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Thursday, August 11, 2022

Amid Spreading Polio Virus, Britain Kickstarts Booster Campaign For Kids Under 10

 

  • Reuters reported that the polio virus is spreading in London for the first time since the 1980s, so the country has launched a polio vaccine booster campaign for children in London aged below 10.
  • The U.K. Health Security Agency identified 116 polioviruses from 19 sewage samples this year in London. It first raised the alert on finding the virus in sewage samples in June.
  • The agency said that the levels of poliovirus found since and the genetic diversity indicated that transmission was taking place in several London boroughs.
  • No cases have yet been identified, but GPs will invite children aged 1-9 for booster vaccines to avoid a potential outbreak.
  • Polio spreads mainly through contamination by fecal matter.
  • The virus found in London sewage is mainly the vaccine-like virus, which is found when children vaccinated with a particular kind of live vaccine - now only used overseas - shed the virus in their feces. 
  • This harmless virus can transmit among unvaccinated children and mutate into a more dangerous version to cause illness.
  • Britain is also expanding surveillance for polio to other sites outside London to see if the virus has spread further.

COVID antibody declines prompts call for booster jabs ASAP

 Figures from the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS) have revealed that the number of people with higher levels of COVID-19 antibodies in their blood is declining quickly – leading to calls for booster vaccination campaigns to be started as soon as possible.

The ONS survey – based on swab and blood samples from thousands of households across the country – found that the proportion of people in England with antibody levels of at least 800 ng/ml fell from 82.4% in March to 71.9% in mid-July.

The 12.7% decrease is “obviously concerning,” according to Dr Quinton Fivelman, chief scientific officer at private testing company London Medical Laboratory, who says the trend is the same in other countries of the UK.

“We already know the latest Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants are the most contagious yet and remain a potentially considerable threat to our health,” he said. “The UK population needs to retain a substantial number of antibodies going into the dangerous winter months.”

The finding comes as the percentage of people testing positive for COVID-19 continues to decrease in England, Wales and Scotland, with an uncertain trend, in Northern Ireland, according to the ONS’ latest update, which was published on 5 August.

Fivelman’s concern is that if the rate of decline continues, only 60% of the UK population will retain substantial antibodies if the next booster campaign for the over-50s and vulnerable people gets underway in early October.

“The new Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 sub-variants do not produce as high an immune response as the previous strains, so re-infection is more likely to occur,” he points out. “Higher levels of antibodies are important to neutralise the virus, stopping infection and limiting people transmitting the virus to others.”

On the plus side, the UK’s baseline antibody level of at least 179 ng/ml, determined at the height of the Delta variant, has held firm. In all 97.8% of people in England had antibody levels of 179 ng/ml in mid-March, and this had fallen only fractionally, to 96.3% by mid-July.

One issue facing the government is that new versions of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that have been tweaked to improve efficacy against Omicron may not be available in time for an earlier start for the booster campaign – or indeed October, unless the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) can approve them quickly.

Both shots – based on the original Wuhan strain of SARS-CoV-2 and the BA.1 Omicron subvariant – are currently under review at the regulator.

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/covid-antibody-declines-prompts-call-for-booster-jabs-asap/

CDC official: Several hundred polio cases likely circulating in New York

 An official from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said Thursday that a polio case detected in New York last month, the first confirmed U.S. case in nearly a decade, could very well be an indication of “several hundred cases” within that community.

In late July, a 20-year-old man from New York’s Rockland County was found to have developed symptoms of polio, including paralysis. The man was unvaccinated, and no other cases have been identified thus far.

Rockland County is known to be a vaccine-resistant area, with the populace having a polio vaccination rate nearly 20 percentage points lower than the general U.S. population, according to the New York State Department of Health.

José Romero, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told CNN the one case detected last month could be “just the very, very tip of the iceberg.”

“There are a number of individuals in the community that have been infected with poliovirus. They are shedding the virus,” Romero said. “The spread is always a possibility because the spread is going to be silent.”

Most people who become infected with poliovirus will not show symptoms, though they can still endanger those who are vulnerable, such as the immunocompromised and unvaccinated.

Last week, the New York State Health Department said the CDC had detected poliovirus through its wastewater surveillance. Six samples were collected from Rockland County across two months and five samples came from neighboring Orange County, which has a lower polio vaccination rate than Rockland.

The samples were found to be genetically linked to the virus that infected the 20-year-old Rockland man.

Shortly after the poliovirus was detected through wastewater surveillance, the CDC deployed a team to investigate the recent polio case.

One community leader from Rockland County, who requested to stay anonymous, told CNN that the team was currently the “opposite of cautiously optimistic.”

In light of the recent case, the CDC has begun offering polio vaccinations in Rockland County.

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/3597090-cdc-official-several-hundred-polio-cases-likely-circulating-in-new-york/

Monkeypox vaccine maker raises concerns about plan to split doses

 The CEO of the company that makes the only vaccine approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to prevent monkeypox told Biden administration health officials he was concerned about a new strategy to split doses and change the way the vaccine is injected.

In a letter shared with The Hill, Bavarian Nordic CEO Paul Chaplin said the company has “some reservations” about the new approach, “due to the very limited safety data available,” as well as the fact that more people experienced adverse reactions after vaccination.

