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Neglected Diseases: Policy Proposals for Universities

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Title: Neglected Diseases: Policy Proposals for Universities


1
Neglected DiseasesPolicy Proposals for
Universities
  • Basit Khan
  • 30 Sept 2006

2
What is a neglected disease?
  • Primarily affect LMI countries
  • Gap in attention from global RD
  • Shortage of safe, effective treatments

Yamey, Brit. Med. J. 2002
3
Operational definition of neglected diseases
  • From the U.S. Orphan Drug Act
  • Any disease that either
  • affects less than 200,000 persons in the United
    States OR
  • for which there is no reasonable expectation that
    the cost of developing and making available in
    the U.S. a treatment...can be recovered from
    sales of the treatment.

4
The landscape of RD for neglected diseases
  • Push and pull incentives
  • Push direct funding or facilitation of research
    and development (grants)
  • Public-private partnerships (PPPs)
  • Virtual RD management
  • Pull promise downstream rewards by organizing a
    market for eventual end products (patents)
  • Advanced Purchase Commitments

5
The landscape of RD for neglected diseases
Moran, PLoS Med, 2005
6
The landscape of RD for neglected diseases
Widdus, IPPPH, 2004
7
This is an important milestone in the fight
against Visceral Leishmaniasis, and it
demonstrates the potential for public-private
partnerships to develop new solutions to serious
global health problems, said Dr. Regina
Rabinovich, Program Director of the Gates
Foundations Infectious Diseases Program.
8
Case Study Malaria
  • 323 million (2004)
  • 60 went to PPPs
  • 49 NIAID and the Gates Foundation
  • Account for 80 of growth in funding (93-04)
  • 37 Drugs
  • 24 Vaccines
  • lt1 Diagnostics
  • Were malaria research funded at the average rate
    for all medical conditions, it would receive more
    than 3 billion in annual RD funding.

Malaria RD Alliance
9
Where universities fit in
  • The preclinical gap
  • Source of scientific knowledge
  • Intellectual property transaction costs
  • Nontraditional partnerships
  • Progressive technology transfer metrics

10
UAEM policy proposals
  • Neglected diseases (ND) research partnering
  • ND research exemptions
  • ND research promotion

11
UAEM policy proposalsND research partnering
  • Engage nontraditional partners
  • PPPs, nonprofits, and developing-world research
    institutions in ND drug development
  • Patent donation
  • Dual-market licensing
  • Straightforward exclusive/non-exclusive licensing
  • Foundation funding for ND research projects

12
Is this contentious?
  • According to several respondents, negotiations
    with academic institutions were often hard,
    reflecting rigidity and overvaluation.
  • 2 cases of protracted negotiation in which the
    university demanded royalties for licenses
    covering developing-world markets.
  • Universities are more difficult to deal with than
    pharmaceutical companies.

13
Case study patent donation
  • UCSB Ca2-channel blockers for schistosomiasis
    treatment (to OneWorld)
  • University of Nebraska royalty-free license to
    Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) for synthetic
    peroxides allows MMV to take out subsequent
    patents on compounds

14
Case study dual-market licensing
  • Azole compounds with anti-Chagas activity
  • Yale, U. Washington, and OneWorld Health
  • Universities reserve the right to partner with
    private companies for antifungal use in
    high-income countries

15
Case study licensing to developing-world
institutions
Salicrup et al., IP Strategy Today 2005
16
Funding opportunities available
  • Real dollars are available for ND research
  • The Bill Melinda Gates Foundation spends
    roughly 650M on global health each year, with a
    growing focus on RD
  • In 2005, the foundation in partnership with the
    NIH awarded 450M in grants for basic science
    research most went to universities
  • 20M to UC Irvine for new Dengue control methods
  • 20M to Imperial College London to treat latent
    TB
  • 9/14/06 additional 68 million in funding for
    NDs

www.gcgh.org
17
Foundation funding
  • Upstream problem
  • UCSF-DNDi example researcher unable to receive
    grant because of IP issues within the university
  • UAEM-UCSF helped to resolve the issue

18
UAEM policy proposalsND research exemptions
  • Part of the EANDL
  • Open access to research innovations for neglected
    disease applications
  • If an innovation has not yet been out-licensed,
    universities should allow non-profit institutions
    to use that innovation for ND research as a
    matter of policy
  • For any innovations that a university
    out-licenses, the university should retain the
    right to non-exclusively open license use of its
    technology for ND research

19
UAEM policy proposalsND research exemptions
  • In either case, the university should forego
    royalties on products sold in developing
    countries
  • Whats to keep companies from using the ND
    exemption and selling products in high-income
    countries?
  • Still actionable infringement
  • Cross-licenses required
  • PIPRA precedent

20
UAEM policy proposalsND research promotion
  • Incentives to attract ND researchers and support
    for existing researchers
  • Example UCB Center for Neglected Disease
    Research, Malaria Institute (JHU)
  • Compound libraries
  • Antihistamine Identified as Potential
    Antimalarial Drug (JHU - July 2, 2006)
  • Annual review practices (portfolio monitoring)
  • Marketing neglected disease capabilities

21
Case study Berkeley
  • Socially Responsible Licensing Initiative
  • Several innovative licensing deals featuring
    royalty-free licenses, no-cost sublicenses,
    profit sharing, and inventor attribution.
  • Provides additional backing for technology
    licensing officers to draft licenses that pursue
    non-monetary goals in the future.
  • Increased foundation funding to Berkeley for
    research on neglected diseases that will be
    licensed under these principles

22
Research and evolution of proposals
  • Proposals are not static
  • Consultation with stakeholders and data-driven
    improvement
  • ND Policy Meeting
  • Research projects on non-traditional partnerships

23
The bottom line
  • Role of our activism to amplify the voices of
    those who are directly affected by the access and
    research gaps
  • This changes the decision-making calculus of
    university administrators
  • Leads to policies that universities will
    eventually be proud of, but might resist mightily
    in the interim
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