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Moderna Sues Pfizer Over COVID Vaccine Patent Infringement, But Patents ‘Belong to the World,’ Says Dr. Robert Malone

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Moderna yesterday filed patent infringement lawsuits against Pfizer and BioNTech, alleging the two companies copied Moderna’s patented mRNA technology and claiming neither of the companies possessed the necessary know-how to have produced the Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA COVID-19 vaccine on their own.

In a statement, Moderna alleged the two companies infringed on patents Moderna filed between 2010 and 2016.

Moderna, based in Cambridge, Mass., filed its lawsuit against Pfizer in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. It sued Germany-based BioNTech in the Regional Court of Düsseldorf, Germany.

Though Moderna has been in existence for only a decade, the company is considered “an innovator in the messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine technology that enabled the unprecedented speed in developing the COVID-19 vaccine,” according to Reuters.

However, in an interview with The Defender, Dr. Robert Malone, who helped develop the mRNA technology used in COVID-19 vaccines and who has become an outspoken critic of the vaccines and pandemic countermeasures, suggested the Moderna lawsuit may represent only the tip of the iceberg, in relation to legal disputes over patents.

Moderna: Pfizer and BioNTech Used Patented Technology Without Permission

Remarking on the lawsuit, Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in a statement:

“We are filing these lawsuits to protect the innovative mRNA technology platform that we pioneered, invested billions of dollars in creating, and patented during the decade preceding the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This foundational platform, which we began building in 2010, along with our patented work on coronaviruses in 2015 and 2016, enabled us to produce a safe and highly effective Covid-19 vaccine in record time after the pandemic struck.”

According to the statement, “Pfizer and BioNTech copied two key features of Moderna’s patented technologies which are critical to the success of mRNA vaccines.”

The BBC explained that one type of infringement alleged by Moderna involves “an mRNA structure that Moderna says its scientists began developing in 2010 and were the first to validate in human trials in 2015.”

The second infringement claimed by Moderna “involves the coding of the spike protein on the outside of the [COVID-19] virus itself,” the BBC reported.

“When COVID-19 emerged, neither Pfizer nor BioNTech had Moderna’s level of experience with developing mRNA vaccines for infectious diseases, and they knowingly followed Moderna’s lead in developing their own vaccine,” Moderna claimed in its statement.

Moderna also claimed Pfizer and BioNTech tested candidate COVID-19 vaccines that did not use technology Moderna claims violates its copyright, but ultimately opted not to develop them.

According to Moderna:

“First, Pfizer and BioNTech took four different vaccine candidates into clinical testing, which included options that would have steered clear of Moderna’s innovative path.

“Pfizer and BioNTech, however, ultimately decided to proceed with a vaccine that has the same exact mRNA chemical modification to its vaccine as Spikevax®.”

Pfizer and BioNTech then copied the spike protein Moderna originally developed.

Moderna said:

“Second, and again despite having many different options, Pfizer and BioNTech copied Moderna’s approach to encode for the full-length spike protein in a lipid nanoparticle formulation for a coronavirus.

“Moderna scientists developed this approach when they created a vaccine for the coronavirus that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) years before COVID-19 first emerged.”

“Although the MERS vaccine never went to market, its development helped Moderna rapidly roll out its COVID-19 vaccine,” according to Reuters.

Moderna said none of the patent rights it is seeking to enforce are related to intellectual property it developed as a result of its collaboration with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for the development of COVID-19 treatments.

Moderna received $2.5 billion in taxpayer funding to support the development of its COVID-19 vaccine, The New York Times reported.

Moderna, in October 2020, “pledged not to enforce its COVID-19 related [sic] patents while the pandemic continued,” according to the company’s statement.

However, the company said it “updated” its pledge on March 7, 2022, “when the collective fight against COVID-19 entered a new phase and vaccine supply was no longer a barrier to access in many parts of the world.”

As part of this “updated” pledge, Moderna “made clear that while it would never enforce its patents for any COVID-19 vaccine used in the 92 low- and middle-income countries in the GAVI COVAX Advance Market Commitment (AMC92),” the company “expected companies such as Pfizer and BioNTech to respect its intellectual property rights.”

Moderna said it “would consider a commercially reasonable license” if requested by other companies, but added, “Pfizer and BioNTech have failed to do so.”

Shannon Thyme Klinger, Moderna’s chief legal officer, said, “Pfizer and BioNTech unlawfully copied Moderna’s invention, and that they have continued to use them without permission.”

