Title: Trilateral Seminar on R
1Trilateral Seminar on RD Policies Related to
Emerging/Re-emerging Infectious
DiseasesSecurity and Intellectual Property
Constraints on Emerging Infectious Diseases
Research
- Gerald T. Keusch, M.D.
- Provost and Dean for Global Health
- Boston University
2Security and Academic FreedomBalancing
legitimate social goals
Can this be done in times of crisis?
Security needs
Academic freedom
3This is not a new debate in the U.S.
- They that can give up essential liberty to obtain
a little safety deserve neither liberty nor
safety. - Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of PA, 1759
4This is not a new debate in the U.S.
- The Association of American University
Professors was founded shortly after the outbreak
of the World War. The Association responded to
our country's entry into the war by appointing a
special Committee on Academic Freedom in Wartime.
That committee's report was imbued with a spirit
of jingoism extreme nationalism characterized by
a belligerent foreign policy, as the new
Association was eager to dispel any suspicion of
a want of patriotic fervor on the part of the
young academic profession. - "Report of the Committee on Academic Freedom
in Wartime," Bulletin of the American Association
of University Professors (February-March 1918)
29-47
5Report of Committee A for 1943, Bulletin of the
American Association of University Professors
(February 1944) 13
- As war in its second year becomes the accepted
routine of American life, rather than a confused
departure from the ways of peace, the decision of
AAUP to hold fast to its fundamental principles
has been justified. - Freedoms lost are difficult to regain.
- Academic freedom is one facet of intellectual
freedom other aspects of that larger concept -
freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and
freedom of religion - are among the avowed
objects for which this war is being fought. - It would be folly to draw a boundary line across
the area of freedom.
6Report of an AAUP Special CommitteeAcademic
Freedom and National Security in a Time of
Crisis Academe Nov/Dec, 2003
- Historically, the government's domestic arsenal
in times of crisis has included three weapons
secrecy, surveillance, and suppression. - The need to maintain secrecy of certain critical
military information is indisputable, as is the
imperative to gather information about an enemy's
actions and plans. - The law has long criminalized giving aid and
comfort to the enemy, which entails, for
example, trading with or providing financial
support to the enemy. - Confined within proper bounds, such measures need
not pose a threat to civil liberties in general
or to academic freedom in particular.
7On the one hand
- We have learned from experience that in the
passion of war, and in the hands of those who may
be properly zealous for its successful
prosecution, the boundaries can blur. - Information the body politic vitally needs to
maintain oversight of public affairs has been
made secret, and classification has sometimes
been imposed solely to save the classifying
entity from accountability and embarrassment. - Surveillance has been extended to lawful
activity. Political dissent has been suppressed
and, at points, such suppression has threatened
to chill the robustness of debate upon which
democracy depends.
8On the other hand
- Although the actions of private groups may affect
the climate of a campusthe government is
necessarily held to a different standard. - It has the capacity not only to preach, but also
to act to quarantine information to place
people, even their private telephone and
electronic communications, under covert
surveillance or research involving foreign
students and to regulate scholarly exchange,
including teaching and researchers.
9Baseline assumption security and freedom exist
in an inherent and therefore ineluctable tension.
- This report questions that assumption.
- The free exchange of scientific data- for example
a component of a deadly toxin- may well help to
equip a terrorist group with a means of mass
destruction. But that same openness may better
equip researchers to produce the means of
preempting or neutralizing that very threat. - Secrecy can impede the pace of scientific
discovery for good as well as for ill.
10Deep philosophical debate how much do we (can
we) cherish academic freedom?
- There are four primary areas of academic freedom
freedom to research, freedom to publish, freedom
to teach, and freedom to speak. - Since 9/11 there have been attempts to (1)
categorize and restrict some research as
"sensitive, and therefore subject to control
(2) implement export control laws and select
agent regulations, (3) limit the publication of
research findings, (4) prohibit certain foreign
nationals from collaborating with U.S.
researchers and receiving education and training
in U.S. universities, and (5) restrain faculty
free speech. - The debate has only begun Can even the debate
be shut down? Will academia get involved? Can we
afford to be complacent? Can policy be affected?
11Consensus is lacking on the best method to
balance scientific publishing and national
security.PNAS 2003, 100 1464 (Also Science,
Nature)
- Continue the current method of classification of
research results as the most appropriate because
imposing new restrictions will only hurt
scientific progress, and because the usefulness
of research results to terrorists is limited. - Self-regulation by scientists using an
Asilomar-like process to develop consensus (eg
recombinant DNA). The inclusion of scientists,
policymakers, and security personnel in the
development phase of guidelines and regulations
will lead to a concensus process - Rely on publishers to scrutinize articles for
data with potential security ramifications is
another option. - Mandate review by federal funding agencies,
either before funding or publication, as a
centralized federally based option.
