Wellcome Trust And Merck Launch Joint Venture To Develop Affordable Vaccines For Low-Income Countries
Main Category: Immune System / VaccinesAlso Included In: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses; Public Health; Pharma Industry / Biotech Industry
Article Date: 19 Sep 2009 - 0:00 PDT
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The Wellcome Trust and Merck & Co., Inc. have announced the creation of the MSD-Wellcome Trust Hilleman Laboratories, a unique research and development joint venture with a not-for-profit mission to focus on developing affordable vaccines for diseases that commonly affect low-income countries.
The joint venture marks the first time a research charity and a pharmaceutical company have partnered to form a separate entity with equally shared funding and decision-making rights. Pairing two of the world's preeminent healthcare institutions provides an opportunity to integrate the best of both to drive the investment and expertise needed to develop and deliver vaccines to low-income countries.
The vision: a sustainable, not-for-profit operating model to turn innovative science into practical solutions for those in greatest need
The heart of this concept is the creation of a sustainable R&D organisation that operates like a business, but with a not-for-profit operating model, to address the vaccine needs of low-income countries. As well as developing new vaccines in areas of unmet need, the Hilleman Laboratories will also work on optimising existing vaccines, an important and powerful way of increasing the impact of vaccination in resource-limited settings. By working in partnership, the Wellcome Trust and Merck seek to achieve what neither can do alone.
"Linking the ingenuity of academic research with the know-how of industry is vital if we are to produce a new generation of vaccines to reduce the burden of infectious diseases in low-income countries," said Sir Mark Walport, Director of the Wellcome Trust. "The Hilleman Laboratories partnership brings together the requisite skills in a powerful way, and Merck is the ideal partner because of its impressive history of innovation and contributions to global health, which provide a perfect complement to the Wellcome Trust mission to improve health in the developing world."
"There is a critical need to develop new ways for scientific innovation to be translated effectively into new vaccines that can save lives and protect the health of people living in low-income countries," said Richard T Clark, Chairman, President and CEO, Merck & Co., Inc. "We believe that success in bringing forward these new vaccines can be best achieved through productive partnerships. The Wellcome Trust's strong track record in global public health and biomedical research combined with Merck's expertise in the development and delivery of vaccines positions the Hilleman Laboratories to make a real and sustained difference."
Merck and the Wellcome Trust will invest equally in the R&D joint venture, which will be primed with a combined cash contribution of £90 million (approximately US$130 million) over the next seven years and will support a staff of approximately 60 researchers and developers. The venture will be based in India to facilitate engagement and partnership with a broad range of experts in vaccine research, policy and manufacturing to develop and mature its R&D pipeline.
While an initial portfolio of projects will be selected only after consultation with the international community and careful technical assessment, examples of the kind of programmes being considered include developing vaccines that do not require refrigeration, and a vaccine against group A streptococci, which cause more than 500 000 deaths per year worldwide.
Providing some of the key input to the Hilleman Laboratories will be a Strategic Advisory Group of internationally recognised, independent experts. Dr David Heymann, Chairman of the UK's Health Protection Agency and former Assistant Director General of the World Health Organization, will serve as chair of the panel.
The Hilleman Laboratories will operate with a combination of core funding from the founders, third-party grants and other revenue streams. Over time, it is envisaged it will receive compensation for its innovations where these are leveraged in higher-income settings. The aim will be to attract multiple sources of income to support the mission of the organisation so that its impact can be sustained as it builds on its early success.
Altaf Lal PhD named CEO
Altaf A Lal PhD has been appointed Chief Executive Officer of the Hilleman Laboratories. Dr Lal spent 20 years working for the National Center for Infectious Diseases at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and was the Chief of the Molecular Vaccine Section in the Division of Parasitic Diseases. Dr Lal is currently Health Attaché and Department of Health and Human Services Regional Representative for South Asia at the Embassy of the United States of America, New Delhi, India. His extensive experience in global public health gives him the expertise needed to lead this new public-private research partnership.
"If we are successful at building new partnerships and collaborations with governments, other companies and NGOs, I am confident that we will be successful in delivering vaccines to the people who need them." said Dr Lal. "This is why I am making a firm commitment as CEO of this new venture to proceed by working in concert with the global vaccine community, obtaining feedback and input at every step."
Dr Lal will soon begin to appoint his staff and identify premises in India, with the goal of being operational in 2010.
Recognizing and extending the legacy of Dr Maurice Hilleman
The new venture is named in honour of the pioneering vaccine scientist Maurice Hilleman PhD. Dr Hilleman is credited with the development of more than 30 vaccines, including measles, mumps and hepatitis B, during a career that included nearly 30 years at Merck.
"Maurice Hilleman was perhaps the single most influential public heath figure of the 20th century when you consider the millions of lives saved, and the countless people who were spared suffering because of his work," said Dr Anthony S Fauci, Director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, National Institutes of Health. "It is only fitting that such a novel endeavour, which aims to develop lifesaving vaccines for those in the developing countries, should be named in his honour."
Source:
Katrina Nevin-Ridley
Wellcome Trust
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