Big pharma needs big collaboration to scale up COVID-19 vaccine production

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Researchers in the US are calling for pharmaceutical companies to share information on their manufacturing processes in order to be able to meet the global demand for COVID-19 vaccines. They say that maintaining secrecy over technical information could cause "dramatic failures", and knowledge-sharing processes between companies need to be thought through while new vaccines are still in development stages.

Journal/conference: Science

Link to research (DOI): 10.1126/science.abc9588

Organisation/s: Duke University Law School, USA

Funder: W.N.P and T.M were supported by the Novo Nordisck Foundation.

Media release

From: AAAS

Large-Scale COVID-19 Vaccine Production Will Require Knowledge Transfer on Manufacturing

Massive, rapid production of vaccines to fight COVID-19 will require firms to share know-how not just about what to make, but how to make it, write Nicholson Price and colleagues in this Policy Forum. They cite the recent approval granted by the U.S. Department of Justice to six pharmaceutical firms to exchange “technical information” on manufacturing processes related to monoclonal antibody (mAb) candidates as an example – one that might pave the way for standardizing manufacturing of biologics going forward. As the world rushes to identify safe and effective vaccines and therapeutics to counter the COVID-19 epidemic, attention is turning to the next step: manufacturing these products at enormous scale. This might require, in some cases, companies to make products originally developed by other firms, in which case they may need to know that company’s manufacturing methods. For myriad reasons, however, patents on products like vaccines often fail to disclose necessary manufacturing information. “[M]aintaining pervasive secrecy for manufacturing COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic could cause dramatic failure,” Price and colleagues argue. They say that relevant information for quick and effective scale-up must be readily available. Especially when the products that will ultimately be made at scale are as-yet unidentified, broader efforts to ensure their eventual scalability should be a focus. The authors acknowledge that transferring knowledge may not be trivial, including in cases where knowledge has not been codified. However, several entities might facilitate this type of knowledge transfer, they say, including existing international organizations and national governments.

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