12Statement of editors
- We must protect the integrity of the scientific
process by publishing manuscripts of high
quality, in sufficient detail to permit
reproducibility. Without independent
verification, a requirement for scientific
progress, we can neither advance biomedical
research nor provide the knowledge base for
building strong biodefense systems. - We recognize that the prospect of bioterrorism
has raised legitimate concerns about the
potential abuse of published information, but
also recognize that research in the very same
fields will be critical to society in meeting the
challenges of defense.
13Statement of editors (continued)
- 3. Scientists and their journals should
consider the appropriate level and design of
processes to accomplish effective review of
papers that raise such security issues. - 4. On occasion an editor may conclude that
the potential harm of publication outweighs
potential societal benefits. Under such
circumstances, the paper should be modified or
not be published. Journals and scientific
societies can play an important role in
encouraging investigators to communicate results
of research in ways that maximize public benefits
and minimize risks of misuse.
14RD Intellectual Property Issues
15Estimated global health RD spending, US
billion - GFHR
84.4
16Sector contributions to global health research
expenditure - GFHR
17Private for profit health research spending, US
, millions - GFHR
18Present Context of IP for Products For DCs
- Increasing public attention to global disparities
in health AIDS, Tb, malaria in particular - Public exposure to controversies stemming from IP
and trade issues (TRIPS), globalization, WTO,
IMF/World Bank - Media portrayal
- Rich vs. poor
- Big pharma vs. sick people
- Insensitive bureaucracies vs. caring relief
organizations
19Present Context of IP for Products For DCs
- Media stories gain attention but are at best
simplistic views that obscure underlying issues
and at worst create barriers to solutions - IP perceptions vary depending on perspective
- Patents are or are not the problem
- Profit based industry controls IP, guarantees
high prices, and prevents universal access - Failure of poor countries to implement and
enforce laws to protect IP - Uncertain, risky, and inherently costly nature of
health product development
20Historical Context of US IP Laws
- 1970s Congress was concerned that IP generated
from federally supported research and owned by
the govt was not being applied - government patents vs 25-30 of private sector
patents were being applied - Major concern as well that US would fall behind
others in technology and market dominance - Main barrier was the unwillingness of the
responsible agencies to grant exclusive licenses,
in an apparent interest to protect the public
interest. - Companies complained that even the non-exclusive
licensing process was excruciatingly slow - Different policies were in effect in different
agencies
21Congress Attempts A Solution
- Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 (officially Amendments to
the Patent and Trademark Act, P.L. 96-517) - Pertains to extramural research funded by
government - B/D extended IP right to non-government
organizations performing federally-sponsored
research, including universities and small
business - Stevenson-Wydler Act of 1980
- Provides the same rights and benefits to
government scientists
22Congress Attempts A Solution
- Together, the 2 laws created a uniform licensing
system for all federal agencies, reduced the
steps needed to grant licenses, and provided
incentives for industry to invest risk capital in
product commercialization from federal patents. - B/D allowed universities and small business
government contractors to receive title to
inventions derived from federal support - allowed grantees and contractors to license the
technology developed under these patents for use
by small business and private industry - 1983 presidential directive extended these rights
to large businesses
23Some provisions were rejected
- Initial version included a formula for
repayment of profits back to the taxpayers when a
patent yielded commercial products. The
provision was dropped only because it was
impossible to agree on the mechanisms. This idea
still comes up from time to time (Wyden bill),
but is opposed by academic centers and small
business interests.
24Some safety provisions were included
- B/D ensured that the Government retained the
rights to meet future needs and to protect the
public against non-use or unreasonable use of
inventions by reserving - right to a non-exclusive, nontransferable,
irrevocable, paid-up license to practice for or
on behalf of the U.S. everywhere (compulsory
license) - march-in rights that enable the government to
require the patent holder or licensee holder to
grant use rights to another user with due
compensation under special circumstances lack of
use within an agreed-upon time frame, or unmet
special health or safety needs licensee
25Safety Clauses
- March-in rights have been formally tested once
- In 1997 CellPro petitioned to use a Hopkins
stem-cell separation method because they couldnt
negotiate a license with JHU - CellPro used the technology anyway, was sued and
found guilty of willful infringement on the
Hopkins patent - CellPros petition argued that JHU and its
licensee failed to commercialize the technology
in a timely fashion and that public health and
safety needs were not being met
26Safety Clauses, continued
- NIH rejected both grounds of the petition (most
is pre-product IP, minor part of total IP, and
what does timely mean?) - Universities and industry remain concerned that
march-in will undermine licensing rights under
B-D, and that petitions for march-in will
prompt a full-blown legal process, with major
time and financial burdens for all involved
27Anthrax, Cipro, and Compulsory Licenses
- The anthrax scare in the fall of 2001 led HHS to
seek a stockpile of Cipro to treat 10 million
people. This was far greater than the supply, or
the capacity to produce it in a timely manner. On
October 16, Sen. Schumer asked Sec. Thompson to
issue a complusory licenses to generic
manufacturers. - (October 19, 2001) AIDS activists denounced the
US government's decision to uphold Bayer's patent
monopoly on ciprofloxacin, a drug approved for
anthrax treatment. Unlike Canada, which decided
to break Bayer's patent, the US will not make use
of cheaper supplies of drug from competing
generic manufacturers of ciprofloxacin by issuing
a "compulsory license."
