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Friday, February 26, 2021

Merck says FDA requires more data on its COVID therapy

 Merck & Co said on Thursday that U.S. regulators have asked for additional data beyond the Phase III study already conducted in order to support potential emergency use authorization of its experimental COVID-19 drug MK-7110.

Based on the feedback from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Merck no longer expects to supply the U.S. government with MK-7110 in the first half of 2021, the company said in its annual report.

The drugmaker - which stopped development of two COVID-19 vaccines last month because they generated immune responses that were inferior to other vaccines - signed an up to $356 million deal in December to supply the U.S. government with 60,000 to 100,000 doses of MK-7110.

Merck picked up the drug when it acquired privately held OncoImmune late last year. At that point, MK-7110, an immune modulator being studied as a treatment for patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19, was already in a Phase III trial.

Topline results that showed a 60% higher probability of improvement in clinical status compared to placebo, as well as a more than 50% reduction in the risk of death or respiratory failure were reported by OncoImmune in September.

Merck said in its annual report that full results from the study, which were consistent with the topline results, were received this month and will be submitted soon.

But the FDA has asked for more data beyond the study. Merck said it is actively working with regulators to address their comments.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/1-merck-says-fda-requires-230330058.html

AstraZeneca-Oxford University says research not affected after expert flags COVID lab hack

 Oxford University said on Thursday it was investigating a digital intrusion after a researcher said he had seen evidence that a laboratory researching COVID-19 had been hacked.

The breach took place in mid-February and occurred at the Division of Structural Biology, known as Strubi, which has been carrying out research into COVID-19, according to Alex Holden, founder of Wisconsin-based Hold Security.

Forbes first reported the breach.

Strubi is distinct from the Jenner Institute, which develops the Oxford COVID-19 vaccine in partnership with AstraZeneca .

Oxford University confirmed there had been a hack and in an emailed statement it said it was investigating.

"We have identified and contained the problem and are now investigating further. There has been no impact on any clinical research, as this is not conducted in the affected area," an Oxford spokesman said, adding that the university was working with the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) on the incident.

It did not name the facility affected.

NCSC, the cybersecurity arm of spy agency GCHQ, said in a statement that it was aware of the incident and was "working to fully understand its impact."

Holden told Reuters that he discovered the intrusion when he found screenshots from inside the lab's network left by the hackers on a poorly secured server.

Holden said the hackers – which his company has been tracking – were Portuguese speakers operating out of South America and that they were criminally motivated, citing references to ransomware and discussions of monetary payouts.

Digital espionage targeting health bodies, vaccine scientists and drugmakers has surged during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In December, U.S. drugmaker Pfizer Inc and its German partner BioNTech SE disclosed that documents related to development of their COVID-19 vaccine had been "unlawfully accessed" in a cyberattack on Europe's medicines regulator. 

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ASTRAZENECA-PLC-4000930/news/AstraZeneca-Oxford-University-says-research-not-affected-after-expert-flags-COVID-lab-hack-32543642/

Takeda sells four diabetes products to Teijin Pharma for $1.25B

 Takeda Pharmaceutical Co said on Friday it agreed to sell four diabetes products in Japan to Teijin Pharma Ltd for 133 billion yen ($1.25 billion).

Takeda will sell the Japanese marketing rights of drugs Nesina, Liovel, Inisync and Zafatek to Teijin Pharma subject to regulator approval, the company said in a release. The drugs generated 30.8 billion yen in sales in fiscal 2019, Takeda said.

The sale is the latest in a series of deals that Takeda has undertaken to reduce debt and refocus its business after its purchase of Shire Ltd, which was completed in January 2019.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-takeda-diabetes-sale/japans-takeda-sells-four-diabetes-products-to-teijin-pharma-for-1-25-billion-idUSKBN2AQ10Y

EU regulator advises use of Regeneron antibody cocktail for COVID-19

 Europe’s medicines regulator said on Friday an antibody drug combination developed by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals can be used to treat COVID-19 patients who do not require oxygen support and are at high risk of progressing to severe illness.

The recommendation can now be used as guidance in individual European nations on the possible use of the combination of casirivimab and imdevimab before a marketing authorisation is issued, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said. (bit.ly/3syYgzB)

Regeneron’s antibody cocktail was authorised for emergency use in the United States in November, and was given to former U.S. President Donald Trump during his COVID-19 infection.

The treatment, given via a drip, is part of a class of drugs known as monoclonal antibodies, which are manufactured copies of antibodies created by the human body to fight infections.

“In terms of safety, most side effects reported were mild or moderate, however reactions related to the infusion (including allergic reactions) have been seen and should be monitored for,” EMA said.

The regulator said its real-time review of the combination is ongoing and will form the basis for its recommendation for an EU conditional marketing approval. It is also reviewing antibody treatments from Eli Lilly and Celltrion.

