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Tuesday, March 30, 2021

FEMA will pay families up to $9K to help cover funeral costs for COVID victims

 Families of those who died from COVID-related causes will soon be able to apply to get reimbursed for funeral expenses as part of the $1.9 trillion economic stimulus plan passed earlier this month.

The federal assistance will be limited to a maximum financial amount of $9,000 per funeral, with a maximum of $35,500 per application for multiple funerals of other family members after Jan. 20, 2020.

“At FEMA, our mission is to help people before, during and after disasters,” said Acting FEMA Administrator Bob Fenton in a statement. “The COVID-19 pandemic has caused immense grief for so many people. Although we cannot change what has happened, we affirm our commitment to help with funeral and burial expenses that many families did not anticipate.

The agency said it will be setting up a toll-free 800 number and an application process in the coming weeks, with details to be provided on the FEMA website at COVID-19 Funeral Assistance.


The program was enacted under the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2021 and the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.

Under the program, an official death certificate must attribute the death to COVID-19 and show that the death occurred in the United States. The death certificate must indicate the death “may have been caused by” or “was likely the result of” COVID-19 or COVID-19-like symptoms. Similar phrases that indicate a high likelihood of COVID-19 are considered sufficient attribution.

Separately, bills now before the New Jersey Legislature would allocated another $20 million to help defray funeral expenses incurred by families of those who died because of the coronavirus. Under the state program, applicants would need to be a New Jersey resident filing for a death attributed to COVID-19.

The amount of money being allocated in federal program is significant, helping to cover expenses that were never planned, said George Kelder, CEO and executive director of the New Jersey State Funeral Directors Association.

“This is huge,” he remarked. “There is the potential for a lot of family members and next of kin to be reimbursed for costs that probably hurt them at the time.”

Kelder noted that the job of FEMA is to respond to natural disasters around the country and typically there are funeral costs associated with that aid. Still, he called the COVID program “a pretty significant offering for the federal government.”

Funeral directors can alert families to the funding program, but the applications for assistance must come from the next-of-kin.

So far, more than 24,400 people in New Jersey have died from COVID-related cases. And the costs of those funerals, which in this state can average from $8,934 to $9,239 — not including the casket or burial — left many with bills they were hard-pressed to pay.

The person applying for funeral assistance can be either a U.S. citizen, a non-citizen national or a qualified alien who incurred the funeral expenses.

The federal assistance will be limited to a maximum financial amount of $9,000 per funeral, with a maximum of $35,500 per application for multiple funerals of other family member.

FEMA officials recommended that families planning to seek assistance gather all funeral expense documents, such as receipts and the funeral home contract, that include the applicant’s name, the deceased individual’s name, the amount of funeral expenses and dates the funeral expenses were incurred.

The agency said it will also require proof of funds received from other sources specifically for use toward funeral costs, noting that FEMA assistance may not duplicate benefits received from burial or funeral insurance, financial assistance received from voluntary agencies, or other sources.

Kelder said some of his members have been alerting families who have lost relatives to COVID that FEMA reimbursement was coming. He expects with the large loss of life across the country, it may take some time to file for assistance once the agency sets up its toll-free lines.

“I’m sure the phone numbers will be overwhelmed,” he said.

State Sen. Richard Codey, D-Essex, who owns funeral homes in Caldwell and Boonton, said the pandemic in some cases led to costs that could be higher and lower than normal times. In the early days of the outbreak, for example, there was no visitation at funeral homes. Families could not even assemble at graveside.

Yet as funeral homes were overwhelmed by the number of COVID deaths, there were other costs to prepare and store the body.

“You had to embalm every body because there was no way to handle all that in the regular time period,” Codey explained.

https://www.nj.com/coronavirus/2021/03/fema-will-pay-families-up-to-9k-to-help-cover-funeral-costs-for-covid-victims.html

Merck KGaA's ATR Inhibitor Shows Promise in Both Cancer and COVID-19

 The COVID-19 pandemic pushed a lot of researchers and biopharma companies to investigate a wide variety of drugs, approved and investigational, to determine if they might have some effect against the infectious disease. One such example of a drug that is showing promise for both cancer and COVID-19 is berzosertib, which is licensed by Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.

research collaboration among UCLA investigators and Merck KGaA, has pointed to the drug as showing promise for COVID-19. It is also being touted for its unusually broad effect in treating a range of cancers.

Berzosertib blocks a key DNA repair protein, ATR. ATR stands for ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related kinase. In cancer, it is being tested in patients who haven’t responded to other drugs that target cancer cells’ DNA damage repair systems. This DNA damage is one of the root causes of cancer, but also results in a fundamental weakness in tumors. If you can further damage their DNA or attack their ability to repair the DNA, it should be possible to slow cancer growth or stop it entirely.