28January 15, 2002, Bayer 10K reportofficial
annual business and financial report filed public
companies with the SEC
- The extent of patent protection varies from
country to country. In some of the countries in
which we operate, patent protection may be
significantly weaker than in the United States or
the European Union. Piracy of patent protected
intellectual property has often occurred,
particularly in some Asian countries. - In an effort to control public health crises,
some developing countries have recently announced
plans for substantial reductions in scope of
patent protection for pharmaceutical products.
These countries could facilitate competition
within their markets from generic makers who
would otherwise be unable to introduce competing
products for a number of years.
29- In response to the recent bioterror attacks in
the U.S. the U.S. and Canadian governments
contemplated compulsory licensing of Cipro, in
effect, permission to generic manufacturers to
market ciprofloxacin before the expiry of our
patent rights. Although we reached agreements
with the two governments intended to ensure
adequate supplies of cipro while preserving our
existing patent rights, we cannot assure you that
these or other governments would not impose
compulsory licensing in future in response to
renewed or increased bioterror attacks. - In order to ensure that sufficient antibiotics
will be available from U.S. governmental
stockpiles, and in addition to donating four
million tablets, Bayer has entered into an
agreement with the U.S. government to supply up
to 300 million tablets, the first 100 million
tablets to be delivered by the end of 2001 at a
price of 0.95 per tablet. - In Canada, Bayer Inc. - in addition to donating
200,000 Cipro tablets - has agreed to supply one
million tablets of Cipro within 48 hours upon
request from the Canadian government and has
assured that it can meet the current and future
demand of Cipro in Canada.
30- The 2 clauses are still debated by IP specialists
and still provoke anxiety in academia and the
private sector - Because B-D expressed Congress view that the use
of discoveries supported by public funds to
improve health was clearly in the public
interest, even if it must be carried out by
government action, the question remains when and
with what justification would the clauses be
invoked by the government?
31A new twist
- June 2005 Supreme Court rules that local
governments may force property owners to sell out
to make way for private economic development when
officials decide it would benefit the public,
even if the property is not blighted and the new
project's success is not guaranteed. - Vermont and the District of Columbia have already
proposed legislation that would allow them to
issue compulsory drug licenses to patent holders
under the eminent domain process. States would
then contract with a generic manufacturer to
produce the drug, paying the drug company a
"reasonable royalty 4 proposed - on each
sale. The competition would facilitate the
"public good" by offering state residents cheaper
drugs.
32Economic, Legal and Policy Barriers to the Fully
Effective Use of IP
- The main economic barrier is the high cost of
developing a product from a basic discovery - The main legal barrier is the complex ownership
system in place to protect the interest of those
who invest in research and development, and to
maintain incentives to continue such investment - The main policy barrier is the difficulty to
balance the competing interestsscientific
community, consumers, and industrial
developmentthat vie for advantage in the
potentially lucrative world of commercialized
health products - Even when all of these are aligned, public
perception may preclude effective use eg Golden
rice story
33Assessing B/D 25 Years Later
- Most assessments suggest that the laws performed
as Congress intended - Independent analyses conclude that the law
increased technology transfer from researchers to
private industry, improved government
patenting/licensing processes, and has
facilitated introduction of products that improve
the health and well-being of the public - Royalties received by universities engaged in
technology transfer have grown by 20-30 percent
annually proof of application of IP to product
development and marketing - Yet, despite these benefits, most university
technology transfer offices have licensed few or
no commercialized products and typically operate
at a loss unless they have blockbuster IP and
many products remain too expensive for those in
need to purchase them
34Its not the patents, its the perception!
But, there is change in the wind, as universities
review their patent and licensing priorities and
give greater consideration to global public goods