TWN
Info Service on WTO and Trade Issues (Mar22/11)
14 March 2022
Third World Network
In-depth: How a Cape Town company made an mRNA vaccine and
what happens next
7th March 2022
Catherine Tomlinson
https://www.spotlightnsp.co.za/2022/03/07/in-depth-how-a-cape-town-company-made-an-mrna-vaccine-and-what-happens-next/
In January, Cape Town-based biotechnology company Afrigen Biologics
announced that it has successfully produced a lab-scale batch of a
COVID-19 vaccine that is similar to that made by pharmaceutical company
Moderna. The achievement is particularly impressive since the vaccine
uses the still relatively new mRNA vaccine technology.
The achievement billed as the first successful "reverse engineering"
of Moderna's vaccine, has been hailed as an important milestone towards
building capacity in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to manufacture
COVID-19 vaccines.
But what has actually happened so far and what else needs to happen
before jabs developed at Afrigen can be used in vaccination programmes?
It started with the Hub
Recognising the rapidly emerging and widening inequality in access
to COVID-19 vaccines globally, the World Health Organization (WHO)
announced the establishment of a mRNA Technology Transfer Hub in June
2021. The aim of the Hub is to build mRNA vaccine manufacturing capacity
in LMICs, with a focus first on COVID-19 vaccines. South Africa was
selected to host the Hub, and Afrigen was tasked with developing a
mRNA COVID-19 vaccine along with a technology transfer package that
could be used to capacitate commercial manufacturers in LMICs to produce
the vaccine.
When the Hub was initially launched it was hoped that, through engagement
and pressure, one of the companies with a leading mRNA vaccine against
COVID-19 - Moderna and/or Pfizer/BioNTech - would be swayed to cooperate
with and support the work of the Hub through licensing their intellectual
property and transferring their technology to the Hub.
This did not happen.
Both companies dug in their heels, as revenues from the sale of their
respective COVID-19 vaccines ballooned and, to date, have refused
to share their technology with the Hub.
Without a technology transfer partner, Afrigen was forced to go it
alone - albeit with significant support from international health
agencies and technical experts from around the world.
Last month - less than seven months after the Hub's establishment
- Afrigen announced that it had successfully made a lab-scale batch
of a mRNA vaccine against COVID-19 that is similar to Moderna's product.
So what has Afrigen actually made?
Afrigen has made a lab-size batch (a couple of litres) of mRNA vaccine
drug substance using the publicly available genetic sequence that
was used by Moderna to develop its vaccine.
Professor Petro Terblanche, CEO of Afrigen, told Reuters that "We
haven't copied Moderna, we've developed our own processes because
Moderna didn't give us any technology". "We started with
the Moderna sequence because that gives, in our view, the best starting
material. But this is not Moderna's vaccine; it is the Afrigen mRNA
Hub vaccine," she said.
The WHO has previously stated that the Hub would focus on developing
a vaccine similar to Moderna's, rather than Pfizer/BioNTech's, because
of the availability of relevant data in the public domain, the vaccine's
less stringent refrigeration requirements, and because of the company's
pledge not to enforce its patents during the pandemic.
Terblanche explained to Spotlight that developing a lab-scale batch
of mRNA vaccine substance has involved multiple steps and that "the
steps for the lab batch are exactly what it would be for full scale".
What will change for full-scale production is the conditions under
which the vaccine is produced.
Vaccines given to humans as part of clinical trials or through health
programs can only be produced in facilities certified for complying
with Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) - which Afrigen is currently
working toward.
According to Terblanche, producing the lab batch involved producing
the sequence, making the plasmid - the DNA, linearising it, purifying
the RNA strains, stabilising it, and encapsulating it. (You can read
more about what these steps entail here).
"There are many raw materials" used to develop Afrigen's
mRNA vaccine," says Terblanche, adding "it's exactly all
the raw materials that are being used by Moderna and CureVac and some
of the others. There are the IVT enzymes, there are the lipids...
the four different nano lipid particles, there are all the enzymes,
all the assays for the analytics, and they are sourced from Europe
and the US," says Terblanche.
Terblanche explains that the RNA (which is synthesised from DNA) used
to develop Afrigen's lab-batch of mRNA vaccines was made by Afrigen's
academic partner-the University of Witwatersrand (Wits), where they
have the relevant platforms and have been working on RNA for six years.
Using the RNA produced at Wits, the formulation, production of the
vaccine drug substance, stability testing, and validation were all
done at Afrigen.
A key component in formulating mRNA vaccines is encapsulating the
mRNA in an oily shell or fat bubble known as a lipid nanoparticle
that prevents degradation of the mRNA and allows for its delivery
to patients. While the complexity of this phase has been widely cited
as a potential barrier to expanding manufacturing capacity for mRNA
vaccines, particularly in LMICs, Afrigen has been able to successfully
complete this process in the lab.