Regeneron said on Thursday an independent panel found the treatment to have “clear clinical efficacy” in reducing the rates of hospitalization and deaths in patients.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-europe-antibody/eu-regulator-advises-use-of-regeneron-antibody-cocktail-for-covid-19-idUSKBN2AQ1KD

AstraZeneca, Sputnik vaccines face hurdles if COVID shots become annual affair

 Vaccines from AstraZeneca, Russia’s Gamaleya Institute and Johnson & Johnson fight the coronavirus with another virus, leaving scientists concerned the shots may lose potency if annual inoculations become necessary to fight new variants.

So-called viral vector shots - also used by several Chinese COVID-19 vaccine developers - use harmless modified viruses as vehicles, or vectors, to carry genetic information that helps the body build immunity against future infections.

However, there is a risk that the body also develops immunity to the vector itself, recognising it as an intruder and trying to destroy it.

Most vector-vaccine developers have opted to use an adenovirus, a harmless class of common-cold viruses.”The experience with adenoviruses has been for many years that vectors can be intercepted by the immune system after repeat injections,” said Bodo Plachter, deputy director of the Institute of Virology at Mainz University’s teaching hospital.

“There may be the same problem with other types of vectors. Only ‘trial and error’ will tell,” he added.

That potentially puts vector vaccines at a disadvantage to mRNA shots from Pfizer and Moderna, or vaccines using deactivated coronaviruses, like Sinovac’s, or the coronavirus’ surface spike proteins, an approach pursued by Novavax.

Vector immunity is not a new issue but has come under renewed scrutiny as companies including J&J anticipate regular COVID-19 vaccinations, like annual influenza shots, may be needed to combat new variants of the coronavirus.

Moderna as well as Pfizer and partner BioNTech said in separate statements this week they are studying additional booster shots that target new variants over time.

Even without any evolution in the virus, it is not yet clear whether vaccine-induced immune memory will eventually wane, which would also require booster shots.

Scientists who spoke with Reuters acknowledged no definitive conclusions can be drawn about vector immunity’s ultimate impact.

While it may prove surmountable in the end, health policymakers will still have to grapple with the question of which vaccines to deploy, and in what order, ahead of potential repeat inoculations.

A major validation of vector technology was the approval of Merck & Co’s Ervebo inoculation against Ebola in 2019 and its use - and that of similar experimental vaccines - during outbreaks in Africa in prior years.

But vector immunity has been implicated in past failures, including when a 2004 Merck AIDS vaccine trial flopped in men previously exposed to the adenovirus used for the vaccine.

AstraZeneca declined to comment. J&J and the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which is responsible for marketing the Sputnik vaccine made by the Gamaleya Institute abroad, did not respond to a request for comment.

MIX AND MATCH

One approach could be to combine different shots, known as “mixing and matching”.

AstraZeneca and partner Oxford University’s shot is being trialled with Russia’s Sputnik V, and British scientists are testing Pfizer’s mRNA shot with AstraZeneca’s vaccine in a study funded by the British government, which says it is aware of the vector immunity issue.

The main motive for the British combination trial was to give healthcare providers flexibility in case of limited supplies, but Matthew Snape, the Oxford vaccinologist leading the project, said the question of vector immunity “is one of the reasons this study is interesting”.

He added there were plans to test for any anti-vector reaction by seeing how well a viral vector performs versus an alternative vaccine when given as a third dose.

Mainz University’s Plachter is among those suggesting it may be more practical over the longer term to pivot to a class of vaccine that does not rely on vectors.

“If after a while, you get to a standard immunization protocol, as with influenza, I would assume you would use other carriers,” he said. AstraZeneca and the Gamaleya Institute have already sought to overcome vector immunity challenges under the standard COVID-19 two-shot regimen. The Russian lab employed two different viral vectors, seeking to prevent efficacy dropping from the primary dose to the booster shot, while AstraZeneca and Oxford use a chimpanzee virus vector to which humans would not previously have been exposed.

But questions over a third or subsequent shot have yet to be addressed.

“One of the big sells for (AstraZeneca) was that there can be no existing immunity,” Ian Jones, a professor of virology at Reading University, said. “This will not be the case once the world has had the COVID vaccines.”

Since the vectors in the leading vaccines have been stripped of their ability to replicate, the antibody and T-cell responses they generate may, however, not be that strong.

Moreover, only tiny vector volumes are needed for COVID-19 vaccines, in contrast with gene therapies where viral vectors serve as gene repair kits for diseased cells and vector immunity needs to be monitored closely because much larger quantities are injected.

“The injected dose is so low that the induction of immunity to the capsid, or virus shell, remains low,” said Luk Vandenberghe, a Harvard Medical School gene therapy expert working on a viral-vector COVID-19 vaccine.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-vector-immunity-fo/astrazeneca-sputnik-vaccines-face-hurdles-if-covid-shots-become-annual-affair-idUSKBN2AQ0VX

Thursday, February 25, 2021

CDC estimated 1-year decline in life expectancy in 2020. Not so — try 5 days

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention made headlines last week when it announced that Covid-19 had reduced the average life expectancy of Americans in 2020 by a full year. The news seemed to starkly illustrate the devastation wrought by our nation’s worst public health crisis in 100 years.

But there was a problem. The pandemic’s appalling toll could not have reduced life span by nearly that much. My own estimate is that when Covid-19’s ravages in 2020 are averaged across the country’s entire population, we each lost about five days of life.

