faculty, Public Health Modeling Unit Affiliated Faculty, Addiction Medicine

Affiliated Faculty, Jackson Institute for Global Affairs

 

Matthew M. Kavanagh, PhD Visiting Professor of Law

Assistant Professor of Global Health

Director, Global Health Policy & Politics Initiative Georgetown University

 

Christopher J. Morten, JD, PhD Deputy Director

Technology Law and Policy Clinic New York University School of Law

 

David Barr Principal

The Fremont Center