Vaxxas, a clinical-stage biotechnology company, has expanded its
global intellectual property portfolio to 42 patents, supporting
its exclusive claim to manufacture and sell its proprietary
vaccination technology, the high-density microarray patch (HD-MAP),
in the United States, Europe, Asia and Australia.
Vaxxas’ patent portfolio covers all significant proprietary
aspects of the company’s vaccine delivery platform and products,
including the manufacture and use of the HD-MAP technology and
novel applicator device; vaccine formulations; and methods for
formulating, loading and coating vaccines on HD-MAP technology.
The latest patent issued to Vaxxas in November 2024 covers the
specific design and use of the HD-MAP and applicator technology for
vaccine delivery to the skin in the United States.
Following issuance of the company’s latest US patent, Vaxxas CEO
and President David Hoey said, “Vaxxas is aiming to transform the
vaccine market by improving the performance of vaccines and
reducing the economic and logistical challenges typically
associated with needle-and-syringe vaccination.
“The growing breadth of our patent portfolio protects our
exclusive use of the technologies necessary to achieve this goal,
as well as freely manufacture and sell our products at commercial
scale and in a safe and regulatory compliant manner.”
Vaxxas Chief Technology Officer Dr Angus Forster said the
company has been very intentional in building its global
intellectual property portfolio.
“The coverage of Vaxxas’ issued patents, both geographically and
technologically, sets us apart as we continue to mature our
vaccination platform and expand our range of products,” said Dr
Forster.
“In the past 24 months alone, we have filed seven new patent
applications covering new aspects of our technology platform,
including HD-MAP delivery of mRNA vaccines, the fastest growing
segment of the vaccine market. These patent applications, if
granted, would extend our cover through to 2045.”
Vaxxas is scaling up to manufacture and distribute the world’s
first commercially available vaccine patches from its global
headquarters and state of the art biomedical facility in
Brisbane.
Vaxxas Chief Operating Officer Scott Fry added, “Because we’re
developing a combination product that includes a vaccine or
medicine component with a medical device, we have broad patenting
opportunities.
“We not only file patents around the vaccines we formulate and
deliver, but also the systems and processes to manufacture the
HD-MAPs and applicators at scale. This latest US patent is further
evidence of the value our team of engineers brings to technology
that could transform the vaccine industry.”
Vaxxas’ HD-MAP technology has completed five successful Phase I
clinical trials involving over 500 participants with vaccines that
address some of the world’s biggest health challenges including
COVID-19, flu, and measles and rubella.
Vaxxas is currently conducting its first US IND-enabled Phase I
clinical study for a pre-pandemic influenza vaccine involving 258
participants, with funding from the United States Biomedical
Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA).
About Vaxxas
Vaxxas is a privately held biotechnology company focused on
enhancing the performance of existing and next-generation vaccines
with its proprietary high-density microarray patch (HD-MAP). Vaxxas
is targeting initial applications in infectious diseases and
oncology.
With success in several completed human clinical trials, Vaxxas’
HD-MAP vaccine delivery platform is advancing toward
commercialisation. The company has completed Phase I clinical
trials for COVID-19, seasonal influenza, and measles and rubella
vaccine patches involving more than 500 participants; and conducted
other vaccine studies targeting pandemic influenza with funding
from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority
(BARDA) – part of the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and
Response within the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
Vaxxas’ core technology was initially developed at The
University of Queensland (UQ), and the company was established as a
start-up in 2011 by UQ’s commercialisation group UniQuest. The
company was founded with the completion of an initial equity
financing led by OneVentures Innovation Fund I with co-investors
Brandon Capital Partners and US-based HealthCare Ventures, followed
by further financing led by OneVentures, joined by UQ.
OneVentures Innovation Fund I and Brandon BioCatalyst are
supported by the Australian Government’s Innovation Investment Fund
(IIF) program. The IIF is an Australian Government venture capital
initiative that provides investment capital and managerial
expertise through licensed venture capital fund managers to
investee companies. Learn more at OneVentures and Brandon
Capital.
About HD-MAP needle-free vaccines
The Vaxxas high-density microarray patch (HD-MAP) is comprised
of thousands of microscopic projections moulded into a small patch.
Each microprojection is ‘printed’ with a small dose of vaccine in a
dried formulation. When applied to the skin, the patch delivers the
vaccine to the abundant immune cells that naturally reside
immediately below the skin surface.
HD-MAP vaccine delivery has the potential to overcome challenges
faced by traditional needle and syringe delivery of vaccines. For
example, the dried form of the vaccine has been shown in early
clinical studies to be more stable at higher temperatures than
vaccines in liquid formulations, potentially reducing the need for
cold-chain storage and distribution.1
Previous studies have also shown the safety and tolerability of
Vaxxas’ HD-MAP for use in vaccine delivery and inducing equal or
greater immune responses to injected vaccines at lower doses.1
Compared with needle and syringe systems, HD-MAP vaccines are
designed to be easier to administer and have potential use in
future pandemic responses.1
Caution
The Vaxxas HD-MAP delivered vaccines are under investigation and
available only for investigational uses. They are not available
anywhere in the world for sale or purchase. As such, Vaxxas makes
no claim that the vaccines are reliable, durable, dependable, safe,
or effective, and makes no claim that it is superior to any other
vaccine or vaccine delivery technology.
References
1 Baker, B., Hacker, E., Siller, G., Lee, M., Mursaliyev, N.,
& Forster, A. (2023). Evaluation of the self-administration
potential of high-density microarray patches to human skin: A
preliminary study. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 19(1).
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2023.2189409
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Australia Amy Miller WE Communications +61 431 072 422
amymi@we-worldwide.com
United States Kathryn Morris The Yates Network +1 914 204
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