In COVID-19, in laboratory assays, they found berzosertib effectively blocked SARS-CoV-1’s ability to replicate while not causing significant harm to cells. The research was published in the journal Cell Reports.

“Currently, there are no effective small-molecule drug therapies against COVID-19,” said Gustavo Garcia Jr., the study’s first author and a UCLA staff research associate. “This study identified a new potential therapy that could help the global fight against COVID-19 and support populations that have been disproportionately affected by this deadly disease.”

In their research, the drug consistently halted SARS-CoV-1 replication. They also tested it against the coronaviruses that cause SARS and MERS, and it worked against those viruses as well.

“This is a chance to actually find a drug that might be broader in spectrum, which could also help fight coronaviruses that are yet to come,” said Robert Damoiseaux, a UCLA professor of molecular and medical pharmacology and of bioengineering.

Although that certainly sounds promising, in cancer it is being discussed as a possible “universal drug to cure cancer.” Berzosertib doesn’t directly destroy cancer cells—traditional cancer therapy is still needed—but by adding berzosertib, the data to date suggests that the odds of success go up significantly.

In a Phase I trial, more than half of the 40 patients who received berzosertib found their tumor growth stopped. A Phase I trial is rather early to make those kind of conclusions, and it’s a very long way from hitting the market, but the Phase I trial did include patients with very advanced tumors, a notoriously difficult patient population, and the drug combination seemed to help.

In the study, a patient’s advanced bowel cancer is now cancer-free after two years; another with ovarian cancer had her tumors shrink after the combination therapy.

Chris Lord, professor of cancer genomics at the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR), which ran the study with the Royal Marsden NHS Trust, said the early signs were “very promising,” and that it was unusual to see a clinical response in a Phase I trial.

Darius Widera, a professor at the University of Reading, told the BBC, “This study involved only small numbers of patients…. Therefore, it is too early to consider berzosertib a game changer in cancer treatment. Nevertheless, the unusually strong effects of berzosertib, especially in combination with conventional chemotherapy, give reasons to be optimistic regarding the outcomes of follow-up studies.”

Damoiseaux  said, “Kinase inhibitors are very frequently standalone cancer treatments, and not all single-agent kinase inhibitors are well tolerated. By contrast, berzosertib is not a standalone treatment and has very limited effects on cell health was used on its own. It may be worthwhile for researchers to run clinical trials to find out whether cancer patients in particular might profit from this drug as a COVID-19 treatment.”

https://www.biospace.com/article/merck-kgaa-s-berzosertib-might-work-in-both-cancer-and-covid-19/

Takeda Pairs Up With BridGene to Solve "Undruggable" Neurodegenerative Diseases

 Takeda Pharmaceutical forged a drug discovery and development partnership with BridGene Biosciences to discover small molecule drugs for “undruggable” neurodegenerative disease targets. The companies will harness BridGene’s IMTAC (Isobaric Mass Tagged Affinity Characterization) Chemoproteomics platform to identify targets and small molecule drug candidates.

Under terms of the deal, the companies will establish five different drug discovery programs. Takeda will then develop those candidates into therapeutic candidates and drive them into clinical development. BridGene with its chemoproteomics platform can identify small molecule interactions with a wide variety of proteins in living cells.

BridGene will receive an undisclosed upfront payment for access to its IMTAC technology. For each validated target, Takeda will receive an exclusive license to research, develop and commercialize the candidates. BridGene will be eligible to receive potential preclinical, clinical and commercial milestone payments that could exceed $500 million, as well as royalties from future sales of commercialized drugs resulting from the collaboration.

Ceri Davis, head of the Neuroscience Drug Discovery Unit at Takeda, said access to BridGene’s novel chemoproteomics platform will help the company rapidly identify novel targets and novel drug candidates that have the potential to target underlying mechanisms of debilitating neurological disorders.

“Partnerships such as this are central to our R&D strategy of pursuing precision medicine approaches to neuroscience disease,” Davis said in a statement.

The collaboration expands on an established pilot project between BridGene and Takeda that was completed in 2020. This new partnership includes an initial research program focused on identifying targets that contribute to a disease phenotype that is believed to underly neurodegenerative disease and is modifiable by small molecules in a phenotypic screen. Takeda has the right to initiate up to four additional research programs as part of the collaboration.

Ping Cao, co-founder and chief executive officer of BridGene, said the collaboration with Takeda is an important milestone for the company. He said this partnership is the first of what the company believes will be multiple discovery and development partnerships built around the company’s chemoproteomics technology.

