Analysis-Governments want COVID vaccine developers to aim higher in hunt
for better shots
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[April 01, 2022]
By Ludwig Burger and Emilio Parodi
(Reuters) - As governments prepare to live
with COVID-19, some are questioning how much to rely on drugmakers to
adapt vaccines to ward off future virus variants amid signs of tension
between companies and regulators over the best approach, according to
several sources familiar with the matter.
Some vaccine experts say government agencies should fund and help
develop a new generation of COVID shots, and seek innovation from
smaller developers, as they did to identify current vaccines.
"We have established a research infrastructure that could do this
relatively reasonably rapidly if we primed the pump and created the same
kind of plan for second-generation vaccines as we did for the
first-generation vaccines," Dr. Larry Corey, a virologist who is
overseeing U.S. government-backed COVID vaccine trials, told Reuters.
BioNTech and Pfizer, who developed the western world's most widely used
COVID vaccine, recently clashed with the European Medicines Agency (EMA)
over the best strategy for developing a new vaccine against the Omicron
variant, and whatever may follow, two sources familiar with the matter
told Reuters.
An EMA spokesperson said the agency, along with other regulators, are
encouraging companies to explore vaccines that target multiple variants.
In January, BioNTech and Pfizer began testing a vaccine designed to
target Omicron alone, believing the best approach is to tackle one major
new variant at a time.
They had said a modified vaccine may not be necessary even after
emergence of the highly-mutated Omicron late last year led to a record
surge in infections.
EMA regulators pressed the drugmakers to give equal priority to a
vaccine targeting multiple variants, figuring that would offer broader
protection against future mutations, the sources said. One of the
sources said EMA would not signal whether the current vaccine trials
will be enough to warrant approval even if the companies demonstrate
safety and immune response.
On Wednesday, BioNTech said the companies would broaden their trial to
test a shot targeting Omicron and the original version of the
coronavirus.
BioNTech said it decided to test a combination shot to scientifically
validate decisions on the best vaccine strategy for the near future.
A BioNTech spokesperson declined to comment on the company's discussions
with EMA. A Pfizer spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.
Moderna Inc, which has also enjoyed great success with its COVID
vaccine, is testing a shot that targets Omicron and the original
coronavirus, aiming to have it ready in the fall.
"We believe this may lead to the best breadth in protection," top
Moderna scientist Jacqueline Miller said at a company event this month.
GlaxoSmithKline is also working with German biotech CureVac on a vaccine
that targets multiple coronavirus variants.
'WE NEED TO DO BETTER'
European and U.S. public health officials are pushing for better tools
to fight COVID. Current vaccines are very effective against severe
disease and death, but no longer against transmission, and immunity
levels tend to wane within months.
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A patient waits after receiving their coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccine booster at the North Oakland Health Center in Pontiac,
Michigan, U.S., December 21, 2021. REUTERS/Emily Elconin
Some health officials question
whether companies that have reaped tens of billions of dollars from
first-generation COVID shots and stand to earn billions more from
repeated boosters are willing to spend the money to find vaccines
offering much broader and longer-lasting protection, which could
take years.
Pfizer and BioNTech say their decisions are led by scientific
findings.
Any new and innovative approach may come from smaller companies that
will need funding for early development work, said Corey, from
Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center.
"We need to do better, and we need to fund that,"
Corey said, adding that a new generation of COVID vaccines could be
supported by about $2 billion in funding. The European Union made a
massive bet on future Pfizer/ BioNTech shots in a deal worth up to
35 billion euros ($39.04 billion). That agreement requires the
drugmakers to revise their shots to deal with new variants.
EU member states have also expressed interest in shots targeting
multiple variants. "The message they've sent to the companies is
'give us more options,'" one of the sources familiar with the matter
said. The international Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness
Innovations, which helped fund early research into some existing
vaccines, has $200 million available for next-generation vaccine
research. It has awarded small grants to manufacturers including the
UK's DIOSynVax and MigVax of Israel.
Among the major Western COVID vaccine makers, Pfizer and BioNTech
appear furthest along in redesigning their shot.
In late January, they launched a clinical trial testing immune
responses to a vaccine targeting Omicron in unvaccinated people, and
as a booster in those fully vaccinated. Results are expected in
April.
BioNTech has argued that laboratory analyses by other researchers
showed that exposure to Omicron in previously vaccinated people
leads to a broad immune response against major prior coronavirus
variants, the sources said.
Lab tests of a BioNTech/Pfizer shot targeting the earlier Alpha and
Delta variants yielded an immune response inferior to what would be
expected from a single-variant vaccine, they added.
A combination vaccine could raise other difficulties, including
exacerbating temporary side effects seen with current shots, GSK
said. Cutting the dose to avoid that could jeopardize efficacy, but
GSK said it was working on that.
(Additional Reporting by Francesco Guarascio in Brussels, Julie
Steenhuysen in Chicago, Jennifer Rigby in London; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)
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