History: Moderna Is An American Pharmaceutical and
History: Moderna Is An American Pharmaceutical and
History: Moderna Is An American Pharmaceutical and
Contents
1History
o 1.12010–2016
o 1.22018–2020
2Overview
o 2.1Leadership
o 2.2Board
3COVID-19 vaccine
4See also
5Notes
6References
7External links
History[edit]
2010–2016[edit]
2018–2020[edit]
In 2018, the company rebranded as "Moderna Inc." with the ticker symbol MRNA, and further
increased its portfolio of vaccine development.[9] In December 2018, Moderna became the largest
biotech initial public offering in history, raising $621 million (27 million shares at $23 per share) on
NASDAQ, and implying an overall valuation of $7.5 billion for the entire company.[31][32] The year-
end 2019 SEC filings showed that Moderna had accumulated losses of $1.5 billion since
inception, with a loss of $514 million in 2019 alone, and had raised $3.2 billion in equity since
2010.[9][23] As of December 2020, Moderna was valued at $60 billion.[33]
In March 2020, in a White House meeting between the Trump administration and pharmaceutical
executives, Bancel told the president that Moderna could have a COVID-19 vaccine ready in a
few months.[9] The next day, the FDA approved clinical trials for the Moderna vaccine candidate,
with Moderna later receiving investment of $483 million from Operation Warp Speed.[9] Moderna
board member, Moncef Slaoui, was appointed head scientist for the Operation Warp Speed
project.[9]
Overview[edit]
Moderna develops mRNAs that are delivered in lipid nanoparticle, using mRNA
with pseudouridine nucleosides. Candidates are designed to have improved folding
and translation efficiency via insertional mutagenesis.[34]
The Moderna COVID-19 vaccine candidate, mRNA-1273, was shown in a Phase I trial to
be immunogenic in a small number of volunteers aged 18–55 years.[35] As of December 2020, no
mRNA vaccine had completed Phase III clinical trials or had been licensed for prophylactic use
against COVID-19, although the Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines had been approved for
marketing under emergency use authorizations from the FDA and regulatory agencies in other
countries.[36][37]
Leadership[edit]
Since 2011, Moderna has been led by CEO Stéphane Bancel, a French businessman with a
pharmaceutical sales and operations background.[10][9] Bancel has been described as having a
secretive approach to Moderna, and as being a tough operator.[10][9] Though never having worked
with RNA before, Stat noted that Bancel "is listed as a co-inventor on more than 100 of Moderna's
early patent applications, unusual for a CEO who is not a PhD scientist".[10] After Noubar Afeyan
and Robert Langer, Bancel is the largest individual shareholder in the company.[38]
Stephen Hoge, M.D., is president and a former McKinsey & Company management consultant
who joined in 2012; he is the fourth-largest individual shareholder in the company.[38][5]
David Meline is CFO.[5]
Board[edit]
Noubar Afeyan, CEO of Flagship Pioneering, has been the chairman of Moderna's board of
directors since 2011.[39] Afeyan who has a Ph.D. in biochemical engineering[40] holds his interest in
Moderna through various Flagship Pioneering vehicles. At the 2018 IPO, documents filed stated
that Afeyan owned 19.5% of the company, while Flagship owned 18%, thus giving Afeyan control
over 37.5% of the company.[23]
In May 2020, board member Dr. Moncef Slaoui resigned from the company to become Chief
Scientist for the Trump administration's "Operation Warp Speed", a group designed to accelerate
the development of a vaccine for the coronavirus. Slaoui continued to hold more than $10 million
in stock options in the company in his new role while the federal government invested
$483 million in the company to assist in coronavirus vaccine trials. Senator Elizabeth
Warren called the holding a conflict of interest and stated that Slaoui should have divested his
options.[41]
COVID-19 vaccine[edit]
Main article: mRNA-1273
See also: COVID-19 vaccine and RNA vaccine