“Our approach to drug discovery and development has two primary components, use of covalent small molecules to bind to undruggable targets and chemoproteomics to look at small molecule interactions with the proteins in live cells. These two can be combined to determine the targets that drive characteristics (phenotypes) of disease onset and progression and to identify the targets that a small molecule drug candidate interacts within live cells. With these tools we can move very quickly from hit to lead in drug discovery, Cao said in a statement.

https://www.biospace.com/article/takeda-paris-with-bridgene-to-go-after-undruggable-neurodegenerative-disease-targets/

Why Wave Life Sciences Crashed Today

 Shares of Wave Life Sciences (NASDAQ:WVE) are down 29% at 1:29 p.m. EDT after the company announced that WVE-120102 and WVE-120101, two of its drugs to treat Huntington's disease, failed to show an effect in early stage clinical trials.

Huntington's disease is caused by different mutations in the huntingtin protein. WVE-120101 and WVE-120102 are designed to reduce the expression of mutant huntingtin protein (mHTT) for patients with the SNP1 and SNP2 mutations, respectively.

The drugs appear to be working, but unfortunately the reduction on mHTT wasn't clinically meaningful. Results from the clinical trial testing WVE-120102 showed the highest dose of the drug reduced mHTT by 9.9% in the cerebrospinal fluid compared to a 0.8% decrease for placebo. In a separate clinical trial of WVE-120101, which wasn't as far along, the highest dose reduced mHTT by 11.6% compared to 10% for placebo.

Considering WVE-120101 and WVE-120102 use the same technology, Wave Life Sciences decided to stop clinical development of both drugs.

Fortunately Wave Life Sciences still has one more shot on goal for Huntington's disease. WVE-003 treats patients with the SNP3 mutation, which affects 40% of patients with Huntington's disease. Importantly, the drug uses an improved backbone chemistry, which Wave Life Sciences believes will last longer in the body. The company plans to begin treating patients with WVE-003 later this year.

Beyond Huntington's disease, Wave Life Sciences also has two other drugs ready to enter the clinic this year: WVE-004 for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia and WVE-N531 for Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

While losing its two lead programs is devastating, Wave has enough cash to get it through the second quarter of 2023. That should be enough time to generate additional data to prove that its improved backbone chemistry works, which would allow the company to raise additional capital at a higher valuation.

https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/03/30/heres-why-wave-life-sciences-crashed-today

Long-Awaited WHO Report on Covid Origins Doesn't Rule Out Lab Leak: Tedros

 Update (1630ET): Now that the report is out, the US and a group of 13 countries responded by releasing a statement raising "concerns" with the WHO report, and the fact that the international team of investigators wasn't allowed access to critical information.

"We voice our shared concerns that the international expert study on the source of the SARS-CoV-2 virus was significantly delayed and lacked access to complete, original data and samples," the countries said in a joint statement.

As we noted earlier, many questions have been raised about the independence of the WHO-convened team of exports, who worked jointly with Chinese scientists and handlers in a way that clearly limited their access.

Asked on Tuesday at a White House press briefing if China had cooperated enough with the report, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said "They [China have not been transparent, they have not provided underlying data, that certainly doesn't qualify as cooperation."

"We don't believe that in our review to date that it meets the moment," she added.

The statement demanded that "going forward, there must now be a renewed commitment by WHO and all Member States to access, transparency, and timeliness" in a not-so-veiled dig at Beijing's unwillingness to share data on suspicious cases that might have been early cases of COVID.

Along with the U.S., the statement was joined by Australia, Canada, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Israel, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, South Korea, Slovenia and the United Kingdom.

Read the statement in its entirety below:

The Governments of Australia, Canada, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Israel, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, the Republic of Korea, Slovenia, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America remain steadfast in our commitment to working with the World Health Organization (WHO), international experts who have a vital mission, and the global community to understand the origins of this pandemic in order to improve our collective global health security and response. Together, we support a transparent and independent analysis and evaluation, free from interference and undue influence, of the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this regard, we join in expressing shared concerns regarding the recent WHO-convened study in China, while at the same time reinforcing the importance of working together toward the development and use of a swift, effective, transparent, science-based, and independent process for international evaluations of such outbreaks of unknown origin in the future.

The mission of the WHO is critical to advancing global health and health security, and we fully support its experts and staff and recognize their tireless work to bring an end to the COVID-19 pandemic, including understanding how the pandemic started and spread. With such an important mandate, it is equally essential that we voice our shared concerns that the international expert study on the source of the SARS-CoV-2 virus was significantly delayed and lacked access to complete, original data and samples. Scientific missions like these should be able to do their work under conditions that produce independent and objective recommendations and findings. We share these concerns not only for the benefit of learning all we can about the origins of this pandemic, but also to lay a pathway to a timely, transparent, evidence-based process for the next phase of this study as well as for the next health crises.

