Title: Medical Research Council
1Medical Research Council
- http//www.mrc.ac.za
- Building a healthy nation
- through research
2 - Indigenous Knowledge Systems Health Lead
Programme - Medical Research Council South Africa
- Managing IP and Benefit-sharing on IKS Research
- Presentation to Portfolio Committee on Arts and
Culture - Dr Motlalepula G. Matsabisa
- 29th, August 2006
-
Going back to our roots for innovative health
solution
3Our Mission and Vision
To promote and advance indigenous knowledge
systems through research and development by
making it a valued health model in the global
environment and to redress health traditions,
which until now have neglected health research
priorities and issues. To be a centre of
excellence in traditional medicines research
regionally and to be competitive globally
4Objectives
- Coordination and development of health research
in indigenous knowledge - Development of institutional and community
networks - Development of an enabling clinical trials
environment - Innovations and commercialization in
traditional health systems. - Policies governing intellectual property and
benefit-sharing - Development of Research programmes that are
appropriate relevant - Support academic research
- Funding
5Organizational Structure
CEO
EXECUTIVE RESEARCH
DELFT SUPPORT STAFF
IKS LEAD PROGRAMME
PA
SOCIAL IMPACT
IKS UTILISATION
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
Malaria Hypertension HIV and AIDS Tuberculosis Can
cer Diabetes
Training Capacity Development Databases Advocacy
Policy Access and Beneficiation
Databases GPS Claims for Cures Monographs Tramed
III
SBU Spin-out Companies IKS Research
Commercialization Drug Manufacturing
Job Creation Poverty Alleviation Capacitation Ent
repreneurial development Business development
PPCP for job creation Ownership and
Empowerment Sustainable community business
enterprises
Drug Discovery Development New Method
development Systems Biology Platform Clinical
Trial Platform Toxicology
6Clinical Evidence for TM
Based on 50 RCTs evaluating 10 TM for 18
indications (Therapeutics Letter, Issue 25, June
July 1998)
7TM Research Platforms
- Platforms
- Old Monkey Plasmodium falciparum model efficacy
- Clinical trial platform
- Malaria, Diabetes, Hypertension
- Systems biology platform
- Metabolimics
- Proteomics
- Genomics
- Drug Targets
- Reversal of Parasite / Virus resistance
- Preclinical studies
- Toxicology
- Antimutagenicity / Mutagenicity
- Genotoxicity
- Carcinogenicity
- Metabolism
- TM QA / QC
- Clinical studies
- Safety studies
- e.g. Immune modulators
- Efficacy studies
- e.g. Immune modulators
8Clinical Trials
- Observational studies
- 3 Month Observational study
- THP is collaborator
- Clinicians Clinical and Pathological evaluations
- Ethics
- Ethics
- Subject Information for screening
- Informed consent for screening
- Informed consent for HIV testing
- Subject information for participation in the
study - Informed consent for participation in the study
- Information leaflet for participation in the
study - Counseling
- Integrated approach To whole
family - Pre-screening HIV counseling
- 1 post screening counseling (referral of
those that are HIV, but not meeting the
inclusion criteria to appropriate accredited
centres for support) - Ethical approval (scientific and ethical
merits) - Protocols are peer-reviewed
- Submitted to ECRA (Animal ethics review)
- Submitted to MRC MCCs Clinical Trials
Committee CTC) for ethical evaluation
- Toxicology
- 90-day sub chronic study on a non-human primate
model - Minimum animals 16 Duration 3 months
- Clinical Trials
- Phase II/III
- Are double blind, randomized, placebo controlled
dose elevation parallel group studies - Phase I Minimum participants 20 Duration 12
weeks - Phase II Minimum participants 40 Duration 6
months (9 12)
Indemnity Insurance For all trialists and
participants in Phase I and II studies
Complete CV of all Trialists Complete contact
details of all trialists including that of
chairperson of Ethics committee
9Medicinal Trade in South Africa
- 1988 1996 750 plant species used in
Traditional Medicines - - 200 very
infrequently traded - 24
000 sp of plants in SA -
4 000 used in Traditional medicines
-
(used by approx. 12-15 million people)
-
- 20 000t
medicinal plants traded/year - US60million - 1996 4300t of wildlife
medicinals traded in KwaZulu-Natal - - US13.3million
- 1997 750t traded in Mpumalanga
US2.25million
10Facts
- 74 of drugs developed from plants could be
attributed to the use of indigenous plants in
traditional medicine by various communities
(Wambembe, 1999). - The annual sales of drugs developed from
traditional medicines amounted to US43bn out of
the US130 000bn total sales of pharmaceuticals
in the 1980s (Rural Advancement Fund Int. 1997). - Less than 0.001 of profits from plant-based
drugs from traditional medicine knowledge accrued
to the people who provided the leads for the
research (Posey, 1991). - Approximately 80 of the rural population use
traditional medicines.
11Drugs from Plants
- Drug Use
Source - Aspirin Pain
killer Wild willow - Theophylline Asthma
Theobroma tree - Digitoxin / Digoxin Heart failure
Digitalis purperieae -
- Artemisinin Antimalarial
Artemisia annua - Vincristine/ Vinblastine Anticancer
Catharanthus roseus - Quinine
Antimalarial Cinchona - Penicillin
Antibacterial Fungus - Cyclosporine
Immunosuppressant Fungus - Tachrolymus FK506 Immunosuppressant
Fungus
12Handling of IP and Beneficiation
13South Africas Brief Progress
- IKS Bill 2002
- To recognize, promote, develop, protect and
affirm the hitherto undermined and marginalized
Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) - To contribute to the reclamation and realization
of indigenous knowledge of South Africas diverse
communities and value systems connected
therewith - and to establish a regulatory framework for IKS
and matters connected therewith.
