May 19, 2025
GHTC sends FY26 appropriations letters to US appropriators
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PATH/Christopher Nelson
May 22, 2025
GHTC sent letters to the relevant appropriations subcommittees in the House and Senate—the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies (LHHS); State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs (SFOPS)/National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs (NSRP); and Defense Subcommittees on Appropriations—asking them to sustain and protect global health R&D funding in the fiscal year 2026 (FY26) budget.
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The Global Health Technologies Coalition (GHTC) welcomes the historic consensus on the World Health Organization (WHO) Pandemic Agreement—a first-of-its-kind instrument that, if implemented, could help reshape the global innovation ecosystem for pandemic preparedness and ensure greater equity in the development of and access to new pandemic tools. While the agreement reflects compromise and not all ambitions were met, it represents important progress and lays the groundwork for action toward global readiness and equity in future health emergencies. “There is a clear and welcome throughline in this agreement that the fruits of research and development, particularly that which is publicly funded, should and must benefit all the world’s citizens, including those in low- and middle-income countries who are far too often left behind,” said Dr. Kristie Mikus, Executive Director of GHTC. “Today, the world is sending a forceful message that we cannot and will not repeat the devastating inequities seen during the COVID-19 pandemic.”Notably, this agreement commits countries to develop policies attaching public interest conditions to public research and development (R&D) funding—an unprecedented move with the potential to transform how treatments, tests, and vaccines are developed and delivered during health crises. It also establishes a new global coordination mechanism on supply chain and logistics, requires national policies that promote post-clinical trial access to products for trial populations and at-risk groups, and outlines principles for a new Pathogen Access and Benefits Sharing (PABS) system, which would grant 20 percent of medical countermeasures produced by participating manufacturers to WHO, enabling more equitable access and distribution worldwide.It is also the first global health agreement grounded in One Health that explicitly acknowledges the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health. These are historic achievements and steps in the right direction to ensure the world is better prepared to respond to future threats.“Today’s adoption is a big win for the world and for multilateralism, but the test now lies in whether countries can seal the deal with PABS and translate these promises into ratification and effective policies at the national level to drive sustained impact,” said Philip Kenol, Senior Multilateral Policy and Advocacy Officer at GHTC.GHTC calls on member states to work diligently to ensure forthcoming negotiations to finalize the PABS system bring all relevant stakeholders to the table and achieve an agreement that drives innovation and delivers equitable access for all who need it, especially underserved populations. Countries must maintain the momentum to ensure that universal ratification of these important obligations and principles catalyzes a stronger and more effective pandemic preparedness architecture that benefits everyone, everywhere.
April 29, 2025
GHTC shares statement for Senate Appropriations Committee's hearing on biomedical research
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GHTC shared a statement ahead of the first part of Senate Committee on Appropriations' hearing on "Biomedical Research: Keeping America's Edge in Innovation," emphasizing how the US government contributes to developing lifesaving technologies that help Americans and people around the world, as well as generate significant economic benefits for the United States and urging appropriators to continue to support this work.Statement for the RecordSubmitted by Dr. Kristie Mikus, Executive Director, Global Health Technologies Coalition
April 29, 2025
Introduction
The Global Health Technologies Coalition (GHTC) thanks the committee for allowing the
submission of statements for the record for such a crucial hearing. The title “Biomedical
Research: Keeping America’s Edge in Innovation” underscores what a critical moment we are in
as a nation as we watch various branches of the US-supported biomedical innovation ecosystem
come to a halt after decades of meaningful and methodical progress. Over the past ~100 days, the
scientific community has faced challenges on an unprecedented scale and has been forced to
reckon with an uncertain future where the United States may start to fall behind the rest of the
world.
As GHTC—a group of 50 nonprofit organizations, academic institutions, and aligned businesses
advancing policies to accelerate the creation of new drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, and other
health tools to bring healthy lives within reach for all people—we encourage the committee to
not lose sight of or backpaddle in support of key biomedical innovation programs that have been
written into bipartisan appropriations bills for decades.