We note the findings and recommendations, including the need for further studies of animals to find the means of introduction into humans, and urge momentum for expert-driven phase 2 studies. Going forward, there must now be a renewed commitment by WHO and all Member States to access, transparency, and timeliness. In a serious outbreak of an unknown pathogen with pandemic potential, a rapid, independent, expert-led, and unimpeded evaluation of the origins is critical to better prepare our people, our public health institutions, our industries, and our governments to respond successfully to such an outbreak and prevent future pandemics. It is critical for independent experts to have full access to all pertinent human, animal, and environmental data, research, and personnel involved in the early stages of the outbreak relevant to determining how this pandemic emerged. With all data in hand, the international community may independently assess COVID-19 origins, learn valuable lessons from this pandemic, and prevent future devastating consequences from outbreaks of disease.

We underscore the need for a robust, comprehensive, and expert-led mechanism for expeditiously investigating outbreaks of unknown origin that is conducted with full and open collaboration among all stakeholders and in accordance with the principles of transparency, respect for privacy, and scientific and research integrity. We will work collaboratively and with the WHO to strengthen capacity, improve global health security, and inspire public confidence and trust in the world’s ability to detect, prepare for, and respond to future outbreaks.

We imagine reports of the statement will be duly modified by China's state-controlled press to reflect just how grateful the international is to have Beijing's cooperation in this matter.

* * *

After abruptly delaying the release of a long-waited report on the origins of the coronavirus, a version of the report was leaked over the weekend (following reports that Chinese officials had interfered in the review process).

On Sunday night, 60 Minutes raised some serious questions about the WHO's investigation of the pandemic's origins in the city of Wuhan. When interviewer Lesley Stahl accused a member of the WHO team of simply taking Beijing's word for it. He replied, incredulously, "what else can we do?"

Well, it appears the WHO leadership in Geneva has accepted the fact that their "report" on the virus's origins, which essentially confirmed speculation that first surfaced more than a year ago (that the virus entered the human population from bats via an intermediary, possibly a civet or another such creature) has failed to dissuade the public of the notion that the virus likely leaked from a nearby lab, the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus heralded the report's release on Tuesday with a mea culpa for the WHO: Dr. Tedros said the mission to China didn't adequately explore whether the virus might have leaked from the lab, before saying that more studies will be needed.

"In my discussions with the team, they expressed the difficulties they encountered in accessing raw data," Dr. Tedros said. "I expect future collaborative studies to include more timely and comprehensive data sharing." The conclusions that the virus origins remains incomplete likely means that tensions over how the pandemic started - and whether China has helped or hinder efforts to find out, as the United States has alleged - will continue.

This marks the first time the WHO has appeared willing to countenance the possibility that the virus might have leaked from the lab, something former Trump national security official Matt Pottinger has repeatedly warned about.

What's more, Dr. Tedros said China withheld raw data on early COVID cases from the team of researchers, which had requested it.

In a tweet published just hours before Dr. Tedros made his remarks, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo slammed the report as a "sham".

Mission leader Peter Ben Embarek said Tuesday as the report was released that the team hadn't done a "full audit" of laboratories (since it's so obvious that nobody is hiding anything.). He described the report as "a work in progress" and added that "until we have a firm lead leading us in one direction we aren't closing the other doors".

As far as the lab-leak theory goes, Embarek acknowledged that "it's possible." But more studies are needed, and whether or not Beijing will cooperate remains unclear.

"I think there is a consensus that new studies need to be undertaken preferably as soon as possible...but in the proper way...well-planned...well-organized." Some are ongoing, some still need to be started, Ben Embarek said.

In the report, the team acknowledged that despite China's insistence that the Huanan Wet Market was ground zero for the Wuhan outbreak, none of the animal products sampled at the market tested positive. Still, they insisted that the "lab leak" scenario was the least likely hypothesis.

One way the team could help determine the virus's origin, and thus test the theory that it occurred naturally, would be to access massive troves of patient data from across China stretching back to Sept. 2019, months before the outbreak was reported to the WHO.

But China has steadfastly refused to provide this data. And as such, Dr Tedros added in a tweet that "all hypotheses remain on the table."

He better be careful...

While the WHO's willingness to anger Beijing with this latest pronouncement about the virus's origins may come as a surprise, in one respect, the agency had little choice: to western readers, the lack of Chinese cooperation and the obvious dissembling surrounding key aspects of the investigation are simply too suspicious to ignore. And no matter what the agency says, readers could easily come to their own conclusions.

Readers can read Dr. Tedros' full remarks here. The closing remarks, where Dr. Tedros noted the fact the review is essentially incomplete, can be found in full below:

Thank you, Dr Peter Ben Embarek, Professor Liang and the whole team for sharing your report and presenting your findings.

I welcome your report, which advances our understanding in important ways.

It also raises further questions that will need to be addressed by further studies, as the team itself notes in the report.

As Member States have heard, the report presents a comprehensive review of available data, suggesting that there was unrecognized transmission in December 2019, and possibly earlier.

The team reports that the first detected case had symptom onset on the 8th of December 2019. But to understand the earliest cases, scientists would benefit from full access to data including biological samples from at least September 2019.