“This may have a negative impact on vaccine uptake and coverage,” Chaplin wrote.

The letter to FDA Commissioner Robert Califf and Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra was first reported by the Washington Post. 

Chaplin said the company fully supports approaches to conserve limited supply, but “it would have been prudent” to roll out the new strategy with much more comprehensive guidance that would allow additional safety data to be collected.

The letter was dated Aug. 9, the day the administration announced a major change to its monkeypox vaccination strategy. The new method splits up the doses and uses one-fifth as much vaccine per shot. The partial dose of the vaccine is injected into the upper layer of skin, rather than the full dose into the underlying fat, which is how shots are typically administered.

The new approach, called an intradermal injection, uses a smaller needle and likely will require additional training for people giving the shot. The request to change the vaccination method was made by the National Institutes of Health, not the manufacturer.

Chaplin said the company has been “inundated with calls from U.S. state government officials with questions and concerns” since last Thursday regarding the new vaccination plan.

“We will of course align our responses with our colleagues at the CDC, but we believe this alignment would have been better served before any announcement to ensure the best rollout,” Chaplin wrote.

The new strategy is an attempt to stretch the U.S.’s limited supply of Bavarian Nordic’s Jynneos vaccine. There are more than 10,000 confirmed cases of monkeypox in the country and demand for the vaccine far exceeds supply. 

Peter Marks, the FDA’s top vaccine official, wrote in a memo Tuesday that approximately 1.6 to 1.7 million people are currently estimated to be at elevated risk of monkeypox in the U.S. and may need vaccination.

Since Jynneos requires two doses, that means the country needs 3.2 to 3.4 million doses. However, Marks said only about half that number are currently estimated to be available before the end of 2022. 

Marks said other methods of conserving or stretching doses were considered, including delaying second doses of Jynneos or using an older smallpox vaccine, but the intradermal method was the only one deemed acceptable. 

Under the new plan, the country’s remaining 441,000 doses could be stretched to give 2.2 million shots. 

“In the current setting of a monkeypox outbreak that is continuing to spread in the context of a limited number of vaccine doses, the additional doses of vaccine that will be made available may also help to benefit public health measurably by assisting in containment efforts,” Marks wrote.

Chaplin said Bavarian Nordic was open to delaying second doses in order to vaccinate more people with a first dose, a strategy employed by several cities as well as the United Kingdom. 

But Marks said there was no evidence a single dose provided enough protection, while there was a clinical trial that showed intradermal administration was effective.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3597288-monkeypox-vaccine-maker-raises-concerns-about-plan-to-split-doses/

Affimed: US trial delayed

 

  • AFM13 monotherapy: On track to report topline data of the registration-directed REDIRECT trial in the fourth quarter of 2022

  • AFM13 combination with natural killer (NK) cells: On track to report updated data at a scientific conference in the fourth quarter of 2022

  • AFM24: Studies continue to enroll; data updates expected at scientific conferences in the second half of 2022

  • AFM28: Following interactions with FDA, strategic decision to focus early clinical development in non-U.S. jurisdictions; clinical study now expected to start in the first half of 2023

  • Cash and cash equivalents as of June 30, 2022 were approximately €237.2 million with anticipated cash runway into mid-2024

  • Conference call and webcast scheduled for August 11, 2022 at 8:30 a.m. EDT/14:30 CEST

Affimed will host a conference call and webcast on August 11, 2022 at 8:30 a.m. EDT / 14:30 CEST to discuss second quarter 2022 financial results and corporate developments. The conference call will be available via phone and webcast.

To access the call, please dial +1 (866) 374-5140 for U.S. callers, or +1 (404) 400-0571 for international callers, and use PIN: 54780189# approximately 15 minutes prior to the call.

A live audio webcast of the conference call will be available in the “Webcasts” section on the “Investors” page of the Affimed website at https://www.affimed.com/investors/webcasts-and-corporate-presentation/.

A replay of the webcast will be accessible at the same link for 30 days following the call.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/affimed-reports-second-quarter-2022-103000066.html

UnitedHealth Deal Questioned by DOJ on Risk of Data Misuse

 The Justice Department held out a 2021 internal audit of UnitedHealth Group Inc.’s data practices as evidence that the health-care giant’s proposed acquisition of Change Healthcare Inc. should be blocked.  

An internal audit of UnitedHealth’s data policies found the company had “no effective means of enforcement if or when data misuse is discovered or reported,” according to evidence presented by prosecutors during an antitrust trial Wednesday.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-10/unitedhealth-internal-audit-shows-data-misuse-risks-doj-says

Ascendis results, business update

 —  U.S. regulatory submission for TransCon PTH, designed to be the first parathyroid hormone replacement therapy, on track for Q3 2022; EU submission planned for Q4 2022

—  SKYTROFA revenue continued to double quarter-to-quarter, reaching €4.4 million in the second quarter

—  With anticipated growth in U.S. revenues and approximately €1 billion of cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities on hand, Ascendis is positioned to fulfill Vision 3x3 and become cash flow positive

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ascendis-pharma-reports-second-quarter-200100190.html