Enabling equitable and affordable access to novel therapeutics for pandemic preparedness and response via creative intellectual property agreements

ASAP Discovery Center, Ed J. Griffen, Pascale Boulet, Randy Albrecht, Ali Akbar, Isabella Amick, Jasmin Cara Aschenbrenner, Blake H. Balcomb, Haim Barr, Harish Battu, Jared Benjamin, Jesse Bloom, Melissa Boby, Matt Bogyo, Daniel Bolon, Pascale Boulet, Ariana Brenner Clerkin, Richard Cadagan, Eda Capkin, Maria CastellanosAnu V Chandran, Shiyu Chen, John Chodera, Daniel Cole, David Cousins, Sara Cuadrado, Andre Schutzer de Godoy, Adeeba Dhalech, Randy Diaz, Maria DiPoto, Jennifer Doherty, David Dotson, Sarah Duggan, Matthew Evans, Michael Fairhead, Gwendolyn Fate, Daren Fearon, Oleg Federov, Matteo Ferla, Lucas Ferreira, Kate Fieseler, Mihajlo Filep, Daniel Flores, Julia Flynn, Laurent Fraisse, Gabizon Ronen, Barien Gad, Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Christine Gathecha, James Gayvert, Vincent Voelz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that the current purely market-driven approaches to drug discovery and development alone are insufficient to drive equitable access to new therapies either in preparation for, or in response to, pandemics. A new global framework driven by equity is under negotiation at the World Health Organization to support pandemic preparedness and response. Some believe that the global intellectual property (IP) system itself is part of the problem and propose a purely Open Science approach. In this article, we discuss how existing IP frameworks and contractual agreements may be used to create rights and obligations to generate a more effective global response in future, drawing on experience gained in the COVID Moonshot program, a purely Open Science collaboration, and the ASAP AViDD drug discovery consortium, which uses a hybrid, phased model of Open Science, patent filing and contractual agreements. We conclude that ‘straight to generic’ drug discovery is appropriate in some domains, and that targeted patent protection, coupled with open licensing, can offer a route to generating affordable and equitable access for therapy areas where market forces have failed. The Extended Data contains a copy of our model IP policy, which can be used as a template by other discovery efforts seeking to ensure their drug candidates can be developed for globally equitable and affordable access.

Original languageEnglish
Article number374
Pages (from-to)374
JournalWellcome Open Research
Volume9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Pandemic Preparedness
  • equitable access
  • intellectual property
  • licensing
  • novel therapeutics
  • patents

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