Based on the date the company updated its pledge — March 7 — Moderna said it is “not seeking damages for activities occurring before March 8, 2022,” adding that it is “not seeking to remove Comirnaty® from the market … is not asking for an injunction to prevent its future sale [and] is not seeking damages related to Pfizer’s sales to AMC92 countries.”

As of Friday morning, Pfizer had not responded to the allegations. A spokeswoman for the company, Jerica Pitts, said the company had not been served with a suit and was “unable to comment at this time.”

Malone: ‘Skirmish’ Between Moderna and Pfizer ‘Part of a Larger Effort to Assert Primacy in the MRNA Vaccine Domain by a Variety of Corporations’

In an interview with The Defender, Malone characterized Moderna’s lawsuit as “part of a larger ongoing dispute over the origins and patent coverage relevant to the mRNA vaccine technology” — while accusing Moderna and others of failure to cite other prior patents, including his own.

Malone said one of the patents under dispute in Moderna’s lawsuit involves the “delivery and formulation of engineered nucleic acids.”

The other patents at the heart of the dispute between Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, according to Malone, “involve broad claims concerning rights to express a full-length spike protein from any coronavirus using a modified mRNA approach.”

Malone said these patents are “also at risk for re-examination due to being overly broad.”

He described the “skirmish” between Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech as being “part of a larger effort to assert primacy in the mRNA vaccine domain by a variety of corporations.”

At its root, the dispute is “really an extension of the concerted effort previously made by BioNTech and UPenn [the University of Pennsylvania] to claim Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman as the original inventors of the [mRNA] technology,” instead of himself, Malone said.

He said this is transpiring “as part of a press campaign advocating that [Karikó and Weissman] receive the Nobel Prize for their work.”

Referring more broadly to Moderna’s lawsuit, Malone said it is “about Moderna attempting to extract money from Pfizer-BioNTech on claims that involve at least one issued patent which clearly failed to cite relevant prior art, both in published literature and in issued U.S. patents.”

“One outcome of this lawsuit,” said Malone, “may be that [one] patent is invalidated for failure to cite, and the other patents cited may be at risk for invalidation due to being overly broad.”

According to Reuters, legal disputes involving patents are “not uncommon in the early stages of new technology,” adding that all of the companies involved in the suit are already embroiled in other lawsuits.

For instance, Pfizer and BioNTech were sued for patent infringement by German company CureVac.

In turn, The Verge reported, Moderna was sued by two biotechnology companies, Arbutus Biopharma and Genevant Sciences, “over the method for packaging up the mRNA and delivering it to the body.”

Arbutus also succeeded in a previous patent infringement challenge against Moderna, in 2020.

And all three companies involved in the latest lawsuit — Pfizer, BioNTech and Moderna — were sued by another biotechnology company, Alnylam, over a similar technology.

Moderna is also involved in a separate legal dispute with the NIH involving rights to mRNA technology.

Bancel, in touting the importance of the mRNA technology for Moderna, went on to claim in the company’s statement that Moderna “is continuing to use the technology to develop treatments for influenza and HIV, as well as autoimmune and cardiovascular diseases and rare forms of cancer.”

Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine is the company’s only commercial product — one that has delivered $10.4 billion in revenue, in contrast to the almost $22 billion in revenue Pfizer has generated from its COVID-19 vaccine.

News of the lawsuit came amidst a recent report, on Aug. 24, that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is likely to approve updated versions of both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 boosters.

Early reaction to the lawsuit on the part of investors was negative, with Pfizer shares falling 1.4% and BioNTech shares declining by about 2% in early morning trading before the opening bell of the New York Stock Exchange.

While the markets may be expressing some jitters in relation to Pfizer as a result of this lawsuit, for Malone, the main issue at hand comes back to the original development of mRNA technology — and who has, perhaps improperly, benefitted from it.

Speaking in reference to patents related to mRNA technology, Malone told The Defender:

“All of these patents are essentially ‘composition of matter’ derivatives of the original patents and publications derived from my own work at the Salk Institute and Vical during 1987-1990.

“Those patents have expired, I received no significant compensation for them, and the ideas, inventions, and scope of those patents now belong to the world. They do not belong to Moderna, BioNTech, CureVac or Pfizer, all of which have developed derivative positions based on that prior art.”

This article was originally published by The Defender — Children’s Health Defense’s News & Views Website under Creative Commons license CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0. Please consider subscribing to The Defender or donating to Children’s Health Defense.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Epoch Health welcomes professional discussion and friendly debate. To submit an opinion piece, please follow these guidelines and submit through our form here.



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