14IKS Proposed Bill 2002
- The objectives of the Bill are
- To give legal recognition to Indigenous Knowledge
(IK) and Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) and
IK practitioners - To establish principles to guide and manage the
recognition, promotion, development, innovation
and protection of IK and IKS - To regulate forms of ownership and benefit
sharing of IK and IKS at all levels of value
addition
15IKS Proposed Bill 2002
- To provide mechanisms for the capacity building
of IK practitioners including their education,
training, capacitation, development, empowerment
and ownership - To promote research and development activities in
the area of IK and IKS - To promote public awareness of IK and IKS
- To establish a regulatory mechanism called the
Indigenous Knowledge Systems Authority to
assist in achieving the above
16Countrys Processes
- DST- IKS Policy 2005
- DST- IP from Public funded/financed Research,
2006 - DEAT- Biological Diversity Act no 10, 2004
- DEAT- National Environmental Management
Biodiversity Act, 2005 - DOH - Traditional Health Practitioners Act, 2005?
- DOH - Traditional Medicines Committee of MCC
- AGRIC- Draft Policy on Protection of Indigenous
Seeds, 2006 - AGRIC- Plant Breeders Rights
- UNESCO- Safeguarding and Protection of Intangible
Heritage, 2003 - DST- National Office of IKS, 2006
17Countrys Processes
- DST-TKDL approach - Documentation by National
Biodiversity Institutions, MRC Centre for
Scientific and Industrial Research - DTI Amendment Patent Law IKS protection
- DTI-Patent Amendment Bill no.17 of 2005 -To amend
the Patent Act ,1978, so as to insert certain
definitions and to require am application for a
patent to furnish information relating to any
role played by an indigenous biological or
genetic resource or TK or use in an invention
and to provide for matters connected therewith - DTI- IP IK Protection Policy Interfacing
protection and commercialisation of traditional
knowledge systems with the existing intellectual
property system. - DTI - Protection and Commercialization of TK
within the existing IP systems (Draft) - DST - Framework for IP from Publicly Financed
Research (Draft)
18IKS POLICY1
- The Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) Policy is
an enabling framework to stimulate and strengthen
the contribution of indigenous knowledge to
social and economic development in South Africa.
The main IKS Policy drivers in the South African
context include the - Affirmation of African cultural values in the
face of globalisation a clear imperative given
the need to promote a positive African identity - Practical measures for the development of the
economic value of services provided by indigenous
knowledge holders and practitioners involved in,
among others, traditional medicine, technologies,
spirituality, and indigenous languages
19IKS POLICY2
- Underpinning the contribution of indigenous
knowledge to the economy the role of indigenous
knowledge in employment and wealth creation and
innovation and - Interfaces with other knowledge systems, for
example, indigenous knowledge is used together
with modern biotechnology in the pharmaceutical
and other sectors to increase the rate of
innovation
20Challenges for IK Protection
- In the South African context there is a need for
the formulation and development of a Policy that
will also address the following problems - Lack of due process of the law to address the
protection of IKS. - Lack of due process of the law to address
commercialization of IKS. - Lack of due process of the law to empower
collective holders of IKS. - Lack of due process of the law to beneficiate the
holders of IKS. - Lack of due process of the law to effect
technology transfer. - Lack of a legal framework to address development,
economic, social and socio-economic issues
21Benefit-sharing ModelPoverty Alleviation
1/2
1/2
National (Bioprospecting) Trust Fund Indigenous
community and traditional healers
MRC
?
1/3
2/3
1/2
?
Different communities Companies jointly
with Private Partners
Local Trust Fund Specific for Traditional
Healers and their specific Community Trustees Trad
itional Healers their Communities and
Research/ Funding Institution
Investigators
Re-invest into IKS Research
?
Individuals who supplied the Information /or
the Genetic material
5
22The Benefit-sharing Model Consortia
1/2
1/2
National Trust Fund Indigenous communities and
traditional healers
CONSORTIUM of Institutions
1/2
X5
X1
X2
X3
X4
Xn
Trust Account / s For Different communities
and Traditional doctors
Local Trust Fund Specific Traditional Healers
and their specific Community Trustees
Traditional Healers , their communities
Consortium
?
?
Investigators
Re-invest into IKS development, education
research
?
Individuals who supplied Information /or the
Genetic material
7
23 Monetary Non-monetary
- Seven Models
- Individuals
- Individual, goes into community
project - Finite period for
benefit-sharing - Authentification of novelty
and ownership - University Model
- Consortia Model
- International Collaboration
- Each country to have its own
model for its community - Country where source of
innovation, has the final say in benefit-sharing
model - Poverty Alleviation model
- Community as majority
shareholder with over 51 control on business - Community not allowed to
sell their shares - Selling or rights of IK to be a national decision
a partnership approach encouraged
24Concluding Remarks1
- National policies political mandate and
public-private-community partnership - Budget and inter-governmental relations
- Observations on and implications of
International instruments e.g. CBD, TRIPS-WTO - Best Practices in Africa and Developing Countries
(South-South relation) - NEPAD AU country participation
25Concluding Remarks2
- Multi-lateral and bilateral agreements
- Capacity Building and Educational Awareness
- WIPO intergovernmental Committee - participation
and implementation - No single government Department has a monopoly on
IKS protection its Development - FINALLY South Africas IKS POLICY to be
Launched internationally at WIPO a sign of hope
for sui generis. - Liability clauses
26http//www.mrc.ac.za Building a healthy nation
through research