U.K. Approves Pfizer Coronavirus Vaccine, a First in the West – The New York Times

LONDON Britain gave emergency authorization on Wednesday to Pfizers coronavirus vaccine, leaping ahead of the United States to become the first Western country to allow mass inoculations against a disease that has killed more than 1.4 million people worldwide.

The decision cleared the way for a vaccination campaign with little precedent in modern medicine, encompassing not only ultracold dry ice but also a crusade against anti-vaccine misinformation.

Britains beating the United States to authorization on a vaccine codeveloped by an American company, no less intensified pressure on U.S. regulators, who are under fire from the White House for not moving faster to get doses to people. But it also fueled concerns that Britain was acting in haste for political reasons or trying to muscle its way to the front of the line for deliveries.

European regulators on Wednesday cast doubt on the rigor of Britains review and said that the authorization was limited to specific batches of the vaccine, a claim that Pfizer denied and British officials did not address.

Britains move provoked a spirited debate among American scientists about whether U.S. regulators, who are known to be unusually meticulous, could afford to hold off any longer on authorizing a vaccine against a virus that is claiming more than 10,000 lives a day worldwide.

American regulators have argued that they lag behind if only by a matter of days because they are virtually alone in reanalyzing thousands of pages of raw data from vaccine trials before approval. Backers of that approach say it is the only way to minimize unintended damage, in lives and in public trust, from vaccines not working.

British and European regulators lean more heavily on the companies own analyses, auditing their figures occasionally but otherwise grounding their decisions on vaccine makers reports. While the more cautious American approach can be valuable, some scientists said the Europeans subject vaccine makers to considerable scrutiny, and it is imperative to move quickly to curb the suffering wrought by the pandemic.

When you say its OK to wait another week or two, youre saying its OK that many thousands of people are going to die, said Dr. Walid F. Gellad, who leads the Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing at the University of Pittsburgh.

No country until Wednesday had authorized a fully tested coronavirus vaccine; Russia and China approved vaccines without waiting for large-scale efficacy tests.

The British government, battered by its handling of the pandemic, exulted in the authorization.

Help is on its way with this vaccine and we can now say that with certainty, rather than with all the caveats, the British health secretary, Matt Hancock, said Wednesday.

While the go-ahead bodes well for Britain, which broke from the European Unions regulatory orbit to approve the vaccine early, it will have no effect on the distribution of the hundreds of millions of doses that the United States and other wealthy countries have procured in prepaid contracts.

It also offers little relief to poorer countries that could not afford to buy supplies in advance and may struggle to pay for both the vaccines and the exceptional demands of distributing them.

Roughly 800,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine, developed with BioNTech, a smaller German firm, were being packaged at the companys Belgian manufacturing plant on Wednesday for shipment to Britain. How and when they will arrive is a secret for security reasons, the company said.

The complicated logistics of moving, defrosting and preparing the vaccine meant it was going to be given only at 50 British hospitals to begin with. The vaccine must be transported at South Pole-like temperatures, and in trays of 975 doses.

First to be vaccinated will be doctors and nurses in the countrys National Health Service, along with nursing home workers and people 80 and over with previously scheduled doctors appointments. A government advisory committee has suggested that older or more vulnerable health workers, and doctors and nurses who work with fragile patients, would be among the first in line.

But the government has not said when other employees of the National Health Service would be eligible for vaccines. Essential workers, like teachers, transport workers and first responders, would not be vaccinated until after people 50 and over and those with underlying health problems received shots.

The advisory committee plans had made nursing home residents a top priority, but they will have to wait until the government begins distributing vaccines beyond hospitals. Pfizer and BioNTech have suggested that is possible, given that the vaccine can be stored for five days in a normal refrigerator.

Eventually, people will get their shots in mass vaccination centers being set up by the military at soccer stadiums and racecourses, or at doctors offices and pharmacies.

Weve been waiting and hoping for the day when the searchlights of science would pick out our invisible enemy, and give us the power to stop that enemy from making us ill, Prime Mister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday. And now the scientists have done it.