Our coalition focuses on the challenge of conducting research and development (R&D) for
neglected diseases, emerging infectious diseases (EIDs), antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and
other global health priorities for which there is a lack of commercial incentive to spur large
private sector R&D investments. Because of this market gap, the US government created the
funding structures and capacity for R&D to develop lifesaving technologies that mitigate the
progression of diseases like HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis (TB), Ebola, Zika, and, most
recently, COVID-19. These efforts by the US government have saved millions of lives and
improved the well-being of an even greater share of people around the world afflicted with
illnesses that have plagued humanity for centuries.
The challenge and way forward through R&D
Unfortunately, we are still without essential technologies to achieve a future where pandemics
are prevented and health is within reach for all. Additionally, diseases are evolving and beginning
to outpace our ability to respond effectively. In 2022, 1.3 million people were killed by TB, 1.3
million people were newly diagnosed with HIV, and 249 million people were infected by
malaria. In 2021, at least 1.14 million people were killed by bacterial resistance, and 4.71 million
deaths were associated with bacterial resistance. More than 1 billion people worldwide are
affected by neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), a group of 21 diseases caused by a variety of
pathogens. Given these growing challenges, new medical products are needed to overcome
neglected diseases, stay ahead of the deadly growth of drug and insecticide resistance, replace outdated and toxic treatments, prepare for future pandemics, and better reach low-resource and
remote communities in the United States and globally.
The United States has a proven track record of success. US government support has led to the
development of 67 approved global health technologies (excluding COVID-19-related
technologies), representing over a quarter of all approved global health technologies created
worldwide since 1999. Looking ahead and toward new challenges, there are 579 global health
technologies in late-stage development worldwide, with the US government supporting 261 (45
percent) of them through US agency collaborations. However, canceling grants, halting future
investments, and firing key staff will be debilitating setbacks for these late-stage products.
In addition to building the innovation ecosystem that helps to protect Americans’ health and
security, investing in global health innovation also yields significant domestic economic benefits.
Such benefits include remarkable job creation, economic gains, and a flourishing technology
sector propelled by US dollars and expertise. After analyzing the data, GHTC and our partners at
Impact Global Health released a report quantifying the return on investment of US government
funding for global health R&D over the past 16-plus years. Highlights of this analysis include:
More than 600,000 new jobs created in the United States.
A direct influx of more than $104 billion into the US economy.
A separate and additional $102 billion into the economy from basic-science-related
global health research.
And, finally, an estimated $251 billion that will be infused into the economy from future
innovations underpinned by the past 16 years of investment and invention.Broadly, the US government agency network that supports global health R&D includes the
Department of State; the US Agency for International Development (USAID); the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS), including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, and
the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA); and the Department
of Defense.
Each of these agencies’ work on global health R&D has in some capacity been jeopardized,
frozen, or eliminated in the past 100 days. While we appreciate the need for thoughtful reviews
of federal funding and the pursuit of an effective executive branch, the cuts to and eliminations
of key global health programs will damage the legacy of US leadership in the innovation space.
Luckily, there is time to reverse these decisions, change course, and reestablish the United States
as a powerhouse of biomedical R&D, as well as a trusted and well-funded research partner to the
world.
Below we intend to highlight a few areas where the global health R&D community finds itself at
a critical juncture. Understanding that a significant amount of funding has hit a standstill, we want to present not only an update to the committee of where the work stands but also what the
future could look like if these lifesaving and cost-effective programs, projects, and functions are
fully operational.
USAID
Over the past several months, the critical R&D work conducted through USAID funding has hit
a standstill. Many of our members have had their programs terminated, putting an indefinite hold
on progress toward tackling some of the world’s most pressing challenges.
As a key implementer of US global health programs, USAID, while not perfect, has been wellpositioned to identify pressing gaps and needs in innovations. The agency applies a unique
business mindset, focusing on the late-stage R&D of technologies that are affordable, appropriate
for last-mile settings, and primed for widespread adoption—thus maximizing the impact of US
taxpayer investment. The benefit of these investments for Americans is also substantial: these
investments not only save and improve lives worldwide, but they also strengthen the US
economy, support our innovation sector, and keep Americans safe.
Following a brief foreign assistance review, nearly all global health R&D awards were
terminated. Projects terminated include efforts to advance:
Promising HIV vaccines. Two early-stage trials of promising HIV vaccines were
stopped from proceeding after patient enrollment had begun. Researchers now face a
ticking clock to find alternative funding to continue the trials before the doses expire and
efforts to train staff and recruit patients are for naught. An HIV vaccine is a priority to
end the epidemic in the United States and globally.
