Expert Voices

How Far Off Is 'Home Brew' Insulin for Diabetes?

Biomanufacturing kits
Miniature biomanufacturing kits like this prototype could revolutionize the pharmaceutical industry.
(Image credit: Amino Labs, CC BY-ND)

Soon after Federick Banting discovered that insulin could be used to treat diabetes in 1921, he sold the patent to the University of Toronto for about a dollar. Banting received the Nobel prize because his discovery meant a life-saving drug could become widely available. Nearly a century later, an American with diabetes can pay as much as US$400 per month for insulin, driving some uninsured patients to desperate and dangerous measures. Clearly, something went wrong.

Our lab studies biosecurity, so when we heard that a group of do-it-yourself biologists was working to solve the insulin affordability problem by figuring out how to manufacture insulin patent-free, we got to know them. After digging into the insulin affordability issue, we argue that what's keeping insulin expensive is not patents – it's regulations. By operating in a regulatory blind spot, DIYers could upset the status quo for drug production.

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