Royal Oak Tribune

FDA publishes vaccine guidelines opposed by White House

- By Matthew Perrone and Zeke Miller

The Food and Drug Administra­tion released updated safety standards Tuesday for makers of COVID-19 vaccines after the White House blocked their formal release, the latest political tug- of-war between the Trump administra­tion and the government’s public health scientists.

In the new guidelines posted on its website, the FDA said vaccine makers should follow trial participan­ts for at least two months to rule out safety issues before seeking emergency approval. That requiremen­t would almost certainly preclude the introducti­on of a vaccine before Nov. 3.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly insisted a vaccine could be authorized before Election Day, even though top government scientists working on the effort have said that timeline is very unlikely. On Monday Trump said vaccines are coming “momentaril­y,” in a video recorded after he returned to the White House.

Former FDA officials have warned that public perception that a vaccine was being rushed out for political reasons could derail efforts to vaccinate millions of Americans.

A senior administra­tion official confirmed Monday that the White House had blocked FDA’s plans to formally publish the safety guidelines based on the two-month data requiremen­t, arguing there was “no clinical or medical reason” for it.

But on Tuesday, the FDA posted the guidance on the agency’s website, making clear that regulators plan to impose the safety standards for any vaccine seeking an expedited path to market.

FDA Commission­er Stephen Hahn said in a statement that he hoped the guidelines would help “the public understand our science-based decision-making process that assures vaccine quality, safety and efficacy.”

The requiremen­ts are aimed at companies seeking rapid approval through the FDA’s emergency authorizat­ion pathway. That accelerate­d process, reserved for health emergencie­s, allows medical products onto the market based on a lower bar than traditiona­l FDA approval. But FDA has made clear only vaccines that are shown to be safe and effective will be authorized against COVID-19.

Former FDA acting commission­er Dr. Stephen Ostroff said the requiremen­ts seem reasonable given the agency is in largely “uncharted territory” in terms of considerin­g emergency use of a vaccine. The agency has only previously cleared one vaccine through the method — a decades- old shot that was authorized to prevent anthrax poisoning in 2005.

“There really is no margin for error here,” Ostroff said. “Even when you’re talking about limited use of a vaccine there has to be some level of assurance that there isn’t a risk here that would far outweigh the benefit.”

Tomeet the FDA’s threshold, companies will need to submit two months of follow-up data from half of their trial participan­ts to show there were no major side effects or health problems. Vaccines, unlike drugs, are normally given to otherwise healthy people, and normally require enhanced documentat­ion of safety.

Initial doses of vaccines for emergency use would likely be reserved for medical workers and people with health conditions that make them particular­ly vulnerable to coronaviru­s. Full FDA approval for the general population will require significan­tly more data and is not expected until mid2021.

The White House attempt to block the guidance release follows a string of instances in which the Trump administra­tion has undercut its own medical experts working to combat the pandemic. FDA’s Hahn has been attempting to shore up public confidence in the vaccine review process for weeks, vowing that career scientists, not politician­s, will decide if the shots are safe and effective.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla has stoked excitement by saying that he expects data on whether the company’s candidate works to be ready in late October. But a number of variables would still have to align for the company to submit, and the FDA to review and greenlight, a vaccine applicatio­n before Nov. 3. Pfizer’s competitor­s Moderna, AstraZenec­a and Johnson & Johnson are working on longer research timelines.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Nurse Kathe Olmstead prepares a shot that is part of a possible COVID-19vaccine, developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., in Binghamton, N.Y.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Nurse Kathe Olmstead prepares a shot that is part of a possible COVID-19vaccine, developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., in Binghamton, N.Y.

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