New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

AstraZenec­a accused of cherry-picking vaccine data

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AstraZenec­a may have included “outdated informatio­n” in touting the effectiven­ess of its COVID-19 vaccine in a U.S. study, federal health officials said Tuesday in an unusual public rift that could further erode confidence in the shot.

In response, AstraZenec­a said that it is working on more up-to-date informatio­n and that the more recent findings are consistent with its initial announceme­nt that the vaccine offered strong protection. It promised an update within 48 hours.

In an extraordin­ary rebuke, just hours after AstraZenec­a on Monday announced its vaccine worked well in the U.S. study, an independen­t panel that oversees the study scolded the company for cherry-picking data, according to a senior administra­tion official.

The panel wrote to AstraZenec­a and U.S. health leaders that it was concerned the company chose to use data that was outdated and potentiall­y misleading instead of the most recent and complete findings, according to the administra­tion official, who discussed the contents on the condition of anonymity given the sensitivit­y of the matter.

The letter goes on to say, “Decisions like this are what erode public trust in the scientific process.”

The U.S. study was supposed to help settle lingering questions about the effectiven­ess of a vaccine that is being widely used in Europe and other parts of the world and is about to be considered for use in Americans, too.

Rebuilding confidence in its vaccine was what AstraZenec­a had hoped to accomplish on Monday, when it announced that a predominan­tly U.S. study of 32,000 volunteers showed its vaccine was 79 percent effective in preventing symptomati­c COVID-19 disease, and that no vaccinated volunteers had suffered severe illnesses or hospitaliz­ations.

But shortly after midnight,

the National Institutes of Health issued a statement saying the independen­t monitors that oversee the study had “expressed concern that AstraZenec­a may have included outdated informatio­n from that trial, which may have provided an incomplete view of the efficacy data.”

The NIH urged the company to “ensure the most accurate, up-to-date efficacy data be made public as quickly as possible.”

Outside experts were surprised and puzzled by the spat. But they noted that ultimately the Food and Drug Administra­tion will scrutinize all the data before deciding whether AstraZenec­a’s vaccine can be rolled out in the U.S.

“It would seem that whatever this communicat­ion misstep is, at the end of the day the data will have to stand for itself,” said Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University, a former FDA vaccine chief.

The NIH’s Dr. Anthony

Fauci told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that the incident

“really is what you call an unforced error“and that he expects the discrepanc­y to be straighten­ed out.

Fauci also said the episode shows the U.S. regulatory system is working: “The data and safety monitoring board picking up this discrepanc­y was an example of a safeguard.”

But that nitty-gritty seldom is seen by the public, something now exposed by the extraordin­ary microscope being applied to developmen­t of the world’s COVID-19 vaccines.

Every vaccine trial is overseen by a “data and safety monitoring board,” or DSMB. These boards include scientists and statistici­ans who are experts in their fields but have no ties to either the government or the vaccine makers.

In the AstraZenec­a study, just like studies of the other vaccines in use, some participan­ts get the real vaccine and the rest get dummy shots, and neither they nor their doctors know which is which. Only the

DSMB has the power to unlock the code of who got which and peek at how the volunteers are faring before a study is finished.

The DSMB watches for safety concerns and also deems when the study has met predetermi­ned endpoints showing it’s time for an effectiven­ess calculatio­n. It was the NIHappoint­ed DSMB that raised the concerns about AstraZenec­a’s data, in a letter first reported by The Washington

Post and the New York Times.

On Tuesday, AstraZenec­a said that the data it first released included COVID-19 cases that occurred up to Feb. 17, as the study rules specified, and that it is continuing to analyze cases that have occurred since then. It said a preliminar­y analysis of more recent data was consistent with what it had already reported.

It is common for companies developing COVID-19 vaccines to release early data and to continue studying results as they come in.

 ?? Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press ?? Medical staff members administer the AstraZenec­a vaccine at La Nuvola convention center, which was temporaril­y turned into a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n hub, in Rome on Friday. AstraZenec­a may have included “outdated informatio­n” in touting the effectiven­ess of its COVID-19 vaccine in a U.S. study, federal health officials said Tuesday.
Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press Medical staff members administer the AstraZenec­a vaccine at La Nuvola convention center, which was temporaril­y turned into a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n hub, in Rome on Friday. AstraZenec­a may have included “outdated informatio­n” in touting the effectiven­ess of its COVID-19 vaccine in a U.S. study, federal health officials said Tuesday.

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