The CDC’s mistake? It calculated life expectancy using an assumption that is assuredly wrong, which yielded a statistic that was certain to be misunderstood. That’s exactly the type of misstep the agency can’t afford to make. Not now, not after former President Trump’s relentless attacks on its credibility. Not after his advisers were caught altering and editing the agency’s monthly reports to downplay the pandemic.

To review: The CDC reported that life expectancy in the U.S. declined by one year in 2020. People understood this to mean that Covid-19 had shaved off a year from how long each of us will live on average. That is, after all, how people tend to think of life expectancy. The New York Times characterized the report as “the first full picture of the pandemic’s effect on American expected life spans.”

But wait. Analysts estimate that, on average, a death from Covid-19 robs its victim of around 12 years of life. Approximately 400,000 Americans died Covid-19 in 2020, meaning about 4.8 million years of life collectively vanished. Spread that ghastly number across the U.S. population of 330 million and it comes out to 0.014 years of life lost per person. That’s 5.3 days. There were other excess deaths in 2020, so maybe the answer is seven days lost per person.

No matter how you look at it, the result is a far cry from what the CDC announced.

It’s not that the agency made a math mistake. I checked the calculations myself, and even went over them with one of the CDC analysts. The error was more problematic in my view: The CDC relied on an assumption it had to know was wrong.

The CDC’s life expectancy calculations are, in fact, life expectancy projections (the technical term for the measure is period life expectancy). The calculation is based on a crucial assumption: that for the year you are studying (2019 compared to 2020 in this case) the risk of death, in every age group, will stay as it was in that year for everyone born during it.

So to project the life expectancy of people born in 2020, the CDC assumed that newborns will face the risk of dying that newborns did in 2020. Then when they turn 1, they face the risk of dying that 1-year-olds did in 2020. Then on to them being 2 years old, and so on.

Locking people into 2020 for their entire life spans, from birth to death, may sound like the plot of a dystopian reboot of “Groundhog Day.” But that’s the calculation. The results: The CDC’s report boils down to a finding that bears no relation to any realistic scenario. Running the 2020 gauntlet for an entire life results in living one year less on average than running that same gauntlet in 2019.

Don’t blame the method. It’s a standard one that over time has been a highly useful way of understanding how our efforts in public health have succeeded or fallen short. Because it is a projection, it can (and should) serve as an early warning of how people in our society will do in the future if we do nothing different from today.

But in this case, the CDC should assume, as do we all, that Covid-19 will cause an increase in mortality for only a brief period relative to the span of a normal lifetime. If you assume the Covid-19 risk of 2020 carries forward unabated, you will overstate the life expectancy declines it causes. It’s not like I am the first person to notice this problem. Researchers have regularly demonstrated that life expectancy projections are overly sensitive to evanescent events like pandemics and wars, resulting in considerably overestimated declines.

And yet the CDC published a result that, if anything, would convey to the public an exaggerated toll that Covid-19 took on longevity in 2020. That’s a problem.

Please don’t misunderstand: I have no desire to play down this horrific pandemic. The U.S. recently surpassed a half-million deaths, the highest number of deaths of any country. Instead, I mean to emphasize that the CDC must remain the world’s gold standard public health agency, and that means working tirelessly to get both its facts and its messages right.

The agency won’t always succeed. But after four years of an administration that claimed infallibility, even as the pile of errors reached staggering heights, we should hold this administration’s CDC to the highest possible standard.

I have been wondering if the CDC should withdraw this report, explaining that it erred by disseminating a finding that was bound to be misunderstood. Yes, Covid-19 deniers will try to score cheap political points for a day or two. But at least for me, I don’t need an agency that is flawless, but one that is forthright.

Peter B. Bach is a physician at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, where he directs the Center for Health Policy and Outcomes.

https://www.statnews.com/2021/02/25/cdc-one-year-decline-life-expectancy-really-five-days/

Why ChromaDex Shares Spiked

 Chromadex Corp 

CDXC 92.4% shares jumped 111% in the regular and after-hours sessions today.

What Happened: The price movement on Thursday was accompanied by intense trading with volumes of 116.67 million. The average volume for ChromaDex shares is 523,511.

While there were no immediate triggers for share movement on Thursday, the bioscience company announced results from a Phase 3 study that examined its nutritional protocol in the treatment of COVID-19, a day prior. 

“The nutritional protocol significantly improves the recovery, liver health, and markers of inflammation of patients with COVID-19,” said Adil Mardinoglu, a professor at King’s College London, as per a company statement. 

“Dysfunctional mitochondria have been implicated in worsened progression for COVID-19, and this nutritional intervention helps to remedy the stress put on the body of an infected patient,” said the professor. 

On Monday, ChromaDex said it had entered into a securities purchase agreement for the sale of $25 million of its common stock in a private placement.

The company agreed to sell nearly 3.84 million of its common stock at a per-share price of $6.50, according to a separate statement.

https://www.benzinga.com/general/biotech/21/02/19871893/why-chromadex-shares-spiked-111-today