Inovio Pharmaceuticals
was one of the earlier companies to identify a potential vaccine
candidate against COVID-19, but the company has run into manufacturing
problems that have stymied its development plans, while other biopharma
groups have pushed ahead in their own development programs.
Inovio’s development issues for its vaccine candidate have become
mired in a conflict with the contract manufacturing organization it has
worked with on previous projects. Because of the issues with the CMO,
Korea-based VGXI, Inc., Inovio has filed a lawsuit
seeking to break the impasse and transfer an existing supply agreement
to another agency. VGXI, according to the company’s lawsuit, is unable
or unwilling to manufacture its vaccine candidate in large quantities.
Inovio has been pushing to develop its vaccine candidate, INO-4800, but
without the large-scale manufacturing necessary, the company’s efforts
have been slowed down considerably. Inovio had a goal of producing one
million doses of INO-4800 by the end of 2020 to support its clinical
trials and emergency use. VGXI could not meet that demand.
Inovio and VGXI have been partners since 2008. VGXI produces and
supplies the DNA plasmids for Inovio’s research and early clinical
trials for its product candidates. Inovio has no purchase commitments
under this supply agreement. The company said purchase agreements are
determined on an individual purchase order basis. Under the Supply
Agreement, Inovio said it agreed to treat VGXI as its most favored
supplier for DNA plasmids, and VGXI agreed to treat Inovio as its most
favored customer.
As COVID-19 took gripped the world, Inovio began to develop its vaccine candidate and in April, received permission
from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to initiate a Phase I study.
As the company eyes a potential Phase II, VGXI informed Inovio that is
does not have the capacity to manufacture the company’s full order of
DNA plasmids on the requested timeline, nor would it be able to
manufacture plasmids for the commercial sale of INO-4800, if it achieved
regulatory approval.
On June 3, Inovio filed a complaint in the Court of Common Pleas of
Montgomery County in Pennsylvania seeking emergency relief to compel
VGXI to “facilitate the transfer of manufacturing methods, using VGXI’s
technology, under the parties’ existing supply agreement,” the company
said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The
technology transfer is permitted under the existing supply agreement
and, if it goes through, would allow Inovio to find another manufacturer
who can meet its needs. When VGXI told the company it did not have the
capabilities to meet its demands, Inovio said it began discussions with
other third-party contract manufacturers, as permitted by the Supply
Agreement. Inovio struck a deal with Ology Bioservices Inc. and
Richter-Helm BioLogics GmbH & Co. KG to support large-scale
manufacturing of INO-4800 and sought to have VGXI turn over the
technology required. VGXI refused, which prompted the lawsuit.
In its filing,
Inovio said it believes the widespread availability of INO-4800 is
essential in quest to develop a medication against the disease that has
been linked to the deaths of more than 390,000 people across the globe,
including 108,000 in the United States.
https://www.biospace.com/article/inovio-files-complaint-to-break-ties-with-cmo-over-covid-19-vaccine-production-issues/
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