Moderna sues Pfizer/BioNTech for patent infringement over COVID vaccine
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[August 27, 2022]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) -Moderna sued Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech on Friday
for patent infringement in the development of the first COVID-19 vaccine
approved in the United States, alleging they copied technology that
Moderna developed years before the pandemic.
The lawsuit, which seeks undetermined monetary damages, was filed in
U.S. District Court in Massachusetts. The suit also would be filed also
in the Regional Court of Duesseldorf in Germany, Moderna said in a news
release.
"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," Moderna
Chief Executive Stephane Bancel said in the news release.
Moderna Inc, on its own, and the partnership of Pfizer Inc and BioNTech
SE were two of the first groups to develop a vaccine for the novel
coronavirus, leading to a revenue windfall.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted emergency use
authorization for the COVID-19 vaccine first to Pfizer/BioNTech in
December 2020, then one week later to Moderna.
Moderna's COVID vaccine - its lone commercial product - has brought in
$10.4 billion in revenue this year while Pfizer's vaccine brought in
about $22 billion.
Pfizer said the company was confident in its intellectual property and
would vigorously defend against the allegations.
"We are surprised by the litigation given the COVID-19 vaccine was based
on BioNTech's proprietary mRNA technology and developed by both BioNTech
and Pfizer," a Pfizer spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
BioNTech called the lawsuit "unfortunate" and declared its work was
original.
"We will vigorously defend against all allegations of patent
infringement," the company said in a statement.
Just a decade old, Moderna, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, had been
an innovator in the messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine technology that enabled
the unprecedented speed in developing the COVID-19 vaccine.
An approval process that previously took years was completed in months,
thanks largely to the breakthrough in mRNA vaccines, which teach human
cells how to make a protein that will trigger an immune response.
BioNTech had also been working in this field when it partnered with the
U.S. pharma giant Pfizer.
Moderna alleges Pfizer/BioNTech, without permission, copied mRNA
technology that Moderna had patented between 2010 and 2016, well before
COVID-19 emerged in 2019 and exploded into global consciousness in early
2020.
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Moderna said its lawsuit was not
meant to stop people from getting vaccines, and it repeated its
pledge to never enforce its COVID-19 patents in 92 low- and
middle-income countries.
But Moderna said it did expect companies such as Pfizer and BioNTech
to respect its intellectual property rights, and it is seeking
royalty payments based on sales after March 8, 2022, and excluding
sales to the U.S. government or to low-income countries.
LENGTHY DISPUTE EXPECTED
If it ultimately prevails, the royalty in such cases is usually a
"high single digit" percentage of sales, according to Jacob Sherkow,
a University of Illinois College of Law professor who specializes in
biotech intellectual property issues.
Wall Street analysts expect the dispute to take years.
Jorge Contreras, a professor at the University of
Utah College of Law, said that Moderna was reversing course on its
public commitment that it would not enforce the patents.
"You can't just take it back because you've decided you'd like to
make some more money," Contreras said.
Sherkow said Pfizer could argue that the court should hold the
company to that pledge, though added there were few if any legal
precedents on whether it could be enforced.
Patent litigation is not uncommon in the early stages of new
technology.
Pfizer and BioNTech are already facing multiple lawsuits from other
companies who say the partnership's vaccine infringes on their
patents.
In Friday's statement, Moderna said Pfizer/BioNTech appropriated two
types of intellectual property.
One involved an mRNA structure that Moderna says its scientists
began developing in 2010 and were the first to validate in human
trials in 2015.
"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," Moderna said.
The second alleged infringement involves the coding of a full-length
spike protein that Moderna says its scientists developed while
creating a vaccine for the coronavirus that causes Middle East
Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).
Although the MERS vaccine never went to market, its development
helped Moderna rapidly roll out its COVID-19 vaccine.
Pfizer shares were down 2% in afternoon Friday afternoon trade,
while Moderna was off 3.3%. BioNTech's American shares were down 3%
after its German stock closed 1.6% lower.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta, additional reporting by Ankur Banerjee,
Mrinalika Roy and Amruta Khandekar in Bengaluru, Zuzanna Szymanska
in Berlin, Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing
by Caroline Humer, Edwina Gibbs, Howard Goller and Cynthia Osterman)
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