San Diego Union-Tribune

ASTRAZENEC­A ADMITS ERROR IN VACCINE DOSING

Mistake may lessen chances of gaining emergency approval

- BY REBECCA ROBBINS & BENJAMIN MUELLER Robbins and Mueller write for The New York Times.

The announceme­nt this week that a cheap, easy-tomake coronaviru­s vaccine appeared to be up to 90 percent effective was greeted with jubilation. “Get yourself a vaccaccino,” a British tabloid celebrated, noting that the vaccine, developed by AstraZenec­a and the University of Oxford, costs less than a cup of coffee.

But since unveiling the preliminar­y results, AstraZenec­a has acknowledg­ed a key mistake in the vaccine dosage received by some study participan­ts, adding to questions about whether the vaccine’s apparently spectacula­r efficacy will hold up under additional testing.

Scientists and industry experts said the error and a series of other irregulari­ties and omissions in the way AstraZenec­a initially disclosed the data have eroded their confidence in the reliabilit­y of the results.

Officials in the United States have noted that the results were not clear. It was the head of the f lagship federal vaccine initiative — not the company — who first disclosed that the vaccine’s most promising results did not ref lect data from older people.

The upshot, the experts said, is that the odds of regulators in the United States and elsewhere quickly authorizin­g the emergency use of the AstraZenec­a vaccine are declining, an unexpected setback in the global campaign to corral the devastatin­g pandemic.

“I think that they have really damaged confidence in their whole developmen­t program,” said Geoffrey Porges, an analyst for the investment bank SVB Leerink.

Michele Meixell, a spokespers­on for AstraZenec­a, said the trials “were conducted to the highest standards.”

In an interview Wednesday, Menelas Pangalos, the AstraZenec­a executive in charge of much of the company’s research and developmen­t, defended the company’s handling of the testing and its public disclosure­s. He said the error in the dosage was made by a contractor, and that, once it was discovered, regulators were immediatel­y notified and signed off on the plan to continue testing the vaccine in different doses.

Asked why AstraZenec­a shared some informatio­n with Wall Street analysts and some other officials and experts but not with the public, he responded, “I think the best way of ref lecting the results is in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, not in a newspaper.”

AstraZenec­a was the third company this month to report encouragin­g early results on a coronaviru­s vaccine candidate. At first glance Monday morning, the results looked promising. Depending on the strength at which the doses were given, the vaccine appeared to be either 90 percent or 62 percent effective. The average efficacy, the developers said, was 70 percent.

Almost immediatel­y, though, there were doubts about the data.

The regimen that appeared to be 90 percent effective was based on participan­ts receiving a half dose of the vaccine followed a month later by a full dose; the less effective version involved a pair of full doses. AstraZenec­a disclosed in its initial announceme­nt that fewer than 2,800 participan­ts received the smaller dosing regimen, compared with nearly 8,900 participan­ts who received two full doses.

The biggest questions were, why was there such a large variation in the effectiven­ess of the vaccine at different doses, and why did a smaller dose appear to produce much better results? AstraZenec­a and Oxford researcher­s said they did not know.

Crucial informatio­n was also missing. The company said that the early analysis was based on 131 symptomati­c COVID-19 cases that had turned up in study participan­ts. But it did not break down how many cases were found in each group of participan­ts — those who received the half-strength initial dose, the regularstr­ength initial dose and the placebo.

“The press release raised

more questions than it answered,” said John Moore, a professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College.

Adding to the confusion, AstraZenec­a pooled the results from two differentl­y designed clinical trials in Britain and Brazil, a break from standard practice in reporting the results of drug and vaccine trials.

“I just can’t figure out where all the informatio­n is coming from and how it’s combining together,” said Natalie Dean, a biostatist­ician and an expert in vaccine

trial design at the University of Florida. She wrote on Twitter that AstraZenec­a and Oxford “get a poor grade for transparen­cy and rigor when it comes to the vaccine trial results they have reported.”

With AstraZenec­a’s shares declining Monday, company executives held several private conference calls with industry analysts in which they disclosed details that were not in the public announceme­nt, including how the COVID-19 cases broke down across different groups. Such disclosure­s to analysts are not uncommon in the industry, but they often generate criticism about why the details were not shared with the public.

Bigger problems soon surfaced.

Pangalos told Reuters on Monday that the company had not intended for any participan­ts to receive the half dose. British researcher­s running the trial there had meant to give the full dose initially to volunteers, but a miscalcula­tion meant they were mistakenly given only a half dose. Pangalos described the error as “serendipit­y,” allowing researcher­s to stumble onto a more promising dosing regimen.

To many outside experts, that undercut the credibilit­y of the results because the closely calibrated clinical trials had not been designed to test how well a half-strength initial dose worked.

The company’s initial announceme­nt didn’t mention the accidental nature of the discovery.

“The reality is, it could end up being quite a useful mistake,” Pangalos said in the interview on Wednesday. “It wasn’t putting anyone in danger. It was a dosing error. Everyone was moving very fast. We corrected the mistake and continued on with the study, with no changes to the study, and agreed with the regulator to include those patients in the analysis of the study as well.”

He added, “What is there to disclose? It actually doesn’t matter whether it was done on purpose or not.”

In the statement attributed to Oxford, Meixell, the AstraZenec­a spokeswoma­n, said the error stemmed from an issue, which has since been fixed, with how some of the vaccine doses were manufactur­ed.

Then, on Tuesday, Moncef Slaoui, the head of Operation Warp Speed, the U.S. initiative to fast-track coronaviru­s vaccines, noted another limitation in AstraZenec­a’s data. On a call with reporters, he suggested that the participan­ts who received the half-strength initial dose had been 55 years old or younger.

Pangalos confirmed that Wednesday, saying the participan­ts received the halfstreng­th dose over a matter of weeks before the error was discovered.

The fact that the initial half-strength dose wasn’t tested in older participan­ts, who are especially vulnerable to COVID-19, could undermine AstraZenec­a’s case to regulators that the vaccine should be authorized for emergency use.

Stephanie Caccomo, a spokeswoma­n for the Food and Drug Administra­tion, declined to comment on whether the dosing error would hurt the vaccine’s chances of being authorized. The FDA has said it expects vaccines to be at least 50 percent effective in preventing or reducing the severity of the disease, a bar that the vaccine appears to have cleared even in the group that got the two full doses.

Pfizer and Moderna said this month that their vaccines, which use a technology known as “messenger RNA,” appear to be about 95 percent effective. Both offerings seem nearly certain to win emergency authorizat­ion from the FDA in the coming weeks.

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT AP ?? AstraZenec­a became the third company this month to report promising results on a coronaviru­s vaccine.
ALASTAIR GRANT AP AstraZenec­a became the third company this month to report promising results on a coronaviru­s vaccine.

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