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Thursday, August 14, 2025

US researchers share COVID-19 vaccine with the world

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1306 days ago
20220115
Doctors Maria Elena Bottazzi and Peter Hotez at Texas Children's Hospital used traditional technology to make a coronavirus vaccine for global use [Courtesy of Texas Children's Hospital]

Doctors Maria Elena Bottazzi and Peter Hotez at Texas Children's Hospital used traditional technology to make a coronavirus vaccine for global use [Courtesy of Texas Children's Hospital]

Us­ing tra­di­tion­al tech­nol­o­gy that can be scaled wide­ly and cheap­ly, Cor­be­vax of­fers a po­ten­tial so­lu­tion to vac­cine in­equity.

By William Roberts-Al­jazeera

 

Re­searchers in the Unit­ed States have cre­at­ed a cheap, easy-to-pro­duce COVID-19 vac­cine that may of­fer a so­lu­tion to un­equal vac­cine ac­cess in de­vel­op­ing coun­tries.

By­pass­ing the patent re­stric­tions of ma­jor phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal firms, doc­tors Maria Ele­na Bot­tazzi and Pe­ter Hotez at the Bay­lor Col­lege of Med­i­cine and the Texas Chil­dren’s Hos­pi­tal Cen­ter for Vac­cine De­vel­op­ment used tra­di­tion­al vac­cine tech­nol­o­gy that can be de­ployed rapid­ly to help in­oc­u­late the glob­al pop­u­la­tion.

“There are coun­tries that are just ridicu­lous­ly low in the per­cent of ac­cess and vac­cine cov­er­age. We re­al­ly have to do a bet­ter job,” Bot­tazzi told Al Jazeera. “We re­al­ly need to vac­ci­nate the en­tire world.”

The world has pro­duced around 10 bil­lion vac­cine dos­es since mid-2020, but more than 70 per­cent of the vac­cines pro­duced last year were con­sumed by wealthy na­tions, ac­cord­ing to pub­lic health ex­perts. Two years in­to the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic, sig­nif­i­cant parts of the world re­main large­ly un­vac­ci­nat­ed, amid the risk that dan­ger­ous new vari­ants – such as Delta and Omi­cron – will con­tin­ue to emerge.

While ma­jor vac­cine pro­duc­ers such as Pfiz­er and Mod­er­na fight to pro­tect their in­tel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty rights, Bot­tazzi and Hotez have de­vel­oped a vac­cine that can be used freely by phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal mak­ers around the world.

Called Cor­be­vax, it re­lies on con­ven­tion­al meth­ods of pro­duc­tion and is based on a mod­el that the pair de­vel­oped to ad­dress SARS, a coro­n­avirus strain that broke out in the ear­ly 2000s.

Cor­be­vax has al­ready been ap­proved for emer­gency use in In­dia, where a vac­cine man­u­fac­tur­er is pro­duc­ing 100 mil­lion dos­es a month, ac­cord­ing to Bot­tazzi and Hotez.

Li­cences have al­so been grant­ed to vac­cine mak­ers in Bangladesh and In­done­sia, and pro­duc­tion talks are un­der way in Botswana, which means that hun­dreds of mil­lions of dos­es a month could soon be pro­duced lo­cal­ly in coun­tries that need vac­cines the most.

“It’s pret­ty ex­cit­ing,” Bot­tazzi said. “We’ve nev­er made a bil­lion of any­thing be­fore.”

‘Trans­for­ma­tive’ po­ten­tial

Cor­be­vax marks “a very im­por­tant ad­vance” in the fight against COVID-19, said Lawrence Gostin, a pro­fes­sor of glob­al health law at George­town Law in Wash­ing­ton, DC.

“Texas is re­al­ly do­ing this the right way by giv­ing away their in­tel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty and co­op­er­at­ing in tech­nol­o­gy trans­fer,” Gostin told Al Jazeera. “It has the po­ten­tial to be a trans­for­ma­tive ad­di­tion to our vac­cine ar­se­nal.”

