Difference between revisions of "CARB-X"

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{{group
 
{{group
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CARB-X
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CARB-X
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|twitter=https://twitter.com/carb_x?lang=ru
 
|sourcewatch=
 
|sourcewatch=
|constitutes=
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|constitutes=public-private partnership
|logo=
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|start=July 28, 2016
|start=
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|description=A globalpartnership focused on [[antibacterial products]], financed by the super-spooky [[BARDA]] and the [[Gates Foundation]].
|description=
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|headquarters=Boston,Boston University,Massachusetts,USA
|headquarters=Boston University,Massachusetts,USA
 
 
|interests=Antimicrobial resistance,antibiotics,antimicrobials
 
|interests=Antimicrobial resistance,antibiotics,antimicrobials
 
|website=https://carb-x.org/
 
|website=https://carb-x.org/
 
|founders=
 
|founders=
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|logo=CARB-X logo.png
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|titular_logo=1
 
|num_staff=
 
|num_staff=
|members=
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|sponsors=Doherty Institute,University of Maryland
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|members=Kevin Outterson,Richard Alm, Jane Ambler,Emma Back,Mike Barbachyn,Greg Basarab,Tim Blizzard,Robert Bonomo (CARB-X),Keith Bostian,Helen Boucher,Tom Boyles,Patricia Bradford,Andrew Camilli,Joe Campbell,Chris Chengelis,David Christ,David Clarke,Bob Clay,David Cook,Lloyd Czaplewski,Peter Dailey,Aaron Dane,Shampa Das,Melnick Dave,Joe Devito,Sabine Dittrich,Alice Erwin,Marta Fernandez Suarez,Phil Fernsten,Patrick Flume,Anthony Ford-Hutchinson,Jo Fothergill,Francois Franceschi,Carrie Furr,Humphrey Gardner,Debbie Goff,Mark Goldberg,Herman Goossens,Howard Haimes,Kim Hanson,Herb Harwell,David Heilman,Carla Hoitink,Richard Hotchkiss,David Hughes,Romney Humphries,Deb Hung,Joe Iaconis,Rick Jack,Namita Jaggi,Zoltan Kanyo,Keith Kaye,Cassandra Kelly-Cirino,Jacqueline Kirchner,Jeff Klausner,Ajay Kumar,Pascal Lavoie,Mathew Lo,Camille Locht,Tom Lowery,Patrick Lukulay,Nada Malou,Helen Marshall,Laura Martin,Marielena Mata,Bob McLaughin,Helen McShane,Marc Mendelson,Paul Miller,Linda Miller,Nel Moore,Marshall Morningstar,Ian Morrissey,Larry Mortin,
 
}}
 
}}
'''Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator''' ('''CARB-X''') is a global nonprofit partnership focused on supporting the development of new antibacterial products.
+
'''Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator''' ('''CARB-X''') is a global [[nonprofit]] partnership focused on supporting the development of new [[antibacterial products]], <ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20160802054526/http://www.bu.edu:80/law/faculty-scholarship/carb-x/</ref> financed by the super-spooky [[BARDA]] and the [[Gates Foundation]].
 +
==History==
 +
CARB-X launched July 28, [[2016]] as one of the world's largest [[public-private partnership]]s to accelerate global [[antibacterial]] innovation, including drugs, [[vaccines]], rapid [[diagnostics]] and devices. CARB-X aims to invest up to $450 million over five years with the goal of accelerating the preclinical discovery and development of at least 20 new antibacterial products.<ref name=injects>https://carb-x.org/carb-x-news/carb-x-injects-up-to-48-million-to-accelerate-first-powered-by-carb-x-portfolio-of-drug-development-projects-to-tackle-antibiotic-resistance/</ref>
  
 
==Activities==
 
==Activities==
 
"The CARB-X initiative plays an important role in [[BARDA]]'s goal to catalyze the early stage development pipeline and enhance our national health security preparedness. CARB-X allows BARDA to tap into a partnership of co-funders, accelerators, and innovators who are pushing critical [[novel antimicrobials]] from discovery to the market to address the public health and national security concerns of [[antibiotic resistant bacteria]]."<ref>https://carb-x.org/partners/funding-partners/</ref>
 
"The CARB-X initiative plays an important role in [[BARDA]]'s goal to catalyze the early stage development pipeline and enhance our national health security preparedness. CARB-X allows BARDA to tap into a partnership of co-funders, accelerators, and innovators who are pushing critical [[novel antimicrobials]] from discovery to the market to address the public health and national security concerns of [[antibiotic resistant bacteria]]."<ref>https://carb-x.org/partners/funding-partners/</ref>
 +
 +
In May 2021, it funded [[SNIPR BIOME]], "a leading [[CRISPR]] and [[microbiome]] biotech company" incorporated in [[Copenhagen, Denmark]], with US $3.9 million. The company applies its CRISPR technologies to selectively target [[microbial pathogens]] and remodelling the [[microbiome]].<ref>https://carb-x.org/carb-x-news/carb-x-is-funding-snipr-biome-to-develop-a-crispr-engineered-drug-to-eradicate-escherichia-coli-e-coli-bacteria-in-cancer-patients-to-prevent-deadly-infections/</ref>
  
 
==Board members==
 
==Board members==
The Joint Oversight Board and Advisory Board members are secret.<ref>https://carb-x.org/about/advisory-board</ref>
+
The Joint Oversight Board and Advisory Board members are not discloses.<ref>https://carb-x.org/about/advisory-board</ref> The members are "a snapshot of their subject matter [[experts]]" as of November 2024.<ref>https://carb-x.org/about/advisory-board/</ref> [[Kevin Outterson]], Executive Director of CARB-X in 2016, is a Professor of Law at Boston University.<ref name=injects/><ref>https://archive.is/9o8Zp</ref>
  