"Afrigen's strength is in formulations... the scientists here,
the PhDs here, that's what they do really well," says Terblanche.
"What is the challenge is for us to scale, you know, to take
this two litres, and there we are getting some technical support from
international experts.
"We are now doing more batches and we will then start with some
preclinical work," she says. Using lab-scale batches, Afrigen
can start undertaking preclinical research to gain insight on the
quality and safety of their vaccine before moving to clinical trials
with human subjects. At this stage, preclinical work includes conducting
stability testing on the vaccine, validating production processes,
and conducting preclinical safety evaluations.
When will Afrigen's candidate vaccine be ready for clinical trials?
The next major milestone for Afrigen will be developing a clinical
trial-size batch of mRNA vaccines. Currently, there are no facilities
in South Africa that have the capacity to produce clinical trial size
batches of vaccines and so, historically, when South African researchers
have sought to develop clinical trial stock of locally-developed vaccines
or biotherapeutics, they have had to commission manufacturing outside
the country.
The scale at which clinical trial stock must be produced can be a
challenge - typically thousands of doses, depending on what is required
to demonstrate statistical significance in clinical trials. Apart
from scale, a critical impediment to production is the lack of a local
facility with the required Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) certifications.
Under South Africa's Medicines Act, medicine and vaccine manufacturers
must be licensed by the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority
(Sahpra), and holding a manufacturing license is contingent on demonstrating
compliance with GMP standards.
Afrigen aims to be the first company in South Africa to have a manufacturing
site certified to produce clinical-grade vaccines. (NantSA which plans
to produce a broader range of products than Afrigen, including vaccines
using different platforms, did not respond to a request for comment
- sent to a media contact listed on this media statement - on the
company's target date for receiving GMP certifications for its newly
launched manufacturing campus in Cape Town).
Before Afrigen can apply for GMP certification from Sahpra, it must
complete facility upgrades and installation of manufacturing equipment.
"Facility readiness is about 60% at the moment," says Terblanche.
She adds that Afrigen is aiming to finalise this process and gain
cGMP approval by June 2022.
Facility upgrades underway include upgrading the facility's electrical
systems and installing a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
(HVAC) system.
Changing role of Sahpra
Meanwhile, Sahpra is positioning itself to assess and certify Afrigen's
GMP compliance.
Sahpra, which must assess and certify whether Afrigen's facility complies
with good manufacturing practices, is currently working towards gaining
Maturity Level 3 (ML3) status from the WHO. According to the WHO,
countries with ML3 status have a "stable, well-functioning, and
integrated regulatory system".
[Sahpra] needs to be at a ML3 status and specifically, vaccine GMP
accredited before they can inspect our own facility," says Terblanche.
She adds that "Sahpra is well on track to reach their ML3 status
before June before we need them to audit us."
Sahpra's Nthabi Moloi told Spotlight, "For a National Regulatory
Authority (NRA) to be able to rely on another regulator's decision
there needs to be an alignment in terms of the standards applied/work
practices deployed, etc. The easiest mechanism for regulators to use
to draw these parallels is to use a ML3 status or ML4 status - as
an indicator of the regulatory rigour.
"SAHPRA is currently engaged with the [WHO's] initial assessment
cycle. The assessment was initiated in November 2021 with an on-site
and virtual team contributing to the assessment process. SAHPRA is
completing the response cycle and providing further documentation
so that the WHO team can, during their May 2022 site visit, then complete
our formal benchmarking assessment," said Moloi.
Timeline for conducting clinical trials
Afrigen is aiming to gain GMP certification in June of this
year and to start Phase 1 clinical trials on its candidate vaccine
by November. Terblanche explains that the product that will be used
in Phase 1 trials will be formulated from end-to-end at Afrigen. This
will include making the RNA, formulating the vaccine, inserting the
vaccine into vials (known as fill and finish), and labelling the vials
for trial use.
"We thought that Phase 1 will take us at least six months, including
data analysis, and then say a... two-month period to get approval
for Phase 2. So, eight months since the start of Phase 1, we could
move to Phase 2," she says.
She says that SAHPRA and the WHO are committed to fast track the clinical
development if the results warrant it. "Phase 2 will probably
take about 12 months, and then we will go into Phase 3," she
says.
"We hope that it might not be necessary to do all three Phases-depending
on our results, but what we said is the clinical development may be
36 months in all."
Doing efficacy trials on COVID-19 vaccines has become more complicated
as more and more people have already received vaccines and as the
efficacy of existing vaccines has raised questions about the use of
placebos in trials.
"At this point in time, we can't tell how many patients we would
require for clinical trials, we can't even tell what the detail clinical
development program would look like. Because this landscape is changing
fairly fast... You're not going to find naive patients.... We'll have
to look at how to design this trial? How do we ensure that we get
statistical significance? Are we going to do a case comparative trial
with Moderna? ...so those details we would only be able to really
unpack after we have some of the preclinical data," Says Terblanche.
