The E is silent

Yote_cropI’ve already mentioned Wake Forest and tech transfer, but the picture above was shot on the University of South Dakota campus here in the US. The university, which has the state’s only medical school and an overall enrollment of more than 10,000, is located in Vermillion, SD. The official mascot is a coyote — though pronounciation of the word in South Dakota drops the long “E” at the end, so it rhymes with “oat.” This is common in western parts of the US, and thus, when rooting on the local team in The Dakota Dome, the correct phrase is “Go Yotes.”

USD is in the beginning stages of a long-term, collaborative project between the neighboring city Sioux Falls, the school and the private sector. It has secured 80 acres of land just outside Sioux Falls and is planning a massive, mixed use academic and residential research park, to be completed over the next 20 years. This is covered in greater detail in the Bioentrepreneur feature article, now live the December issue of Nature Biotechnology, but the school’s expansion is just one part of its attempts to ramp up tech transfer. USD is also in the midst of a $250 million fundraising campaign called Onward. It has already raised more than half of that and is earmarking at least $97 million for future student financial aid.

I visited the campus on a gray, fall day, just before USD’s 2014 Homecoming weekend. The red-stone buildings and long stretches of green grass made the campus seem like some sort of scholarly oasis situated just north of Main Street.

Photographer for these shots is Travis Huggett — his website is here. (Full disclosure: he’s my cousin.)

Brady Huggett

Red

On the USD campus.

Begin

The beginnings of the University of South Dakota Research Park, in Sioux Falls, SD.

 

Plans

Richard Naser, president of University of South Dakota Resarch Park Inc, examines plans for the completed project.

 

 

Ebola, and Working at Accelerated Speed

timeA short three months ago I wrote a blog about R&D leads in treating Ebola virus disease (EVD) with vaccines and therapeutics included in the Ebola pipeline.  The piece was sceptical about what could be achieved in the pace of product development, clinical trials and commercialization solutions for the emergency in West Africa.

Three months later, like many others, I am amazed by the response time by industry and coordinated action of governments, funders and implementors in accelerating R&D across interventions. Over this time period, EVD has also arrived on shores outside of the African continent in Spain, UK, France, Norway, Germany and USA. What I had considered early and unproven leads in August have now progressed rapidly to provide non-human primate data, first-in-man data and parallel planning for phase III trials, at-scale production, policy directives to deploy and supply financing.

EVD Vaccines

The World Health Organization and partners announced on Oct 23, their earliest timeline yet, hopes of introducing a brand new EVD vaccine to the field at scale by Q1 2015. Two candidates are currently in Phase I trials (GSK ChAD3 and New Link rVSV) and as many as five more vaccine candidates may enter Phase I trials in January 2015. Depending on the Ph I results returning in December, one or both of the leading vaccine candidates will be scaled up to Phase III trials in West Africa in January 2015. The clinical trials are now being designed with care among expert stakeholder groups. It is proposed that the large cohort trials will start with 20,000 health workers in Liberia and potentially 8,000 more in Sierra Leone. The positive externalities would be that beneficial outcomes are proved, the highest-risk group of people would be the first to gain protection. At the high-level meeting on Ebola vaccines, industry manufacturers pledged to increase capacity for production so supply constraints in the worst-case outbreak scenario can be reduced.

EVD Drugs

WHO technical consensus on whole blood therapies and convalescent blood serums are a priority for suffering patients. However, due to limited supply of blood, infrastructure for blood screening, processing and administration from surviving EVD patients and difficulty in logistics, this currently cannot be deployed as a wide-scale solution. There is support for the clinical trials of small molecule drugs (antivirals) that can be quickly and affordably produced without manufacturing constraints. In addition, the RNA and monoclonal Ab approaches will also commence efficacy trials, but face additional implementation hurdles such as complex manufacturing and high cost of goods to produce, thus resulting in constrained supply.

EVD Diagnostics

Diagnosing EVD in a person infected for only a few days is difficult, because the early symptoms, such as fever, are nonspecific to the disease and could be another infectious disease (malaria, typhoid, lassa fever, etc.). The US CDC recommends ELISA testing, PCR and virus isolation to identify EVD patients from other diseases. However, these tests currently require laboratory work and diagnosis and cannot be deployed at first-screening point of care.

The WHO is working with the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND), a public-private product development partnership, to check technical feasibility and closest match to target product profile for an EVD diagnostic to be developed. Multiple molecular and antigen detection technologies are being tracked by the diagnostics consortium with the following plan for commercialization:

Q1 2015: Validation phase

Q2 2015: Field trials conducted

It is important to concurrently accelerate the diagnostics work with high sensitivity and specificity to EVD at the same time as vaccine development. One of the common side effects of vaccines is the slight fever post-immunization and the initiation of the host immune response in reaction to the attenuated virus. Diagnostics will help distinguish if the fever is a normal side effect or presence of EVD itself.

Continuous Tracking the Call to Action

As the EVD outbreak continues to drain health resources in West Africa, other health indicators in the region are falling – for example, with the general population being too scared to visit hospitals, expectant mothers, patients with malaria, lassa fever and other health issues are not being appropriately treated. As the health indicators fall and business climate is hampered, West African countries start the spiral of downward economic impact, which is felt across the continent.

The R&D efforts have been accelerated by the global community, but the on-the-ground management of containment and control goes on day by day. Some may say the global community should have had these antidotes prepared since EVD was identified in 1976, others will see the accelerated development speed as a sign of further global collaboration. What lessons does this teach us about controlling other infectious diseases? That investments in basic research is important and that we cannot start from ground zero in outbreak situations? That, if there is political will, R&D for diseases of the poor can be accelerated across all areas? Perhaps in a World Bank proposed Emergency Fund? Overall, investments in health systems need to be higher on the global health agenda, since countries are better protected against any emerging threat if they have a strong defence.

Many questions, and answers are probably all of the above.

Julia Fan Li

Changes in University Tech Transfer

Bailey Power Plant

The Bailey Power Plant incorporated into the Innovation Quarter in Winston-Salem, NC. (Source: Wake Forest University)

The December issue of Nature Biotechnology includes a BioE feature article investigating changes in university tech transfer in the US. We started thinking about this topic early in 2014 and spent about six months reporting on it, before taking all that information and trying to mold it into publishable form. The result is that we have more than we were able to fit into the article, and I wanted to pass along some tidbits on Trade Secrets.

One of the schools we looked at is Wake Forest University, located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. (Full disclosure: I went to Wake Forest for my undergraduate degree.) The school landed in our list of “top 20” schools due to its gross licensing revenue over 2009-2013. As part of reshaping its tech transfer methods, Wake Forest set up an Innovation Quarter downtown, which includes the Wake Forest Biotech Place. Besides being a home for academic research and corporate offices, the Innovation Quarter now holds events. There is a lot of talk about collaboration between arts and sciences in the corporate world today, and lots of assumptions being made about the amazing things that will happen when various groups mingle. Time will tell how that plays out, but either way, the Merge event discussion between a dermatologist and a “tattoo historian” being held at the Innovation Quarter sounds fascinating.

I’ll put up other images from our reporting, and other interesting bits of information from the various schools mentioned in the piece, over the coming days. Article will be out in early December.

Brady Huggett