In my discussions with the team, they expressed the difficulties they encountered in accessing raw data. I expect future collaborative studies to include more timely and comprehensive data sharing.

I welcome the recommendations for further studies to understand the earliest human cases and clusters, to trace the animals sold at markets in and around Wuhan, and to better understand the range of potential animal hosts and intermediaries.

The role of animal markets is still unclear.

The team has confirmed that there was widespread contamination with SARS-CoV-2 in the Huanan market in Wuhan, but could not determine the source of this contamination.

Again, I welcome the recommendations for further research, including a full analysis of the trade in animals and products in markets across Wuhan, particularly those linked to early human cases.

I concur with the team’s conclusion that farmers, suppliers and their contacts will need to be interviewed.

The team also addressed the possibility that the virus was introduced to humans through the food chain.

Further study will be important to identify what role farmed wild animals may have played in introducing the virus to markets in Wuhan and beyond.
The team also visited several laboratories in Wuhan and considered the possibility that the virus entered the human population as a result of a laboratory incident.

However, I do not believe that this assessment was extensive enough. Further data and studies will be needed to reach more robust conclusions.

Although the team has concluded that a laboratory leak is the least likely hypothesis, this requires further investigation, potentially with additional missions involving specialist experts, which I am ready to deploy.

We will keep you informed as plans progress, and as always, we very much welcome your input.

Let me say clearly that as far as WHO is concerned all hypotheses remain on the table.

This report is a very important beginning, but it is not the end. We have not yet found the source of the virus, and we must continue to follow the science and leave no stone unturned as we do.

Finding the origin of a virus takes time and we owe it to the world to find the source so we can collectively take steps to reduce the risk of this happening again.

No single research trip can provide all the answers.

It is clear that we need more research across a range of areas, which will entail further field visits.

Before I conclude I want to express my thanks to the experts from around the world and China who participated in the report, and look forward to continuing this important work.

Excellencies, as always, we are grateful for your continuing engagement, and we look forward to your questions and comments.

Embarek also pushed back against reports that China tried to meddle with the report, which can be read in its entirety below:

WHO Convened Global Study of Origins of SARS CoV 2 China Part Joint Report by Joseph Adinolfi Jr. on Scribd

https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/long-awaited-who-report-covid-origins-doesnt-rule-out-lab-leak-tedros-says

COVID Vaccine Side Effects: Is the System Working?

It's now 100 days since the first COVID shot was given in the largest mass vaccination campaign in U.S. history. With more than 2 million shots administered daily, more vaccines are going in arms each day in America than in all of the clinical trials combined.

Each vaccine's clinical trial had 30,000-40,000 participants and was required to produce data for at "least two months after completion of the full vaccination regimen to help provide adequate information to assess a vaccine's benefit-risk profile." Today, that means we are getting more and more real-world data from a larger and more diverse group than any clinical trial could ever hope to produce.

And as vaccine makers continue to seek FDA authorization, the real-world data also require intense scrutiny. According to the CDC, the current vaccine safety monitoring program is one of the most intense ever. But how does it work -- and is it intense enough?

Aaron Kesselheim, MD, JD, MPH, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, joins us on this week's episode to answer that question and explain the possible shortfalls, as well as what you should know if you need to report something.

The following is a transcript of his interview with "Track the Vax" host Serena Marshall:

Marshall: I wanted to start out for those who may be not familiar with how the U.S. does post-marketing surveillance of vaccines -- what happens after the FDA gives approval for a vaccine?

Kesselheim: Well after the FDA gives approval for a vaccine, the vaccine can be made more widely available and oversight of the vaccine actively shifts to what's often called post-market surveillance.

There are a number of different overlapping systems that the U.S. has in place related to monitoring vaccines on the market to ensure that they are still showing the same activity that we expected them to have in their preapproval trials.

And that there aren't any emerging side effects that we might not have seen in the preapproval studies. Because there might be rare side effects that, you know, even in a study of 20 or 30 thousand people may not have happened. Or may have happened a very small number of times. But then when you start giving the vaccine to tens of millions or hundreds of millions of people, those kinds of side effects can emerge.

Marshall: And we sort of saw that play out, right, with the anaphylactic shock and reactions that occurred once the mRNAs started to roll out?

Kesselheim: Yes. Once the first vaccines rolled out through the Emergency Use Authorizations, there were a couple of reports in the newspaper about people having, as you said, anaphylaxis or some reactions to them that we didn't necessarily observe in the preapproval studies. That led physicians and other providers to change the way that they administer the vaccines, to ensure that people were being monitored more closely for a certain period of time after the vaccine.

Marshall: And you mentioned a multi-layered system that's in place. How many reporting systems are there? If it really comes down to it, it's not just one that's looking at what could go wrong with the vaccines after it's been approved?

