Los Angeles Times

Pfizer assures vaccine won’t be rushed

CEO says he won’t bend to pressure from Trump administra­tion.

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The head of Pfizer, one of the drugmakers racing to develop a coronaviru­s vaccine, told employees he was disappoint­ed that its work was politicize­d during this week’s presidenti­al debate and tried to reassure U. S. staff that the company won’t bend to pressure to move more quickly.

Albert Bourla, Pfizer’s chief executive, told the employees Thursday that the company is “moving at the speed of science,” rather than under any political timing, according to a staff letter obtained by the Associated Press.

“The only pressure we feel — and it weighs heavy — are the billions of people, millions of businesses and hundreds of government officials that are depending on us,” Bourla wrote.

During his debate with former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday, President Trump said he had talked with the companies whose experiment­al vaccines are furthest along in testing.

“I’ve spoken to Pfizer, I’ve spoken to all of the people that you have to speak to, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and others. They can go faster than that by a lot,” Trump claimed. “It’s become very political.”

‘ The only pressure we feel — and it weighs heavy — are the billions of people, millions of businesses and hundreds of government officials that are depending on us.’ — Albert Bourla,

Pfizer’s chief executive

Pfizer has said that it expects to have data from its ongoing late- stage test by October that could show whether the vaccine is safe and effective. In his letter to employees, Bourla wrote that the company hopes to have “a hundred million doses delivered by the end of the year.”

Those doses could not be distribute­d until the Food and Drug Administra­tion reviews Pfizer’s data and decides whether to issue what’s called an emergency use authorizat­ion. That would allow distributi­on of the vaccine on a limited basis, with initial shots expected to go to medical and other front- line workers, nursing homes and people most at risk of catching or becoming seriously ill from the virus.

Moderna’s chief executive, Stéphane Bancel, told the U. K.’ s Financial Times on Wednesday that Moderna would not be ready to seek emergency use authorizat­ion from the FDA for its vaccine candidate before Nov. 25 at the earliest.

Johnson & Johnson started the late- stage and final patient study of its vaccine last week.

And AstraZenec­a, which has a candidate in late- stage trials around the world, has placed its U. S. study on hold while the FDA reviews a possible safety problem.

Bourla and top executives of eight other companies developing COVID- 19 vaccines and treatments pledged in early September not to seek even emergency use authorizat­ion, let alone a full approval of their products, until they were proved safe and effective.

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