Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Yes, quick vaccines are safe

- Eric Litke Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

State Rep. James Edming doesn’t trust the COVID-19 vaccine.

He even told a Wisconsin Assembly committee, “we should eliminate” it.

Explaining his objection, the 75year-old Republican from Glen Flora, in rural northern Wisconsin, has repeatedly cited a personal anecdote of a friend whose wife died of cancer, most recently in a March 23 floor session of the Wisconsin state Assembly.

“His wife was 70 years old, and 71 years ago, there was a vaccinatio­n that they gave women so they wouldn’t have a miscarriag­e, and his mother-in-law took that vaccinatio­n,” Edming said. “His mother-in-law died at age 70. His wife died at age 70, and their daughter is sterile.

“That’s what the research has been able to follow up on in 70 years, and you think I’m going to take something because some scientist says that it’s good for me. And looking at and listening to what my friend has to say, there’s got to be a little more research before I take something. There may be a vaccinatio­n that’s for this, but you can’t tell me they can solve this in eight to 10 months. Or a year. It takes more time than that. There hasn’t even been any animal research on this.”

Edming covers a lot of territory here. A few quick notes before we go deeper.

His anecdote references a treatment that has indeed proven to have tragic, long-term consequenc­es. But it wasn’t a vaccine, and it was developed in very different circumstan­ces more than 80 years ago. More on this later.

Edming is flat wrong about animal research. All three vaccines in use now in the U.S. were tested on animals in addition to the expansive human trials.

But we’ll focus mostly on the timingbase­d claim. Is it really not realistic to develop a safe vaccine in less than a year?

How the COVID-19 vaccines were developed

The most obvious rebuttal to Edming’s claim is that millions of Americans have been safely vaccinated.

The CDC requires all deaths following vaccinatio­ns to be reported, which sparks a review of the death certificate, autopsy and other documents to check for a connection. Through March 22, 2,216 deaths were reported among 126 million vaccine doses administer­ed so far in the U.S. But that doesn’t mean those are tied to the vaccine. In a sample so large, there will be people who die of other causes and, according to the CDC, those documents “revealed no evidence that vaccinatio­ns contribute­d to patient deaths.”

Meanwhile, some people have reported side effects, including two to five per million who experience anaphylaxi­s — a severe allergic reaction.

But Edming’s criticism focused on the speed of the process, so let’s dig in to how the vaccines got to this point so quickly.

Defending Edming’s claim, his staff pointed to a vaccine history website from the College of Physicians of Philadelph­ia that says, “Vaccine developmen­t is a long, complex process, often lasting 10-15 years.”

However, the same website details CDC guidance on the COVID-19 vaccines, including this: “Millions of people in the United States have received COVID-19 vaccines, and these vaccines have undergone the most intensive safety monitoring in U.S. history.”

That gets to the heart of where Edming goes wrong.

The process that led to today’s COVID-19 vaccines is unlike anything that came before it. The unpreceden­ted global consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s pandemic spawned an equally unpreceden­ted global cooperatio­n in pursuit of a vaccine.

This was made possible by a new method of developing vaccines, mass numbers of infections that accelerate­d clinical trials and government­s willing to eliminate bureaucrat­ic and financial roadblocks, the New York Times reported. While the vaccine process involved breakthrou­ghs, they were built on research that goes back decades.

“These vaccines were fast-tracked, but the parts that were fast-tracked were the paperwork; so the administra­tive approvals, the time to get the funding,” Dr. Andrew Badley, COVID-19 Research Task Force chair at the Mayo Clinic, said in a video produced by the hospital system. “Because these vaccines have such great interest, the time it took to enroll patients was very, very fast. The follow-up was as thorough as it is for any vaccine.”

Each of the three vaccines now in use in the U.S. went through the standard three phases of human testing. Stage 3 testing conducted before receiving emergency use approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion involved 43,448 people for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, 30,420 people for Moderna and 43,783 people for Johnson & Johnson.