Kesselheim: Right. Well, there are three different major systems of post-market surveillance. There's what's called VAERS or the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. This is more of a passive, spontaneous reporting system in which clinicians and manufacturers, and even the public can voluntarily report adverse events to the government to have to learn about them. That's one major way of identifying safety issues.

Another way of identifying safety issues is through post-market studies that the manufacturer agrees to do upon approving the product. And so there might be additional prospective trials potentially in kids or pregnant women or other smaller populations; but still, obviously, a very important population of patients to understand how the vaccine works. And so sometimes the manufacturers agree to do those kinds of studies upon drug approvals.

And then the third major way is through observational data or registries, in which people who get the vaccine through normal routine care have that experience and any kind of follow-up symptoms reported. Either through formal reporting of that to a registry that collects a certain number of people and then evaluates the data, or through much larger insurance claims that could also be used to study side effects through observational studies of these larger real-world experiences. Those are kind of the three major pillars of oversight.

Marshall: Now when it comes to the COVID vaccines, we're seeing all three of those pillars being employed, correct?

Kesselheim: Well, so far with the COVID vaccine, you know --

Marshall: You hesitated there. So I'm assuming that's probably a no?

Kesselheim: Well, I mean, I think that there are a lot of ways that the post-market surveillance of the COVID vaccine could be going better. I think that we are seeing a lot of spontaneous reporting. And we are seeing a lot of local institutions keeping track of people who receive vaccines and sort of mini registries in a sense. So far in the U.S. we've only had vaccines available through Emergency Use Authorizations.

We haven't yet had those kinds of formal post-approval studies that have been developed and designed for these trials. So we haven't really seen that yet.

And the other major issue is, right now a lot of vaccines are being given outside of healthcare systems, through public, state government supported vaccine delivery websites and the goal here being to get as many vaccines as quickly as possible into people as quickly as possible.

And that's absolutely the right thing to do. But as a result of that, we're not getting as much sort of rigorously collected observational data as we might plan to get in the weeks and months that follow when the vaccines become formally approved by the FDA and are more likely to be administered through healthcare settings where the experiences are more likely to be registered in these large databases. I think there are ways that the post-market vigilance related to them could be optimized.

Marshall: Now that's an interesting point, Dr. Kesselheim, because I think a lot of folks are really worried and concerned about that long-term data and that that data is still out. And what it sounds like you're saying is that the post-marketing surveillance really isn't up to par with these EUA approved vaccines compared to full approval. So is that something people should be concerned about, that it's not really at the same standard right now?

Kesselheim: Well, I mean, I think it's certainly something that policymakers, the people in the Biden response team and people who help sort of organize and run our healthcare systems, people in the CDC, hopefully, it's those people, I think, are the people who should be concerned about this kind of thing.

Hopefully, they are taking steps to move us in the direction of where we have a more comprehensive, rigorous collection of vaccine experience data going forward. I don't necessarily think that individual people should be as concerned about this yet. I mean, I think I would just want to make clear that everything we know about these vaccines thus far suggests that they're extremely effective and are extremely safe.

And so there's nothing that should make people concerned about taking the vaccines at this point, if it's their turn to get it. But I do think that it is something that policymakers and, you know, people organizing the vaccine response should be taking into account going forward. So that we can get this standard safety information in a reasonable timeframe and in a rigorous way so that we can evaluate it. And that's how we learn more about every new drug and vaccine that reaches the market.

Marshall: What a lot of people want to know though, especially with the mRNA vaccines, is what does the long-term data show? Because it hasn't been approved by the FDA previously, even in an emergency use, until COVID. So when you're looking at this post-marketing surveillance and getting the information, how do we instill confidence in those individuals who say, well, you're now not maintaining a database that's not to the proper standard. And we don't have the long-term data on it?

Kesselheim: Right. And I think that this is an important conversation to be having. It is important to recognize that this is a novel vaccine technology. Fortunately it turns out it's extremely effective in this case. And I think that it's also important to recognize that even if these systems were in place, the whole process of developing a vaccine and testing it in response to that has kind of taken place over the last nine to 12 months.

Long-term data, it's going to take a long time for that data to kind of accumulate and for us to be able to analyze it. Even if under the best of circumstances this whole ongoing learning about mRNA vaccines and about the COVID vaccines are going to continue over the next months and years.

What I'm just saying is we should be taking steps now to ensure that process is as efficient as possible. But I don't think there's necessarily anything anybody can do to try to make these things happen quicker than they are going to happen anyway, because these things, you know, it takes time to gather this information and analyze it appropriately.

And see what happens to people months and years out of a vaccine. So we're going to be continuing to learn about these vaccines for the next months or years, anyway.

Marshall: Yeah, we can't jump forward in time, unfortunately, to see in a year or two, how they work. But to that point, is there a timeline for how long you have to report an adverse event?

