Tobacco firm to profit from cancer genes

Sarah Boseley, health editor
Monday November 12, 2001
The Guardian

One of the world's biggest tobacco companies aims to make billions of
pounds from the diseases caused by cigarette smoking through deals
with biotech companies for the exclusive rights to market future lung
cancer vaccines.

The strategy by Japan Tobacco, which makes Camel, Winston, Mild Seven
and the menthol cigarette brand Salem, was condemned yesterday as both
cynical and dangerous.

If a successful lung cancer vaccine went on the market, it would not
stop smokers dying of other tobacco-related diseases, such as heart
disease and emphysema. But the arrival of a vaccine, promoted by a
tobacco company, would encourage smoking in the false belief that they
could be treated.

"Giving a tobacco company exclusive rights to lung cancer vaccines is
like putting Dracula in charge of a blood bank," said Helen Wallace,
deputy director of GeneWatch UK, which uncovered the deals.

Dr Wallace is worried that one of the biotech companies, the
Seattle-based Corixa Corp., has based its work on the patenting of
human lung cancer gene sequences, which may have come from a smoker
who may not have known of the commercial prospects that his genes
offered.

Derek Yach, director of the non-communicable diseases cluster at the
World Health Organisation, said: "We tackle lung cancer by breaking
the addictive grip of the tobacco industry and taking action to help
people quit smoking or never start. The last company that should
control the rights to a lung cancer vaccine is one that makes huge
profits from products that cause the disease."

Japan Tobacco, the third-biggest tobacco firm in the world, has paid
Corixa for an exclusive licence to develop and sell vaccine and
antibody-based products aimed at the prevention and/or treatment of
lung cancer, primarily in north America and Japan. The idea behind it
is to use certain proteins found in lung cancer tumours to generate an
immune response in the patient. So far, Japan Tobacco has paid Corixa
several million pounds.

The other contract, with the California-based Cell Genesys, was signed
in late 1998 on payment by Japan Tobacco of �8.7m and an undertaking
of �18.8m in research funding. In return, Japan Tobacco receives
marketing rights.

The tobacco giant also invested three years ago in the UK company
British Biotech, which is developing a genetically engineered protein
that can dissolve and prevent blood clots and may help prevent heart
attacks and strokes.

Public health officials and anti-tobacco campaigners say the best way
to prevent deaths from smoking is by clamping down on the advertising
and promotion of cigarettes.

"What we have got is a company that wants to block the things that
would prevent the diseases in the first place and profit from mopping
up the mess that their products have created," said Clive Bates of
Action on Smoking and Health. "It was a new low," he added.

Lung cancer is one of over 50 diseases caused by smoking, he pointed
out, and an effective vaccine would not prevent deaths from other
causes. It would also inevitably be priced too high for those in poor
countries.

GeneWatch says that patents on gene sequences in lung cancer tumours
may impede progress towards a vaccine, since they prevent research by
others.

Both Corixa and Cell Genesys strongly defend their contracts with
Japan Tobacco, saying it is dealing with the pharmaceutical arm of the
company (which accounts for less than 2% of the tobacco giant's sales)
and that their main concern is to save lives.

A Corixa spokesman said people should bear in mind the needs of cancer
sufferers.

Jennifer Williams of Cell Genesys said the deal was done in 1998,
"when the company was not as well financed as it is now. It made sense
for us to do that." But she said it was unlikely that they would seek
an alternative partner.

Roy Tsuji, general manager of the media and investor relations
division at Japan Tobacco, said the company was diversifying because
of the limited prospects for growth in the tobacco sector.

"The vast majority of people welcome efforts that help find drugs for
various diseases."





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