MSF slams expensive vaccines, urges GSK
and Pfizer to cut prices
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[January 20, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON - The international charity Medecins
Sans Frontieres urged drugmakers GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer on Tuesday
to slash the price of their pneumococcal vaccines to $5 per child in
poor countries.
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In a report on vaccine prices ahead of an international donor
conference in Berlin at the end of January, MSF slammed Big Pharma
companies and said the cost of vaccinating a child in the world's
poorest countries was now 68 times higher than in 2001.
The "skyrocketing" prices mean many countries can't afford expensive
new vaccines such as those that protect against pneumococcal
disease, which kills about a million children a year, MSF's report
said.
"A handful of big pharmaceutical companies are overcharging donors
and developing countries for vaccines that already earn them
billions of dollars in wealthy countries," said Rohit Malpani,
policy and analysis director for MSF's access campaign.
Responding to the criticism, GSK said in a statement that it was
already barely covering its costs with the price it charges poorer
countries for its pneumococcal shot, Synflorix, which it said was
"one of the most complex we've ever manufactured".
"Many of our available vaccines are advanced and complex and require
significant upfront capital investment to make and supply," it said,
adding that to discount pneumococcal vaccines further would threaten
GSK's ability to supply them long-term.
Pfizer also said its pneumococcal shot, Prevenar 13, was highly
complex. "It takes more than two years to create one batch of
Prevenar 13, encompassing some 500 separate quality control tests
... multiple facilities and hundreds of trained professionals," it
said in a statement.
MSF's report said pneumococcal shots alone accounted for about 45
percent of the cost of fully vaccinating a child against 12
diseases. It said GSK and Pfizer had together reported more than $19
billion in global sales for pneumococcal vaccines since their
launch.
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A pledging conference for the GAVI global vaccines alliance is due
in Berlin next week, when government donors and private
philanthropists will be asked for some $7.5 billion to help immunize
hundreds of millions of children in poor countries between 2016 and
2020.
"Governments need to put pressure on (drug) companies to offer
better prices to GAVI," said Kate Elder, an MSF policy adviser.
"We need to put public health before profit. Life-saving vaccines
for children shouldn't be big business in poor countries."
(Editing by Andrew Roche)
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