Kesselheim: There is not a timeline. I think that, and again, this is also something that listeners should realize, is that the public can report adverse events. There are mechanisms for -- you don't have to necessarily go through your doctor. Or go through the pharmaceutical company.

You can try to report them yourself. And right, you felt something that you want to report, and that happened 30 minutes after the vaccine, or it happened a week after the vaccine. That's still within your right and ability to report.

And then the scientists at the CDC and FDA, and other experts can use that information in the context of all the other reports to try to understand if there is a signal or if the experience that you had was unrelated to the vaccine.

Marshall: So because the COVID vaccines were developed under a public health emergency, vaccine developers aren't liable for those serious problems that may emerge. Is that similar to liability with other vaccines and other manufacturers?

Kesselheim: That is true. And because of the context and the sort of Emergency Use Authorization that the vaccines are currently being made available, that limits the liability of the manufacturers.

And yes, we also have a system in place for childhood vaccines. So for manufacturers of childhood vaccines, there is a no-fault administrative remedy system for the very, very, very small number of children who are injured by childhood vaccines. And so there's kind of a formal administrative process for them to go through and to get compensation for whatever injuries. And the reason we have that is because these, the childhood vaccines that we have for measles and mumps and other conditions like that, are so very important to have. And so very important for everybody to, you know, to take. That for the extremely small number of people who are injured by them, we need to also have available a system to compensate people for their injuries under those conditions.

And so what we have is, what the law has set up in place, a kind of an administrative, no-fault system, sort of like worker's compensation. Where you report the injury and if it looks like it's one of the injuries that's known to be connected to a vaccine, then you get compensation. You don't have to go through litigation and, you know, sort of a long process of the court system to go through.

Marshall: And that's the same for COVID?

Kesselheim: It is similar. There is, at least for right now, while these COVID vaccines are under EUAs. There is a kind of a comparable system for compensating people who have serious injuries.

Marshall: Now with childhood vaccines, they've been studied for decades. I mean, I believe I saw a statistic that's one of the most studied medical advancements in history. But with these EUA vaccines, COVID vaccines, should we expect to see more adverse events reported, especially given the short time turnaround? And it's a pandemic vaccine, than those childhood vaccines, because we are administering to an effectively wider group of people, everyone, the entire American population?

Kesselheim: I think you're absolutely right that we're going to see more adverse events reported. But I think the reason that we're gonna see them is because COVID-19 and the COVID vaccines are top of everybody's mind and everybody's lives are being affected by it in various ways. And everybody's talking about them.

There's actually data showing that, that there's this effect that you can have, that when you bring public attention to a particular drug or a particular vaccine, then that can lead more people to think about whether or not symptoms that they might've had, might've been connected to it, then lead them to report adverse events.

And so this effect is, you know, observed when a new drug hits the market. And similarly with these new vaccines and everybody's talking about them, it's likely that we're going to get a lot of adverse events reported. And I think that that's to be expected and that's also something that we can plan for; something that the people at the CDC and FDA can adjust for when they're doing their calculations.

You know, when you bring your kid into the pediatrician for a vaccine, for so many people, that's just such a routine thing that if the kid two days later has a coughing fit, you might think that that's just a normal virus...

Marshall: Normal cough.

Kesselheim: And not think about the vaccine you had a couple of days ago. Because everybody's talking about COVID-19 and the COVID vaccine. So constantly. I think more people are going to be attuned to the fact that like: "Oh, I had a coughing fit. Two days ago, I had the vaccine, maybe they are related... maybe I should report that."

Marshall: Yeah. So that's an interesting point because what it sounds like you just described is related events, but not necessarily causation events and that doesn't have to be met to report to VAERS?

Kesselheim: No, you can report anything you want. Part of the complexity of evaluating VAERS data is trying to understand what might be a signal of causation and what might not be and to try to separate the wheat from the chaff in that way. Trying to figure out what might be a causative event and what is sort of true and unrelated.

Marshall: Yeah, I was just looking at the various data and I saw a lot of people reporting things like flushing or arm pain, but there were also some reports of things such as foaming at the mouth. Seven people had reported that. So we don't necessarily know if that report was a cause -- that foaming of the mouth was caused by the vaccine, just simply that somebody had that happened to them and they themselves attributed it to the vaccine?

Kesselheim: Exactly, maybe that person had just very vigorously brushed their teeth or something like that. And so they're not, we're not really sure what to attribute that forming at the mouth to.

Marshall: When that data gets crunched should we expect to see differences in adverse events between the one-dose and two-dose shots?

Kesselheim: I think that it's certainly possible that you'll see differences in adverse events. So the one-dose shot is not an mRNA vaccine, it's an adenovirus vector, right, so given the fact that it's a different vector, you might expect to see different side effects or, you know, different kinds of things reporting.

