Don’t punish small business heroes behind pandemic response

America’s startups deserve much of the credit for beating back Covid-19. Small businesses were responsible for nearly three-quarters of Covid-19 diagnostic innovations — more than 600 inventions in all, according to a new report from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

Unfortunately, we might not be able to count on small businesses the next time a public health crisis strikes. That’s because our government may soon vote to betray startups by sabotaging their business model.

The moment of reckoning will come in February, when the World Trade Organization decides whether to adopt a proposal to waive patent rights for Covid-19 tests and treatments. It can’t do so without U.S. support.

The proposal would have no upside at all. Global Covid-19 cases are dramatically lower than the peak of the crisis, drug manufacturing capacity hasn’t been an issue for over a year, and countries around the world already have access to the most advanced treatments, thanks to patent-sharing agreements.

The downside, on the other hand, would be significant. A patent waiver would be fatal to American startups, which rely on steady financial investment. Reliable patent rights are the system’s linchpin, as I know from experience.

In 2010, two scientists at the University of Michigan began developing an antibody that could be used to treat inflammatory bowel diseases. After nearly a decade, they came up with an antibody called PTM-001.

The scientists were confident that PTM-001 would work, but they still needed to turn their invention into a usable medicine, and for that, they needed investment. In 2019, I joined up with them as co-founder and CEO, and we formed a startup, PTM Therapeutics. We applied for a patent on their discovery as a usable medicine.

Our San Carlos company is growing fast. But we will never reach our goal of changing patients’ lives without venture capital investment. And with all the challenges and risks involved in biotech startups, there’s no way we could attract enough money without secure patent rights.

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