Daily Maverick

Hub gives hope to scale up vaccines

South Africa chosen to host the first WHO Covid-19 mRNA vaccine technology transfer hub. By

- Peter Fabricius

With Covid-19 surging in Africa and a large continenta­l shortage of vaccines, South Africa has been chosen to host the World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO’s) first Covid-19 messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine technology transfer hub to scale up production and access to vaccines.

This will be the first in a series of Covid-19 mRNA vaccine technology transfer hubs that the WHO is launching around the world to boost vaccine supplies.

It will be establishe­d by a South African consortium comprising the companies Biovac and Afrigen Biologics and Vaccines and a network of universiti­es, partnering with the WHO and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

The South African consortium was chosen from a list of about 20 companies or consortium­s that wanted to receive technologi­es, while about 20 companies offered their technologi­es to be manufactur­ed by the hub.

President Cyril Ramaphosa said the production of the mRNA vaccine in South Africa would help to overcome the inequality in vaccine distributi­on in Africa, which was still struggling with severe shortages while developed countries had surpluses. He called for an end to this “vaccine nationalis­m” and said that Africa had to manufactur­e its own vaccines as soon as possible because supplies from the North were just not forthcomin­g.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the full extent of the vaccine gap between developed and developing economies, and how that gap can severely undermine global health security,” Ramaphosa said at the virtual launch of the South African technology transfer hub on Monday.

“This landmark initiative is a major advance in the internatio­nal effort to build vaccine developmen­t and manufactur­ing capacity that will put Africa on a path to self-determinat­ion. South Africa welcomes the opportunit­y to host a vaccine technology transfer hub and to build on the capacity and expertise that already exists on the continent to contribute to this effort,” he said.

Although the establishm­ent of this vaccine technology transfer hub was a step in the right direction, it did not detract from SA’s insistence on a waiver of Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights – the protection of intellectu­al property rights – for Covid-19 vaccine manufactur­ing companies to allow developing countries to produce them more cheaply, Ramaphosa said.

“This is great news, particular­ly for Africa, which has the least access to vaccines,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s. “Covid-19 has highlighte­d the importance of local production to address health emergencie­s, strengthen regional health security and expand sustainabl­e access to health products.”

He noted that Covid-19 infections and deaths had surged by almost 40% over the past week across Africa, and deaths had tripled or quadrupled in some countries. He attributed this to vaccine inequity, the spread of the new, more dangerous Covid-19 variants and a relaxation of public-health measures. Yet the head of the WHO’s Health Emergencie­s Programme, Michael Ryan, stressed that manufactur­ing Covid-19 vaccines in Africa, while commendabl­e, would not address the immediate crisis, which was to get vaccines into the arms of the most vulnerable people on the continent and around the world as soon as possible.

Ryan said the world had a “short window of opportunit­y” before the coronaviru­s evolved a variant that was more transmissi­ble and more lethal. The only way to seize that opportunit­y was for richer countries to provide their surplus vaccines to poorer countries to enable them to vaccinate this relatively small number of the most vulnerable people.

“It will be a catastroph­ic moral failure at global level if we do not do that,” Ryan said.

WHO Chief Scientist Soumya Swaminatha­n said it would probably take between nine and 12 months to produce a Covid mRNA vaccine at the new SA technology transfer hub. The timeline would depend on whether the partners chose an already triedand-tested vaccine technology or a more experiment­al one. She said the candidate partners for the hub included some larger, more establishe­d vaccine manufactur­ers as well as some smaller, less-establishe­d ones.

Getting to the point of manufactur­e would take longer for the smaller companies as their vaccines would still have to undergo Stage 2 and 3 clinical trials. She added that the good news was that South Africa already had considerab­le experience in conducting clinical trials.

The South African Covid mRNA technology transfer hub is being supported by France as part of its wider effort to boost Africa’s capacity to manufactur­e Covid-19 vaccines and treatments.

On his visit to South Africa in May, French President Emmanuel Macron announced France and Germany would provide financial support for South Africa’s Aspen Pharmacare company to boost production of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

At Monday’s launch of the mRNA technology transfer hub, Macron said he was proud of Biovac and France’s South African partners for having been selected by the WHO to establish the Covid mRNA vaccine hub. The mRNA technology is used by the Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines.

“This initiative is the first of a long list to come, that we will keep supporting, with our partners, united in the belief that acting for global public goods is the fight of the century and that it cannot wait,” Macron said.

The WHO said the hub partners would negotiate the details of the initiative with the SA government and public and private partners inside the country and globally.

The WHO added that the technology transfer hub would benefit from the Medicines Patent Pool’s vast experience of intellectu­al property (IP) management and issuing of IP licences.

It said Biovac was a biopharmac­eutical company that resulted from a partnershi­p formed with the SA government in 2003 to establish local vaccine manufactur­ing capability for the provision of vaccines for national health management and security.

“Afrigen Biologics and Vaccines is a biotechnol­ogy company focused on product developmen­t, bulk adjuvant [assisting] manufactur­ing and supply and distributi­on of key biological­s to address unmet healthcare needs.

“The organisati­ons complement one another, and can each take on different roles within the proposed collaborat­ion: Biovac will act as developer, Afrigen as manufactur­er, and a consortium of universiti­es as academic supporters providing mRNA know-how, and Africa CDC for technical and regional support.

“The South African consortium benefits from having existing operating facilities that have spare capacity and because it has experience in technology transfers. It is also a global hub that can start training technology recipients immediatel­y.”

The production of the mRNA vaccine in South Africa would help to overcome the inequality in vaccine distributi­on in Africa,

which was still struggling with severe

shortages

 ??  ?? South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (right) and his French counterpar­t Emmanuel Macron bump elbows during a press conference at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on 28 May. Macron was on a two-day official visit to SA. Photo: Themba Hadebe/Pool/EPA-EFE
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (right) and his French counterpar­t Emmanuel Macron bump elbows during a press conference at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on 28 May. Macron was on a two-day official visit to SA. Photo: Themba Hadebe/Pool/EPA-EFE

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