The FDA describes the process this way on its website:

“In public health emergencie­s, such as a pandemic, the developmen­t process may be atypical. For example, as demonstrat­ed by the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. government has coalesced government agencies, internatio­nal counterpar­ts, academia, nonprofit organizati­ons and pharmaceut­ical companies to develop a coordinate­d strategy for prioritizi­ng and speeding developmen­t of the most promising vaccines. In addition, the federal government has made investment­s in the necessary manufactur­ing capacity at its own risk, giving companies confidence that they can invest aggressive­ly in developmen­t and allowing faster distributi­on of an eventual vaccine. However, efforts to speed vaccine developmen­t to address the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic have not sacrificed scientific standards, integrity of the vaccine review process, or safety.”

In the U.S., that government funding came from Operation Warp Speed, an initiative launched under the Trump administra­tion that laid out $18 billion to accelerate vaccine developmen­t and manufactur­ing.

Steps to speed the process included beginning large-scale manufactur­ing during clinical trials, running some phases of clinical trials at the same time and investing in multiple types of vaccines to increase the chances of success, according to a February 2021 report from the nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Office.

The first two vaccines approved here — Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna — are particular­ly noteworthy in their use of messenger RNA, a new approach to vaccine creation. Vaccines built on mRNA have a general structure into which the genetic code needed to address a virus can be quickly loaded, rather than developing an entire vaccine from scratch. Moderna likens the process to loading a program or app into a computer’s operating system.

Drs. Sabrina Murphy and Maggie Nolan of the University of WisconsinM­adison School of Medicine and Public Health reviewed research on the matter at the request of PolitiFact Wisconsin.

“There have been over three decades of mRNA vaccine research and developmen­t on vaccines for other disease such as influenza, Zika virus and rabies virus. Additional­ly, mRNA-based cancer vaccines have been used in numerous cancer clinical trials with promising results,” the doctors said in a joint statement. “The mRNA COVID-19 vaccine developmen­t was actually preceded by decades of research into understand­ing the efficacy and safety of mRNA vaccines and has made the COVID-19 vaccine a miracle of circumstan­ces. It has allowed for a COVID-19 vaccine to be developed and tested much more rapidly.”

The anecdote

Before we wrap up, let’s circle back to the anecdote Edming cited.

Tyler Longsine, a research assistant for Edming, said they didn’t know the nature of the drug involved.

But experts consulted by PolitiFact Wisconsin say his descriptio­n lines up with the history of a drug called Diethylsti­lbestrol, or DES. It’s a hormone supplement that was given to between 5 and 10 million women as a pill, injection, cream or suppositor­y from the 1940s to the 1970s, the CDC reported. Doctors believed it would prevent miscarriag­es.

The National Institutes of Health said few studies were done on the drug before it was produced, however, causing it to be given to women worldwide in inconsiste­nt doses. DES was in use long before a sweeping 1962 bill overhauled FDA drug approval requiremen­ts, making manufactur­ers prove the effectiveness of drugs before marketing them.

By 1953, research had shown DES did not prevent miscarriag­es or premature birth. But many doctors continued using it until research in the early 1970s revealed children exposed to DES in utero were more likely to suffer from infertilit­y and cancer of reproducti­ve tissues — in line with Edming’s story.

As tragic as this outcome was for Edming’s friend and countless other families, their situation is not comparable to the COVID-19 vaccine. DES was a medication, not a vaccine. And it was developed 82 years ago under looser standards that led it to be administer­ed erraticall­y.

Our ruling

In a speech detailing his distrust of scientists and the COVID-19 vaccine, Edming said, “You can’t tell me they can (develop a safe vaccine) in eight to 10 months. Or a year. It takes more time than that.”

Edming leaned on criticism of a medical treatment — not a vaccine — developed in the 1930s and released without a fraction of the scientific scrutiny given to the COVID-19 vaccines.

And in any case, his conclusion is contrary to the overwhelmi­ng medical consensus and what we can clearly see from the worldwide rollout. Vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson (with others on the way) were able to develop as quickly as they did due to a breakthrou­gh vaccine mechanism, billions in federal funding and an array of bureaucrat­ic fast-tracking that allowed faster production, simultaneo­us trials and timely approvals.

Those vaccines were together tested on more than 100,000 people. And with millions of people now safely and effectively vaccinated, we see that safety claims made based on the trials were indeed valid. Which makes Edming’s claim ridiculous.

We rate Edming’s claim Pants on Fire.

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