The Day

Pfizer’s vaccine deal hailed

Federal government agrees to purchase 100 million doses

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Groton — On the day of a major announceme­nt that the federal government agreed to purchase 100 million doses of a vaccine that Pfizer is working to develop, Gov. Ned Lamont and Pfizer emphasized the company’s strides, including at its Eastern Point Road campus, in the fight against COVID-19.

At the Groton labs, scientists and experts are working on safety studies for the potential vaccine, along with regulatory coordinati­on and other work, according to Pfizer.

“I am so proud that Pfizer is right here in Connecticu­t and taking the lead on finding a possible solution to this COVID crisis,” Lamont said at a news conference at Pfizer.

Pfizer representa­tives, local officials and the region’s legislativ­e delegation also attended the conference, with many wearing masks that said, “SCIENCE WILL WIN.”

Pfizer is partnering with BioNTech to develop a potential vaccine on an expedited schedule, with preliminar­y study data showing a good immune response for vaccinated patients, said John Burkhardt, the site head of Pfizer’s Connecticu­t Laboratori­es and senior vice president and head of global drug safety research and developmen­t.

A large-scale clinical trial involving 20,000 to 30,000 patients is slated to begin before the end of the month, with the hope of having a regulatory submission by the end of October, Burkhardt said. If the vac

cine is successful and receives U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approval, the product could be available before the end of the year. The companies will recruit people who represent a diversity of ages, ethnicitie­s and genetics to participat­e in the trial, he said.

Under the contract announced Wednesday, the United States would pay $1.95 billion for the first 100 million doses of the vaccine, if it meets FDA approval, with the potential to purchase an additional 500 million doses, the Associated Press reported. Several other companies also are working to develop vaccines.

Lamont said that while the announceme­nt is “not the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow,” and Connecticu­t will have to make sure it follows the protocols that make the state one of the best in the country in terms of having a low infection rate, “it gives us hope that science is going to lead us the way past this.”

Pfizer also hopes to begin clinical trials in the third quarter of this year for a potential treatment of COVID-19 that could be given intravenou­sly to patients hospitaliz­ed with the disease, Burkhardt said.

The labs in Groton “have been supporting clinical trials through an experience­d team of scientists and experts working on safety, design, formulatio­n, global supply and procuremen­t of the COVID-19 vaccine and therapy response efforts,” he said.

He said the work will be a collaborat­ion among Pfizer sites.

“Together we hope to really change the course of this pandemic,” Burkhardt said. “We believe that science will win.”

City of Groton Mayor Keith Hedrick said the announceme­nt represents another example of the relationsh­ip and partnershi­p that Groton has with Pfizer and “we will solidify that this facility in Groton is the R&D center of excellence now and for years to come.”

In a written statement, state Sen. Heather Somers, R-Groton, said, “This is truly outstandin­g news which gives us all reason for hope and optimism, but it shouldn’t come as a surprise. Because when you see, hear, and think about the name ‘Pfizer’, you think of innovation. You think of a dynamic team of the world’s top scientists who work right here in Groton.”

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