For Britain, which has suffered one of Europes highest per capita death tolls from the virus, the decision by its drug regulator was the latest evidence of a vaccination strategy that has been the most aggressive in the West.

Britain remains under the authority of the European Unions drug regulator until it consummates its split from the bloc on Dec. 31. But the government recently strengthened an old law that allows it to step out from under the blocs regulatory umbrella in public health emergencies. That allowed it to fast-track a review of the Pfizer vaccine, which was 95 percent effective in a late-stage clinical trial.

Britain had pre-ordered 40 million doses of the vaccine and 315 million doses of competing vaccines, spreading its bets to assure it can inoculate the countrys 67 million people.

British ministers cast the speed of the Pfizer approval as an early example of the new flexibility the country will have once it fully untethers itself from European regulation. Yet Brexit has also exacted costs, starving Britains drug regulator of money it used to draw from contracts with the European Union.

British regulators are also vetting a vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, a British-Swedish company. It is cheaper and easier to store than Pfizers, so much of the world could rely on it, but its regulatory path forward in the United States is unclear after scientists and industry analysts questioned promising early results.

The chemistry underlying Pfizers vaccine had never before produced an approved shot, but scientists have experimented with it for years, testing vaccines that did not make it to market. In order to coax cells to make a viral protein, called a spike, and elicit an immune response, this class of vaccine delivers genetic instructions, known as messenger RNA, encased in tiny fat globules.

BioNTech made a prophetic bet on the technology and joined forces with Pfizer, one of the worlds largest drug companies; they ended up delivering stunning results, on a timeline that was unheard-of before this year.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration plans to decide on emergency authorization for the Pfizer vaccine shortly after a meeting of an advisory panel on Dec. 10. American officials have said vaccinations could begin within 24 hours after approval.

Another American company, Moderna, and the National Institutes of Health have also developed a messenger RNA vaccine that has proved effective in large trials. The F.D.A. will consider their application for emergency authorization shortly after Pfizers.

The European Medicines Agency, which regulates vaccines across the European Union, is expected to make a decision about the Pfizer vaccine later in December.

Pfizer has said it expects to be able to produce up to 50 million doses this year, about half of them going to the United States. Since each person needs two doses, a month apart, up to 25 million people worldwide could begin vaccination before 2021.

The United States has bought 100 million doses in advance from Pfizer, and the European Union 200 million doses.

The approval arrived at a perilous moment in the pandemic in Britain, where the virus has killed nearly 70,000 people, and hundreds more die each day. A third of Englands hospital systems were caring for more Covid-19 patients in recent weeks than at the height of the first wave in the spring.

A monthlong shutdown of restaurants and pubs has stanched the spread of the virus, but that is being replaced by a less stringent system of localized restrictions, with allowances for Christmastime travel that scientists fear will seed another uptick in infections.

In a clinical trial, the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine proved highly effective among older adults, who are more vulnerable to developing severe Covid-19 and who do not respond strongly to some types of vaccines. It caused no serious side effects.

As vaccines become widely available, the scientific feat of developing them will give way to the social and political problem of convincing people to take them. In Britain, the source of some of the most virulent modern disinformation about vaccines, just over half of people have said in surveys they would definitely accept an inoculation.

Safety concerns have been accentuated by the speed of vaccine testing and approval, despite Britains regulators saying repeatedly they were not taking shortcuts.

Beyond those challenges, manufacturers will quickly need to eventually make billions of doses and move them to hospitals, clinics and pharmacies.

The Pfizer vaccine makes this effort especially complex. It has to be stored at around minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit) until shortly before injection, requiring transportation in boxes stuffed with dry ice.

Matina Stevis-Gridneff contributed reporting from Brussels, Katie Thomas from Chicago and Rebecca Robbins from Bellingham, Wash.

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U.K. Approves Pfizer Coronavirus Vaccine, a First in the West - The New York Times

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