Penticton Herald

Moderna sues Pfizer, BioNTech over COVID-19 vaccine patents

The company said it believes its rivals’ vaccine infringes on patents Moderna filed between 2010 and 2016

- By TOM MURPHY

COVID-19 vaccine maker Moderna is suing Pfizer and the German drugmaker BioNTech, accusing its main competitor­s of copying Moderna’s technology in order to make their own vaccine.

Moderna said Friday that Pfizer and BioNTech’s vaccine Comirnaty

infringes on patents Moderna filed several years ago protecting the technology behind its preventive shot, Spikevax.

The company filed patent infringeme­nt lawsuits in both U.S. federal court and a German court.

Pfizer spokeswoma­n Pam Eisele said the company had not fully reviewed Moderna’s lawsuit, but the drugmaker was surprised by it, given that their vaccine is based on proprietar­y technology developed by both BioNTech and Pfizer.

She said in an email that Pfizer Inc., based in New York, would “vigorously defend” against any allegation­s in the case.

BioNTech did not immediatel­y respond to a request from The Associated Press seeking comment.

Moderna and Pfizer’s two-shot vaccines both use mRNA technology to help people fight the coronaviru­s.

That approach is radically different than how vaccines have traditiona­lly been made.

Moderna said it started developing its mRNA technology platform in 2010, and that helped the company quickly produce its COVID19 vaccine after the pandemic arrived in early 2020.

By the end of that year, U.S. regulators had cleared shots from both Pfizer and Moderna for use after clinical research showed that both were highly effective.

Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel said in a prepared statement that the vaccine developer pioneered that technology and invested billions of dollars in creating it.

Moderna worked with scientists at the National Institutes of Health to test and develop its COVID-19 vaccine. The company said its lawsuit is not related to any patent rights generated during that collaborat­ion.

The company said it believes its rivals’ vaccine infringes on patents Moderna filed between 2010 and 2016. Moderna said in its complaint that Pfizer and BioNTech copied some critical features of its technology, including making the “exact same chemical modificati­on to their mRNA that Moderna scientists first developed years earlier” and went on to use in Spikevax.

Moderna said it recognizes the importance of vaccine access and is not seeking to remove Comirnaty

from the market. It also is not asking for an injunction to prevent future sales.

Moderna said in 2020 that it would not enforce its COVID-19 related patents while the pandemic continued. But the company said in March, with vaccine supplies improving globally, that it would update that pledge.

It said it still would not enforce its patents for vaccines used in low– and middle–income countries. But it expected companies like Pfizer and BioNTech to respect its intellectu­al property, and it would consider “a commercial­ly reasonable license” in other markets if they requested one.

“Pfizer and BioNTech have failed to do so,” Moderna alleged in a statement.

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