All eyes are on a handful of drug
companies after news that the U.S. is prioritizing five COVID-19 vaccine
programs. But since the selections went public, experts have been
raising questions about the process and the drugmakers that were left
off.
Earlier this week, The New York Times reported
that AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Merck, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna had
scored “finalist” status at Operation Warp Speed, an aggressive program
to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to Americans this year. Four of the
companies have already received federal funding for their programs, and
the finalists will have access to additional resources, NYT reports.
Among those resources is priority access to clinical trial facilities, former FDA chief Scott Gottlieb said
on CNBC. With limited testing capacity nationwide and many vaccines in
development, that’s set to hinder companies that weren’t picked.
The former FDA chief pointed out
two absences that struck him—Sanofi and Novavax. Of the five vaccines
selected, only one platform—from Merck—has ever been used in an approved
shot.
“There’s no sort
of old-style technology in this mix,” Gottleib said. “I’m surprised that
either Sanofi or Novavax, someone who is developing [a
vaccine using] an older approach … wasn’t selected. If you want to
spread your bets, you probably want to spread your bets across different
platforms.”
Sanofi and Novavax “appear to be pretty
far along,” Gottlieb added, or at least “close enough that they could
have been included if in fact the government wanted to include a
protein-based approach in this initial mix.”
In late-stage testing,
each COVID-19 vaccine will need to be tested in 10,000 to 15,000
participants against a control arm of about 15,000 patients, Gottlieb
said. He predicted that clinical trial access will be a “critical issue”
this fall.
Meanwhile, a source linked to the project told Science the selection process has been “chaotic” and that it wasn’t “transparent to those of us who are trying to help out.”
The latest move is “typical Operation
Warp Speed, where everything is sort of cryptic and it’s unclear what
they’re actually saying,” Baylor College of Medicine vaccine expert
Peter Hotez told Science. Hotez, who is part of a public-private group
formed to assist with COVID-19 drug and vaccine development, said the
process has not been transparent so far. He also wondered why Sanofi had
been left out of the finalists.
About six months into the pandemic, 10
vaccines are in human testing and more than 120 are in preclinical
stages, according to an update this week from the World Health
Organization. Even as researchers move their projects through research
stages, teams are also working on the manufacturing end to prepare for a
massive scale-up in the event the vaccines succeed in testing.
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