European efforts to assess Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine stymied by data
gaps
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[July 13, 2021]
By Michel Rose, Polina Ivanova and Emilio Parodi
PARIS (Reuters) - The developers of
Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine have repeatedly failed to provide
data that regulators deem to be standard requirements of the drug
approval process, according to five people with knowledge of European
efforts to assess the drug, providing new insight into the country’s
struggle to win foreign acceptance of its product.
Reuters reported last month that the European Medicines Agency (EMA)’s
review of the drug’s safety and efficacy was delayed because a June 10
deadline to submit data on the vaccine's clinical trials was missed,
according to one of those people, who is close to the agency, and
another person familiar with the matter. The EMA is the European Union’s
medicines watchdog.
The hitches go beyond that one deadline, the person close to the agency
said. As of early June, the EMA had received hardly any manufacturing
data, and the clinical data the agency had received was incomplete, the
person said.
Separately, an assessment of Sputnik V by a French delegation of
scientists in advance of the EMA review found that the vaccine
developers were unable to document that the so-called master cell bank,
the initial building block of the vaccine, complied with specific EU
regulation on preventing disease contamination, according to four people
with knowledge of the delegation's findings.
The EMA, which launched its formal review of the Russian vaccine in
March, had previously been expected to decide in May or June whether to
approve use of the drug in the EU.
The person close to the EMA said notable missing clinical information
during the EMA review included case report forms that record any adverse
effects people experienced after receiving the jab in trials. It is
standard practice for developers to submit such forms, this person
added. It was also not clear how the scientists working on the vaccine
tracked the outcomes of people given a placebo, the person said.
The watchdog rates such data shortcomings on a scale that goes from
“critical” - the most serious - to “major” to “minor.” The person said
nothing had met the critical threshold, “but there are several
‘majors,’” indicating issues that can be remedied but require much work.
The person added they didn’t expect the review to be completed until
after the summer.
Several people who have interacted with Russia’s Gamaleya Institute,
which developed Sputnik V and oversaw the clinical trials, attribute the
repeated failure to provide some information to lack of experience in
dealing with overseas regulators. "They are not used to working with a
regulatory agency like the EMA," the person close to the agency said,
referring to Gamaleya’s scientists.
Gamaleya is supervised by Russia’s health ministry. Neither Gamaleya nor
the ministry responded to questions for this report. The Kremlin
declined to comment.
Sputnik V is marketed overseas by Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, called
the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF).
RDIF said Reuters’ reporting contained “false and inaccurate statements”
based on anonymous sources who are attempting to harm Sputnik V as part
of a disinformation campaign. RDIF suggested the vaccine could be under
attack by the “Western pharmaceutical lobby,” without offering evidence
of such a campaign.
RDIF added that the vaccine is registered in more than 60 countries and
that studies from places including Argentina, Mexico and Hungary that
are already using the vaccine show it is safe and effective. It said
there had been “no reported serious adverse events.”
On the French delegation’s findings, RDIF said “the Sputnik V cell bank
is fully compliant with all EMA requirements.”
RDIF said it is working closely with the EMA, whose inspectors have
visited Sputnik V production facilities. “From the inspections already
completed we’ve received no major critical comments and none of the
issues raised doubted the safety and efficacy of the vaccine,” said RDIF.
One of the people with knowledge of European efforts to assess the drug
said they had no reason to doubt that Sputnik is a safe and effective
vaccine. A study by international scientists published in the Lancet in
February found Sputnik to be more than 90% effective.
The EMA, which is headquartered in Amsterdam, declined to comment on
details of the review while it is ongoing. The agency said it applies
the same standards to all applicants and to authorise a COVID-19 vaccine
the EMA requires “detailed information on its safety, efficacy and
quality.”
The delay could allow rival vaccine makers to sew up key markets. The
stumble is one of several for the developers of Sputnik V in dealing
with some overseas drugs watchdogs reviewing the vaccine, who have
identified a lack of data, insufficient documentation of methodology and
non-compliance with what they view as standard protocol.
Brazilian regulators initially rejected imports of Sputnik V after
technical staff highlighted "inherent risks," citing a lack of data
guaranteeing its safety, quality and effectiveness. Slovakia’s drug
agency said it had insufficient data from Moscow before the government
ultimately gave a limited go-ahead for the vaccine. Hungary gave
emergency approval for the jab despite what several people with
knowledge of the process said were concerns raised by some specialists
working on the review at Hungary’s drug regulator about insufficient
documentation.