 
==Finances==
 
==Finances==
Many of the usual suspects.<ref>https://carb-x.org/partners/funding-partners/</ref>
+
Many of the usual suspects, including the spooky [[BARDA]], the [[Gates Foundation]], and [[Wellcome Trust]]. Other funders include [[Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and Research]] (BMBF); the [[United Kingdom's Department of Health and Social Care]](DHSC), through its [[Global Antimicrobial Resistance Innovation Fund]] (GAMRIF), the [[Public Health Agency of Canada]] (PHAC), the [[Novo Nordisk Foundation]]; and the [[NIAID|Unites States' National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases]] (NIAID), part of the [[National Institutes of Health]] (NIH).<ref>https://carb-x.org/partners/funding-partners/</ref>  
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
{{stub}}
 

Latest revision as of 05:28, 19 November 2024

Group.png CARB-X  
(Public-private partnershipTwitter WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
CARB-X logo.png
FormationJuly 28, 2016
HeadquartersBoston, Boston University, Massachusetts, USA
InterestsAntimicrobial resistance, antibiotics, antimicrobials
Sponsor ofDoherty Institute, University of Maryland
Sponsored byBARDA, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Wellcome Trust
Membership•  Kevin Outterson
•  Richard Alm
•  Jane Ambler
•  Emma Back
•  Mike Barbachyn
•  Greg Basarab
•  Tim Blizzard
•  Robert Bonomo (CARB-X)
•  Keith Bostian
•  Helen Boucher
•  Tom Boyles
•  Patricia Bradford
•  Andrew Camilli
•  Joe Campbell
•  Chris Chengelis
•  David Christ
•  David Clarke
•  Bob Clay
•  David Cook
•  Lloyd Czaplewski
•  Peter Dailey
•  Aaron Dane
•  Shampa Das
•  Melnick Dave
•  Joe Devito
•  Sabine Dittrich
•  Alice Erwin
•  Marta Fernandez Suarez
•  Phil Fernsten
•  Patrick Flume
•  Anthony Ford-Hutchinson
•  Jo Fothergill
•  Francois Franceschi
•  Carrie Furr
•  Humphrey Gardner
•  Debbie Goff
•  Mark Goldberg
•  Herman Goossens
•  Howard Haimes
•  Kim Hanson
•  Herb Harwell
•  David Heilman
•  Carla Hoitink
•  Richard Hotchkiss
•  David Hughes
•  Romney Humphries
•  Deb Hung
•  Joe Iaconis
•  Rick Jack
•  Namita Jaggi
•  Zoltan Kanyo
•  Keith Kaye
•  Cassandra Kelly-Cirino
•  Jacqueline Kirchner
•  Jeff Klausner
•  Ajay Kumar
•  Pascal Lavoie
•  Mathew Lo
•  Camille Locht
•  Tom Lowery
•  Patrick Lukulay
•  Nada Malou
•  Helen Marshall
•  Laura Martin
•  Marielena Mata
•  Bob McLaughin
•  Helen McShane
•  Marc Mendelson
•  Paul Miller
•  Linda Miller
•  Nel Moore
•  Marshall Morningstar
•  Ian Morrissey
•  Larry Mortin
A globalpartnership focused on antibacterial products, financed by the super-spooky BARDA and the Gates Foundation.

Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator (CARB-X) is a global nonprofit partnership focused on supporting the development of new antibacterial products, [1] financed by the super-spooky BARDA and the Gates Foundation.

History

CARB-X launched July 28, 2016 as one of the world's largest public-private partnerships to accelerate global antibacterial innovation, including drugs, vaccines, rapid diagnostics and devices. CARB-X aims to invest up to $450 million over five years with the goal of accelerating the preclinical discovery and development of at least 20 new antibacterial products.[2]

Activities

"The CARB-X initiative plays an important role in BARDA's goal to catalyze the early stage development pipeline and enhance our national health security preparedness. CARB-X allows BARDA to tap into a partnership of co-funders, accelerators, and innovators who are pushing critical novel antimicrobials from discovery to the market to address the public health and national security concerns of antibiotic resistant bacteria."[3]

In May 2021, it funded SNIPR BIOME, "a leading CRISPR and microbiome biotech company" incorporated in Copenhagen, Denmark, with US $3.9 million. The company applies its CRISPR technologies to selectively target microbial pathogens and remodelling the microbiome.[4]

Board members

The Joint Oversight Board and Advisory Board members are not discloses.[5] The members are "a snapshot of their subject matter experts" as of November 2024.[6] Kevin Outterson, Executive Director of CARB-X in 2016, is a Professor of Law at Boston University.[2][7]

Finances

Many of the usual suspects, including the spooky BARDA, the Gates Foundation, and Wellcome Trust. Other funders include Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); the United Kingdom's Department of Health and Social Care(DHSC), through its Global Antimicrobial Resistance Innovation Fund (GAMRIF), the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), the Novo Nordisk Foundation; and the Unites States' National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).[8]

 

Known member

1 of the 74 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Debra GoffUS doctor

 

Sponsors

EventDescription
BARDAResponsible for bioterrorism "medical countermeasures" (i.e. the actual biological weapons, like "vaccines")
Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationVery influential and rich foundation established to take leadership of global health.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Wellcome Trust4th wealthiest charitable foundation in the world
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References