Next-generation malaria vaccines with improved efficacy. A clinical trial of two
experimental vaccines in the United Kingdom was shut down mid-trial after some
patients had already received doses, leaving them without appropriate follow-up care, and
an award to the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research was ended. Advancing improved
malaria vaccines is a priority for global health and protecting US military personnel.
Shorter treatment and preventative regimens for TB, including drug-resistant forms,
which could reduce treatment time by several months and improve adherence. Three
significant treatment trials were halted, including two that were set to begin this year, and
one with children, which was stopped mid-trial after some kids had received partial
treatment. A trial that was set to start this spring to advance a one-month preventative
therapy to stop people exposed to DR-TB from developing active TB is now on hold, and
its future is unclear.
Efforts to strengthen laboratory and surveillance systems across dozens of countries,
which is critical to detect and prevent the spread of EIDs. If these efforts are resumed, the decades-long fights to tackle these diseases could reach a tipping
point after years of dedicated work by the brightest minds in the American research enterprise.
NIH
NIH excels at basic and early-stage biomedical research, unlocking scientific discoveries that can
later be translated into lifesaving global health technologies by the private sector, nonprofits, and
other US agencies. While NIH primarily facilitates basic research on global health challenges
through intramural programs and external grants to universities, nonprofits, and other
organizations across the United States, its ongoing investments in clinical trials for HIV/AIDS—
and, increasingly, trials for malaria and TB—also makes it one of the biggest global funders of
clinical development in each of these disease areas.
Two key NIH institutes and centers, the Fogarty International Center (FIC) and the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), contribute the lion’s share to global health
R&D that directly benefits US citizens. Both FIC and NIAID are at risk of elimination and/or
reprioritization and have absorbed some of the deepest cuts after the recent HHS reorganization.
Both institute directors were reassigned to the Indian Health Service, and grants that focus on,
among other issues, international collaboration, HIV/AIDS, and pandemic prevention have been
terminated or indefinitely frozen. We write today to encourage the appropriations committee to
think strategically about these vital resources at NIH and their contributions to our national and
global health security through the pursuit of innovation.
FIC plays an important role in accelerating science, partnerships, and technical assistance to
advance new technologies for some of the world’s most pressing health challenges. With less
than one-fifth of one percent of the total NIH budget, the center delivers significant scientific
returns for global and American health, forging international partnerships to facilitate truly global
research. Many FIC-trained scientists now hold high-ranking academic and government
positions around the world and have made critical contributions to long-standing global public
health challenges such as HIV/AIDS and emerging threats like COVID-19, Zika, and Ebola.
Ultimately, FIC investments abroad improve public health in the United States. FIC’s
investments in scientific capacity globally improve our ability to detect emerging and novel
disease threats sooner. The center also creates a platform for partnerships between scientists in
the United States and around the world. When FIC investments lead to new tools or interventions
designed for low-resource settings, these innovations can be deployed back in the United States,
where they can drive down costs and improve access to health care in rural settings—an
exchange known as reciprocal innovation.
For over six decades, most NIH funding for neglected disease R&D has flowed through NIAID,
which conducts research across a range of global infectious disease threats, including HIV/AIDS,
malaria, TB, NTDs, influenza, Zika, Ebola, and COVID-19. NIAID scientists, in partnership
with Moderna, developed one of first COVID-19 vaccines, mRNA-1273, to reach Americans, and advanced the vaccine to human clinical trials just 65 days after the genome of the virus was
shared—far quicker than any previous vaccine development timeline.
Beyond COVID-19, NIAID has recently contributed to several major global health innovations:
NIAID supported, through a public-private partnership, the development of an
innovative, automated diagnostic for TB—the Cepheid Xpert® MTB/RIF test—which is
simple to use and provides results in less than two hours. In comparison, older diagnostic
methods can take several weeks.
NIAID supported clinical research demonstrating that a combination of two newer
drugs, bedaquiline and delamanid, could be safely taken together to treat drug-resistant
TB in HIV-positive and HIV-negative individuals.
