Orlando Sentinel

Vaccine makers promise safety, highest standards

Pledge comes as political pressure hurts FDA credibilit­y

- By Linda A. Johnson

The top executives of nine drugmakers likely to produce the first vaccines against the new coronaviru­s signed an unpreceden­ted pledge meant to boost public confidence in any approved vaccines.

The companies said Tuesday that they will stick to the highest ethical and scientific standards in testing and manufactur­ing and will make the well-being of those getting vaccinated their top priority.

The announceme­nt comes amid worries that President Donald Trump will pressure the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to approve a vaccine before it’s proven to be safe and effective.

The president has repeatedly said a vaccine could be ready by the end of the year, or even as early as October. His administra­tion also is pressing ahead with what it calls “Operation Warp Speed,” a program meant to accelerate the developmen­t and manufactur­e of vaccines.

Meanwhile, public health officials have expressed doubt that adequate data on vaccine safety and effectiven­ess would be available before November. They also worry if Americans stay away from the vaccine because they don’t trust it, COVID-19 will be harder to control.

The pledge announced Tuesday was signed by the chief executive officers of American drugmakers Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Moderna, Novavax and Pfizer, and European companies AstraZenec­a, BioNTech, GlaxoSmith­Kline and Sanofi.

BioNTech has partnered with Pfizer on one of the three vaccines now in the final round of human testing.

The companies said they will seek approval or authorizat­ion for emergency use only after they have confirmed the vaccines work and are safe through a large, final round of human testing.

“We believe this pledge will help ensure public confidence in the rigorous scientific and regulatory process by which COVID-19 vaccines are evaluated and may ultimately be approved,” the pledge states.

The CEOs also promised to “ensure a sufficient supply and range of vaccine options, including those suitable for global access.” The statement noted the nine companies previously created more than 70 new vaccines against deadly diseases, helping to eradicate some of them.

The executives likely worry that skepticism about the their medicines could limit sales, given an AP-NORC poll in May found that only about half of those surveyed planned to get the vaccine. The country already has a small, but vocal, group of “anti-vaxxers” who oppose giving their children the many standard vaccines.

The FDA’s credibilit­y also has been shaken by its emergency authorizat­ions — at the urging of the Trump administra­tion — for two unproven treatments, convalesce­nt plasma and malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine. Both were heavily criticized by many medical experts.

Last week, the Merck and Pfizer CEOs joined chief executives of three other companies testing COVID-19 drugs and vaccines to pledge that they won’t seek even emergency approval without solid results in final stage human testing. They added that extra transparen­cy on testing results and the approval process is needed.

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