The broad­er US vac­cine de­vel­op­ment pro­gramme, Op­er­a­tion Warp Speed, had fo­cused pri­mar­i­ly on new vac­cine tech­nol­o­gy based on mes­sen­ger RNA (mR­NA), which teach­es cells how to man­u­fac­ture a pro­tein that trig­gers an im­mune re­sponse. But while mR­NA vac­cines can be de­vel­oped rapid­ly, they are dif­fi­cult to pro­duce or dis­trib­ute on a mas­sive scale when com­pared with old­er types of vac­cines.

“If we’re just us­ing mR­NA tech­nol­o­gy, we would nev­er be able to vac­ci­nate the world,” Bot­tazzi said.

Yet, de­spite the risk of new vari­ants emerg­ing from large un­vac­ci­nat­ed pop­u­la­tions in the Glob­al South, Bot­tazzi and Hotez said they were un­able to draw any in­ter­est in their project from the White House.

“No one cared in the US gov­ern­ment, and no one still re­al­ly cares,” Hotez told Al Jazeera. A White House spokesper­son did not im­me­di­ate­ly re­spond to Al Jazeera’s re­quest for com­ment on the mat­ter.

In­stead, Bot­tazzi and Hotez turned to non-prof­it and phil­an­thropic sources, in­clud­ing the Kle­berg Foun­da­tion, the Dunn Foun­da­tion and the JPB Foun­da­tion, among oth­ers.

They patched to­geth­er $7m to fund the ven­ture, and have now li­censed the vac­cine “with no patents or strings at­tached” to phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal firms in In­dia, Bangladesh and In­done­sia.

“This con­cept, some peo­ple re­fer to as a south­ern own­er­ship, oth­ers call de­coloni­sa­tion,” Hotez said. “In oth­er words, we are not now go­ing to dic­tate to oth­er coun­tries. They are go­ing to own this.”

Build­ing ca­pac­i­ty

The av­er­age cost of Cor­be­vax in In­dia is ex­pect­ed to be $2 a dose, the In­di­an gov­ern­ment has es­ti­mat­ed, and its pre­dict­ed ef­fi­ca­cy in pre­vent­ing se­vere dis­ease is about 90 per­cent, ac­cord­ing to ini­tial da­ta from In­di­an phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal firm Bi­o­log­i­cal E.

In Africa, many coun­tries are be­low 10 per­cent in the por­tions of their pop­u­la­tions that are ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed, a key mea­sure tracked by the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion. Nige­ria, a na­tion of around 212 mil­lion peo­ple, has ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed less than 2.5 per­cent of its pop­u­la­tion.

Mean­while, the US has ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed 63 per­cent of its pop­u­la­tion, and the bench­marks are even bet­ter in west­ern Eu­rope. Sig­nif­i­cant parts of Asia, South Amer­i­ca and the Mid­dle East have yet to catch up. Iraq’s ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed rate is 15 per­cent, while Syr­ia is at five per­cent and Yemen at one per­cent.

“There is a huge vac­cine ca­pac­i­ty short­fall [in de­vel­op­ing na­tions],” Prashant Ya­dav, a se­nior fel­low at the Cen­ter for Glob­al De­vel­op­ment, told Al Jazeera. “We need much more sup­ply this year.”

The US gov­ern­ment has pledged to do­nate more than one bil­lion dos­es of COVID-19 vac­cine by the end of 2022, with Pres­i­dent Joe Biden boast­ing that the US is do­nat­ing more dos­es than any oth­er na­tion. So far, 370 mil­lion dos­es have been shipped – but “it’s still just a drop in the buck­et”, Gostin said.

The roll-out of the cheap­er, eas­i­er-to-pro­duce Cor­be­vax could ul­ti­mate­ly dwarf those num­bers, with Hotez not­ing: “[We’re on track to meet or ex­ceed] the en­tire out­put of the US gov­ern­ment for glob­al vac­cines.”

 

 


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