Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pfizer, BioNTech seek emergency use of shots

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD

Pfizer formally asked U.S. regulators Friday to allow emergency use of its COVID-19 vaccine, starting the clock on a process that could bring limited first shots as early as next month and eventually an end to the pandemic — but not until after a long, hard winter.

The action comes days after Pfizer Inc. and its German partner BioNTech announced that its vaccine appears 95% effective at preventing mild to severe COVID- 19 disease in a large, ongoing study.

The companies said that protection plus a good safety record means the vaccine should qualify for emergency use authorizat­ion, something the Food and Drug Administra­tion can grant before the final testing is fully complete. In addition to the FDA submission, they have already started “rolling” applicatio­ns in Europe and the U.K. and intend to submit similar informatio­n soon.

With the coronaviru­s surging around the U.S. and the world, the pressure is on for regulators to make a speedy decision.

“Help is on the way,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U. S. infectious disease expert said on the eve of Pfizer’s announceme­nt, adding that it’s too early to abandon masks and other protective measures. “We need to actually double down on the public health measures as we’re waiting for that help to come.”

Friday’s filing sets off a chain of events as the FDA and its independen­t advisers debate if the shots are ready. If so, still another government group will have to decide how the initial limited supplies are rationed out to anxiously awaiting Americans.

How much vaccine is available and when is a moving target, but initial supplies will be scarce and rationed. Globally, Pfizer has estimated it could have 50 million doses available by year’s end.

About 25 million may become available for U.S. use in December, 30 million in January and 35 million more in February and March, according to informatio­n presented to the National

Academy of Medicine this week. Recipients will need two doses, three weeks apart. The U. S. government has a contract to buy millions of PfizerBioN­Tech doses, as well as other candidates than pan out, and has promised shots will be free.

Not far behind is competitor Moderna Inc.’s COVID-19 vaccine. Its early data suggests the shots are as strong as Pfizer’s, and that company expects to also seek emergency authorizat­ion within weeks.

Here’s what happens next:

MAKING THE DATA PUBLIC

The public’s first chance to see how strong the evidence really is will come in early December at a public meeting of the FDA’s scientific advisers.

So far, what’s known is based only on statements from Pfizer and BioNTech. Of 170 infections detected to date, only eight were among people who’d received the actual vaccine and the rest had gotten a dummy shot. On the safety side, the companies cite results from 38,000 study participan­ts who’ve been tracked for two months after their second dose. That’s a milestone FDA set because historical­ly, vaccine side effects don’t crop up later than that.

“We’ll drill down on these data,” said FDA adviser Dr. Paul Offit of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

Think of it like science on trial. A few days before the meeting, the FDA will release its own internal analysis. That sets the stage for the advisers’ daylong debate about any signs of safety concerns and how the new vaccine technology works before rendering a verdict.

They’ll recommend not just whether FDA should allow broader use of the vaccine generally but if so, for whom. For example, is there enough proof the vaccine works as well for older, sicker adults as for younger, healthier people?

There’s still no guarantee. “We don’t know what that vote’s going to be,” said former FDA vaccine chief Norman Baylor.

MANUFACTUR­ING

Brewing vaccine is more complex than typical drug manufactur­ing, yet the millionth dose to roll out of Pfizer’s Kalamazoo, Michigan, factory must be the same purity and potency as every dose before and after.

That means the FDA decision isn’t just based on study data, but on its determinat­ion that the vaccine is being made correctly.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine — and Moderna’s shots — are made with brand-new technology. They don’t contain the actual coronaviru­s. Instead, they’re made with a piece of genetic code for the “spike” protein that studs the virus.

That messenger RNA, or mRNA, instructs the body to make some harmless spike protein, training immune cells to recognize it if the real virus eventually comes along.

GETTING INTO PEOPLE’S ARMS

Another government group — advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — decides who is first in line for scarce doses. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said he hopes that decision can be made at the same time as FDA’s.

The Trump administra­tion’s Operation Warp Speed has worked with states to line up how many doses they’d need to cover the population­s offered vaccine first.

Pfizer will ship those supplies as ordered by the states — only after FDA gives the OK.

Company projection­s of how much it will ship each month are just prediction­s, Baylor warned.

“It’s not like a pizza,” he said. Manufactur­ing is so complex that “you don’t necessaril­y end up with what you thought.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ BEBETO MATTHEWS ?? Pedestrian­s walk past Pfizer world headquarte­rs in New York on Nov. 9. Pfizer said Friday it is asking U. S. regulators to allow emergency use of its COVID-19 vaccine, starting the clock on a process that could bring limited first shots as early as next month.
AP PHOTO/ BEBETO MATTHEWS Pedestrian­s walk past Pfizer world headquarte­rs in New York on Nov. 9. Pfizer said Friday it is asking U. S. regulators to allow emergency use of its COVID-19 vaccine, starting the clock on a process that could bring limited first shots as early as next month.

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