The global patent landscape of emerging infectious disease monkeypox

Author:

Cai Yuanqi,Zhang Xiaoming,Zhang Kuixing,Liang Jingbo,Wang Pingping,Cong Jinyu,Xu Xin,li Mengyao,Liu Kunmeng,Wei Benzheng

Abstract

Abstract Background Monkeypox is an emerging infectious disease with confirmed cases and deaths in several parts of the world. In light of this crisis, this study aims to analyze the global knowledge pattern of monkeypox-related patents and explore current trends and future technical directions in the medical development of monkeypox to inform research and policy. Methods A comprehensive study of 1,791 monkeypox-related patents worldwide was conducted using the Derwent patent database by descriptive statistics, social network method and linear regression analysis. Results Since the 21st century, the number of monkeypox-related patents has increased rapidly, accompanied by increases in collaboration between commercial and academic patentees. Enterprises contributed the most in patent quantity, whereas the initial milestone patent was filed by academia. The core developments of technology related to the monkeypox include biological and chemical medicine. The innovations of vaccines and virus testing lack sufficient patent support in portfolios. Conclusions Monkeypox-related therapeutic innovation is geographically limited with strong international intellectual property right barriers though it has increased rapidly in recent years. The transparent licensing of patent knowledge is driven by the merger and acquisition model, and the venture capital, intellectual property and contract research organization model. Currently, the patent thicket phenomenon in the monkeypox field may slow the progress of efforts to combat monkeypox. Enterprises should pay more attention to the sharing of technical knowledge, make full use of drug repurposing strategies, and promote innovation of monkeypox-related technology in hotspots of antivirals (such as tecovirimat, cidofovir, brincidofovir), vaccines (JYNNEOS, ACAM2000), herbal medicine and gene therapy.

Funder

the science and technology of traditional Chinese medicine project of Shandong Province

Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province

the Science and Technology of Traditional Chinese Medicine Project of Shandong Province

the Special fund of Qilu Health and Health Leading Talents Training Project

National Nature Science Foundation of China

Demonstration Projects of Science and Technology for the People of Qingdao City

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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