And so, yes, so, that those are things that you'll have to try to take into account. It's actually, you know, all of this that we're talking about, this is what makes the VAERS data so complicated and so challenging as a way of trying to draw any firm conclusions about the safety issues related to the vaccine. And it's kind of why you need those two other pillars. The follow-up studies and the observational studies as well. To all supplement each other, to try to triangulate around a particular conclusion.

Marshall: So when you get the shot, how do you know the difference, that your immune system is simply working and you're having a lingering side effect of a robust immune response and that something is actually wrong that you should report to the VAERS system? How does an individual differentiate?

Kesselheim: That's, I think, impossible because every person is experiencing what they experience. This is why we don't make scientific decisions based on anecdote. This is why we do controlled studies, controlled prospective studies to try to make decisions about a drug's effect or a vaccine's effectiveness and its safety, as well.

So what I would suggest for each individual person is that they should keep in mind what the kinds of side effects they're expected to receive based on their conversations with their provider. And if they feel like their side effects are different than that, or there is a particularly concerning feeling that they're experiencing, then they should just report that. Everyone reporting their data together.

Again, then it's up to the scientists and the experts at the CDC and the FDA to evaluate that information and try to bring together all of those individual experiences to try to draw some conclusions from them. So I think from an individual point of view, it's impossible to tell that and people should just use their best judgment about what they do or don't want to report.

Marshall: But it's not always up to the scientists at the FDA, right? I mean, even the perception of a serious problem can lead to a market withdrawal. We saw that with Lyme disease vaccines. The manufacturer withdrew the vaccine from the market, even though it seemed to work. So in some ways, those anecdotes do have lasting and serious impact. And that's something we could see with these mRNA ones and now the adenovirus vectors if the public doesn't gain confidence.

Kesselheim: Absolutely. And this is why I think public trust in the FDA and the CDC; and public trust in the process for getting these products on the market, and open, clear communication about these products with the public is so important. Because we need the public to feel like and believe that our public health experts are managing what they need to manage and doing it and doing it correctly.

And I think that unfortunately what we saw throughout much of 2020 was a substantial lack of trust in part due to, you know, decisions and statements made by people in the government about the vaccines in particular. But also about other products that made people wonder whether or not the communications that were happening about the vaccines were being driven by political reasons rather than being driven by what is in the public's best interest.

Because I think that if the public trusts the FDA and the public trusts the CDC and the public believes that they're being spoken to in a clear and truthful way, then the public will be more likely to listen to the messaging that they get from those sources. And they will be likely to trust in the safety of the vaccines.

If that doesn't happen, then I think that unfortunately, a lot of people will then turn to the internet or to their crazy uncles and be more likely to listen to them. And those kinds of things can lead people to have vaccine hesitancy and other things like that, that aren't science driven.

Marshall: Yeah, those anecdotes though, that you hear from your, you know, quote unquote crazy uncle, as you put it, do stick with you. And they do stick with people who are concerned that the safety data for these vaccines isn't there, especially long-term.

So when you, as an expert, are looking at VAERS and these safety monitoring systems, what can you tell our listeners that will instill confidence in them that this long-term data monitoring is being done to the standard necessary?

Kesselheim: First of all, I think that it's very important to recognize that everything we know about the vaccines indicates that these vaccines are extremely effective and extremely safe. And there are these various systems that the FDA and the CDC has in place to continue to monitor the safety of vaccines.

And I think that we need to make sure that those systems are up and running and running to their maximum capacity as quickly as possible, and as effectively as possible. And that they have adequate resources behind them. I think that the public can also feel confident that in this new presidential administration, that the scientists are gonna feel not inhibited to talk about what's actually going on. And that people will learn about emerging issues, if there are any, as soon as possible and in as clear a way as possible.

And so I think that given all of that, the sort of vast weight of the data is in favor of taking the vaccines, given what a severe disease this is and what the impacts it's had on society. And so I think people should feel confident that the systems are in place, that there are extremely well-trained scientists running it. And that there will be systems going forward to inform people about emerging issues and make adjustments to vaccine doses or recommendations for boosters or whatever, that will be science-based in the future. And I think that that's why it's so important that we have people that we put in charge of the FDA and the CDC and places like that, that can instill that kind of confidence.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/podcasts/trackthevax/91761

Brazil med center readies study of AstraZeneca vaccine for minors

 Brazilian biomedical center Fiocruz will submit a study proposal for researching the use of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine in minors, the head of the institute, Nisia Trinidade, said on Tuesday.

Fiocruz has partnered in Brazil with AstraZeneca to finish, distribute and eventually fully produce the vaccine, which is already approved in Brazil for use in adults.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-vaccine-fiocruz/brazils-fiocruz-readies-study-of-astrazeneca-vaccine-for-minors-idUSKBN2BM2P6