NIAID supported preclinical research that contributed to the development of
pretomanid, a new drug approved in 2019 by the US Food and Drug Administration for
use as part of a combination therapy for highly drug-resistant forms of TB.
NIAID developed an Ebola treatment, mAb114, which was found to dramatically
improve the survival rate of infected patients in a clinical trial carried out amid the 2019-
2019 outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The technology underpinning
this treatment has also been used in research on therapeutics for COVID-19—illustrating
how continued investment in a range of global health challenges helps prime our research
infrastructure and scientific knowledge base for emerging threats.
We have seen the NIH research partnerships supported by FIC and the technologies accelerated
by NIAID scientists transform our global health security toolbox and take center stage in the
fights against the most significant health-related disasters in recent memory. These institutes and
centers have saved American lives while powering the biomedical innovation engine that makes
the United States’ leadership on these issues second to none. Sustaining support for these
research entities will help maintain our edge on innovation and keep us all safe.
BARDA
BARDA supports the advanced development of vaccines, drugs, and other medical
countermeasures to protect Americans against threats to public health, including EIDs, AMR,
and pandemic influenza. BARDA works with industry to bridge the “valley of death” between
basic research and product development—so called because many potential medical innovations
stall after public funding for basic research drops off but before other public, private, or nonprofit
R&D funders pick up later-stage product development efforts. Through unique contracting and
incentive mechanisms, BARDA’s partnerships ensure promising research is translated into
urgently needed medical products by creating commercial incentives for private-sector partners
to invest in R&D. Through emergency supplemental appropriations, BARDA has made a significant impact during
global health emergencies. Between 2015 and 2017, BARDA helped advance at least three Ebola
vaccine candidates, at least six diagnostics for Zika, and at least five Zika vaccine candidates,
leading to 11 US Food and Drug Administration-approved products for filoviruses like Ebola and
Zika. BARDA has also supported development of broad-spectrum antiviral called galidesivir,
which has the potential to treat a variety of pathogens, including Ebola, Marburg, yellow fever,
and Zika. In response to COVID-19, BARDA has supported at least 127 products, including
vaccines, diagnostics, therapeutics, and devices, and devices through $25 billion in emergency
supplemental funding appropriated through COVID-19 relief bills, which is more than 43 times
its base fiscal year 2020 appropriation. As we have all now seen firsthand, the delay between the
emergence of a health threat and the development of appropriate tools to combat it costs lives
and disrupts the most fundamental functioning of our global society.
BARDA has also already made significant contributions to the global effort to curb AMR,
including through the founding of the Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Biopharmaceutical Accelerator (CARB-X), as directed by the U.S. National Action Plan for
Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria. Since 2017, CARB-X has supported 113 R&D projects
in 14 countries. Of these, 18 projects have already advanced into or completed clinical trials; 12
remain active in clinical development, including late-stage clinical trials; and three diagnostic
products have reached the market. Indeed, BARDA is a leader across three critical stages of
R&D through three programs: preclinical research supported by CARB-X, clinical research
funded through the Broad Spectrum Antimicrobials Program, and post-approval funding from the
Project BioShield Special Reserve Fund.
Conclusion
Global health research that improves the lives of people around the world while at the same time
supporting US interests, creating jobs, and spurring economic growth at home is a win-win
investment. The traditional distinction between “domestic” and “global” can create
vulnerabilities to Americans’ health and well-being. Many diseases that may not be common in
the United States now still pose significant domestic health concern or threats to Americans. The
incidence and burden of these health challenges globally represent a reservoir for continued
spread, risking the emergence of dangerous genetic mutations, and they are also a source of
significant human and economic loss. Millions of people die every year, and our vulnerability to
disease increases because we lack the necessary technological innovations. The United States, as
a biomedical research powerhouse, can change history and save lives through relatively small
public investments while meeting necessary domestic health security requirements. It also makes
good business sense for America to invest in biomedical innovation for global health considering
the economic benefits to the United States aforementioned, including several hundred thousands of jobs
created for the US economy. The challenges the R&D community faces today are hard to ignore, but by regaining lost ground
on issues like funding biomedical innovation, reengaging with international research
collaborations, and strengthening the capacity for research universities and research
organizations, we can pull ahead and reclaim our strategic edge.