Brazilian regulator Anvisa last month gave conditional approval for
imports of Sputnik V. The conditions imposed “seek to overcome the
information gaps in the process and ensure minimum conditions of vaccine
safety and quality,” Anvisa told Reuters. It added that Sputnik V has
not been distributed to people in Brazil.
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Vials labeled "Sputnik V coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine",
March 24, 2021. REUTERS / Dado Ruvic/File Photo/File Photo
Hungary’s regulator, at the time it approved Sputnik
V in January, publicly acknowledged that there can be conflicting
opinions during an authorization process and that it had received
reassuring answers to its questions regarding the vaccine. The
Slovakian government this month said it sold most of its Sputnik V
back to Russia, citing low interest.
CELL CULTURE
Sputnik V is named after the Soviet-era satellite that triggered the
space race, in a nod to the project’s geopolitical importance for
Russian President Vladimir Putin. EMA approval would lend legitimacy
to the vaccine, which initially faced scepticism by some Western
scientists and politicians, and speed up its availability in Europe.
Moscow's efforts to obtain EU approval hit obstacles before it
submitted its application.
In November 2020, the French government dispatched a team of
scientists to Moscow to help Paris decide if it should use Sputnik V
and manufacture the drug on French soil, in the event of EMA
approval.
The four people with knowledge of the delegation’s findings said
that the paperwork the scientists reviewed showed that fetal bovine
serum had been used in the culture to nurture the master cell bank
and that the developers hadn’t documented the serum’s origin.
Fetal bovine serum is commonly used around the world in vaccine
development. But since the outbreak of mad cow disease in the 1980s,
European and North American regulators have required that vaccine
developers document it is from a safe source.
One of the four people familiar with the delegation’s work is French
scientist Cecil Czerkinsky, a member of an international advisory
board set up by RDIF and who was separately briefed on the
delegation’s concerns about the master cell bank. The French team
felt “frustration” with the answers they received when they asked
the vaccine developers about the issue, Czerkinsky told Reuters.
The French delegation informally shared their conclusions --
including their questions regarding the master cell -- with the EMA,
one of the people said.
RDIF told Reuters the Gamaleya Institute “never used ‘non-traceable
bovine serum’ for cell bank preparation.” It added that the Sputnik
V cell bank has been independently verified not to contain prions -
the proteins associated with conditions like mad cow disease. RDIF
didn’t identify who conducted the independent verification.
The EMA in early March announced the launch of a "rolling review" of
Sputnik V, a faster process that checks data as it lands. But the
drug’s developers did not submit the first data until a month later,
delaying the process at the earliest stages, said an official in the
French government briefed on the matter.
France's ministries for health and research, which sponsored the
delegation to Moscow, did not respond to a request for comment on
the delegation’s findings.
BRAZILIAN CAUTION
Brazilian regulator Anvisa’s rejection in April of Sputnik V imports
kicked off a testy public exchange with RDIF, which threatened to
sue the Brazilian agency for defamation.
A crucial issue for Anvisa related to the adenovirus, the virus that
causes the common cold and which is used in Sputnik V to carry into
the body information that triggers an immune response. Anvisa
publicly said there was a risk the adenovirus in Sputnik V could
replicate, potentially causing a negative reaction in recipients.
Anvisa’s manager for medicines and biological products called this
possibility a “serious” defect. The Russians said there was no
evidence of replication and Anvisa had misinterpreted the
documentation.
Sergio Rezende, a former science minister advising Brazilian state
governors who are looking to import the Russian vaccine, said that
in discussions with Gamaleya, the Russians appeared unfamiliar with
the expectations of Brazilian regulators. Rezende told Reuters he
urged the Russians to rework their application, which they initially
resisted but ultimately did.
Anvisa told Reuters its requirements “are aligned with the
regulations of other agencies of reference around the world.”
On the possibility of the adenovirus reproducing, Anvisa said
studies and documents supplied by Gamaleya indicated the “occurrence
of replicating adenoviruses” and lacked adequate assessment of the
relationship between that and the vaccine’s safety. Anvisa added
that the conditions it imposed included demonstrating the absence of
replication in all batches sent to Brazil.
RDIF, in its responses to Reuters, said Gamaleya “has confirmed that
no replication-competent adenoviruses (RCA) were ever found in any
of the Sputnik V vaccine batches that have been produced.”
(Reporting by Michel Rose in Paris, Polina Ivanova in Moscow and
Emilio Parodi in Rome; Additional reporting by Matthias Blamont in
Paris, Lisandra Paraguassu in Brasilia, Stephen Eisenhammer in Sao
Paulo and Marton Dunai in Budapest; Writing by Christian Lowe;
Editing by Cassell Bryan-Low)
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