She notes that both the WHO and local experts in clinical development
will be involved in designing the trials.
When will manufacturing be transferred to commercial partners?
As a technology transfer Hub, Afrigen will be tasked with transferring
technology to and training multiple international partners. The WHO
has already announced 13 countries that will receive technology transfers
from the Hub to enable their manufacture of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.
Although the WHO has not yet announced what companies in these countries
will act as commercial partners, it is already known that, in South
Africa, Afrigen's commercial partner will be the partially state-owned
entity, Biovac.
Terblanche adds that in addition to producing commercial stock, the
Hub's commercial partners may be responsible for producing some of
the clinical trial stock, which can assist them with their later regulatory
applications - but that this is still being worked out.
"The thinking," she says, "was it makes sense that
at the end of Phase 2, that the sponsor for Phase 3 should be the
market authorisation entity and therefore, Biovac. I think the verdict
on that decision is still out. It is not impossible that Afrigen will
go to Phase 3 and have the market authorisation. It's also not impossible
that Biovac may come in at Phase 2."
Dr Morena Makhoana, CEO of Biovac, told Spotlight that he expects
Biovac will manufacture [the vaccine for the] Phase 3 [trial]. "If
Phase 3 clinical trials are successful this will lead to market authorisation
of the product through the regular regulatory approval process,"
he says.
Last week Biovac announced that a consortium of development finance
institutions would support Biovac in raising R2.3 billion to expand
its vaccine manufacturing capacity - including for the Pfizer/BioNTech
mRNA vaccine. "Biovac has an agreement with Pfizer/BioNTech where
it will be producing Drug Product (Formulation-Fill Finish) on behalf
of Pfizer," says Makhoana.
In addition to the expanded capacity being developed at Biovac, Terblanche
notes, "The capacity we've designed [at the Afrigen] facility
for once it's fully, fully commissioned, is 10 million vials, which
is about 50 million doses. We are a tech developer and training facility,"
she says. "We are not a commercial supply facility", but
production capacity at Afrigen may be used to bridge or supplement
that of its commercial partners.
SA training international manufacturers to produce mRNA vaccines
In addition to developing a technology transfer package, Afrigen will
conduct hands-on training for commercial partners seeking to gain
knowledge, capacity, and skills to produce mRNA vaccines. "Our
training is tech transfer and training. It's very specific. It is
on the process and the product that will be made in those facilities.
[It] is very, very focused," says Terblanche. She adds that the
training will happen on-site, off-site, and some of it also, to some
extent, remotely, depending on what the maturity level of the partners
are.
Technology transfer recipients from Argentina and Brazil are arriving
in the country this week "for the first hands-on training to
make the lab-scale vaccine," says Terblanche.
South Africa's new role as a global trainer in mRNA vaccine development
and manufacturing less than a year since the establishment of the
Hub's first spoke in the country is impressive. "Give credit
to the South African scientific community... the fact that the scientists...
could [in a short period] make a vaccine at in a platform that's unknown
to most people, it's a new platform for vaccine production... is really
phenomenal," says Terblanche.
Potential patent problem
Despite backing from international health agencies and funding of
the Hub by multiple countries, patent protections held by the private
company, Moderna, leave significant legal uncertainty on whether the
Hub's vaccine candidate will be able to be manufactured, marketed,
and rolled out in LMICs, if demonstrated safe and effective in clinical
trials.
"Under the Bolar exemption [a provision in South Africa's and
international trade law] we can operate up to Phase 3 clinical trials,
but we cannot go commercial," Terblanche told Spotlight.
Whether the Hub's vaccine can be commercialised after clinical development
will depend on its patent status in each country where it will be
used.
"We are working on a number of strategies to ensure that we have
freedom to operate for the Hub and spokes... remember, now it's not
only South Africa... it is going to be 20 other countries, low-and
middle-income countries," says Terblanche.
According to data compiled by the Medicines Patent Pool, 17 patents
applications related to Moderna's vaccine were filed through WIPO's
Patent Cooperation Treaty (which acts as a clearing house for filing
applications to multiple countries at once) between 2006 and 2021.
These protections could impede competitor products such as the Hub's
vaccine through 2041. Eight of these patent applications were filed
in South Africa, four of which were granted -lasting through 2032.
While Moderna has pledged not to enforce its patents during the pandemic,
it has retained discretion on when it will resume enforcement of these
patents. Says Médecins Sans Frontières' Candice Sehoma, "The
patents granted to Moderna related to mRNA vaccines may jeopardise
the success of the WHO's mRNA Vaccine Technology Transfer Hub as well
as the future of self-reliant vaccine production in South Africa."