Category: Corona Virus Vaccine

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Dr. Marc Siegel: Coronavirus vaccine creation at warp speed This is science, government at their best – Fox News

May 5, 2020

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InFebruary 1976 at Fort Dix, N.J., a military recruit died within 24 hours of a new kind of swine flu.

When 500more people acquired it and four got sick, a public panic ensued (fueled by fears of another pandemic like the 1918 Spanish flu, which killed over 50 million worldwide) and a rush to a vaccine began. The federal government agreed to accept liability for adverse events.

By October the vaccine was ready, and by November, more than 6 million doses had been given. In December, serious side effects emerged, and by January, more than 500 cases of Guillain-Barre Syndrome had been reported (linked to the vaccine) with 25deaths, and the pandemic never came. What happened instead was millions of dollars of lawsuits.

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Ever since then, the federal government has been reluctant to take complete responsibility for emergency vaccine production.But the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act signed into law by President Bush in 2005, protects vaccine manufacturers from financial risk during a declared public health emergency. It was utilized during the rush for an H1N1 swine flu vaccine during the pandemic of 2009. And now, when the ferocious and wildly contagious new coronavirus has convinced the Trump administration to step up and throw caution to the wind.

This is an inspiring development and a proactive use of government authority (a joint program chaired by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Department of Defense Secretary Mark Esper) thatshould be lauded no matter which side of the political aisle you are on.

Operation Warp Speed is an unprecedented,no-holds-barred program to speed discovery, productionand large-scale manufacturing of a vaccine against COVID 19. It is not just ambitious and unprecedented science, it is also courageous, government at its best.

Billions of dollars in health care costs and many thousands if not millions of lives stand to be saved if this project succeeds, with the government financially backing massive production and assuming all liability. This vaccine project is so ambitious that it is being compared to the Manhattan Project from WWII, where we won the race against the Germans to develop the atomicbomb.

I spoke withAzar about Operation Warp Speed on SiriusXm Doctor Radio this week. He was more excited than Ive ever seen him. He talked about changing the paradigm, assuming the riskand matching manufacturing with the emerging science so that by the time a vaccine candidate makes it through trials, production will have already ramped up to match it. The goal, as the president announcedon Sunday night, will be to produce a viable vaccine by the end of the year.

As opposed to the 1976 swine flu fiasco, in 2020 we have a real pandemic that has already killed more than60,000 Americans and is, unfortunately, not going to stop there.

We have to put the full weight of all of government, all of industry, behind this, Azar said to me. Vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics. Money is not the question here. The question is the ability and willingness to challenge the traditional development of timelines and paradigms. You know, thenormal way that vaccine or drug development works is you develop it, you do a little trial, then you do a second trial, then you do a third trial, then if it hits you decide OK, now Ill start doing commercial scale of manufacturing, and then thats just months and months and years ...

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"We, the U.S. government, can actually take on that risk. So we have assembled a portfolio of potential vaccines. We have assessed each of them based on the manufacturer, the platform, the manufacturing scalability, the precedent nature of the molecule and vector so that we know if this is something that likely is going to work. And we invest in that.

"What we are also going to do is invest in manufacturing at the same time. So that we can scale up. And that means we may end up with vaccine manufacturing capacity that we dont need. And so be it. Because we are going to put those bets against molecules very early on. So that if we get a hit we are going to be able to scale production immediately also.

Some of the vaccine candidates utilize new techniques of biogenetic engineering while others rely on an older more tried-and-true inactivated viral vector. In all cases the technology is promising and safety in small trials has already been shown for several of the candidates.

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As opposed to the 1976 swine flu fiasco, in 2020 we have a real pandemic that has already killed more than60,000 Americans and is, unfortunately, not going to stop there. As with the Manhattan Project, my bet is, once again, the U.S. government willdefy all the odds and win.

This is what government is intended for; to make the bet and assume the risk and, if they win, to save many of our lives.

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Dr. Marc Siegel: Coronavirus vaccine creation at warp speed This is science, government at their best - Fox News

5 things to know for May 4: Coronavirus, vaccines, economy, weapons ban, elections – CNN

May 5, 2020

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1. Coronavirus

2. Vaccines

3.Economy

4. Canada weapons ban

5. Election 2020

Labradors are still America's favorite dog, but corgis have wiggled into the top 10

Boris Johnson and his partner named their new son after doctors who saved Johnson's life during his battle with Covid-19

Taco Bell is offering a taco bar kit so you can celebrate Cinco de Mayo at home in style

"Because I can't really pinpoint or go back in the past, I just think it's very important to talk to people, to express how important it is to just keep your social distancing. Stay in the house!"

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5 things to know for May 4: Coronavirus, vaccines, economy, weapons ban, elections - CNN

Coronavirus Vaccine: UPenn Testing New, Unproven Genetic Technology That Could Be Faster Than Traditional Vaccine Development – CBS Philly

May 5, 2020

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) Philadelphia researchers are working on a COVID-19 vaccine thats currently being tested on 20 people at the University of Pennsylvania. Its using a new, unproven genetic technology that could be faster than traditional vaccine development.

This is one of about a dozen vaccines in the very early stages of testing. The reason there is so much interest and excitement about the one being tested here in Philadelphia, is its ability to potentially be fast-tracked.

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For the volunteers in this first phase of testing, there appears to be little risk.

Helping to respond to this pandemic, this is like a wonderful opportunity, said Anthony Campisi.

Campisi is one of 20 volunteers testing a COVID-19 vaccine at the University of Pennsylvania.

I think its incumbent upon everyone to do whatever they can in a moment like this, Campisi said.

Traditional vaccines made with a live virus takes years. However, this one from Inovio Pharmaceuticals in Plymouth Meeting uses a DNA replica of the coronavirus genome released by China.

Development could be much faster, according to Dr. Joseph Kim, the head of Inovio.

Our plan is to manufacture 100,000 doses by the end of the year, Kim said.

This is phase one of the clinical trial, where the vaccines safety is tested. Campisi, whos with Ceisler Media in Philadelphia, received his first injection on April 20.

Absolutely no symptoms whatsoever, Campisi said.

Blood tests will show if hes developing antibodies to the vaccine the first step to determine if it can train the immune system to recognize and attack COVID-19.

I think a vaccine is the solution everybody is looking for. I dont know if this vaccine is gonna be the solution, said Dr. Pablo Tebas, who is leading the Penn trial. I think its important that we develop different kinds of vaccines.

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Tebas says if this vaccine pans out, it should be available by the beginning of next year. Campisi is hoping.

It would be very gratifying to play even a really small role in, you know, coming up with a response to pass this pandemic, Campisi said.

Campisi, whos 33, is a Penn general practice patient. He saw information about the trial in a regular correspondence with his doctor there and quickly signed up.

The vaccine is also being tested by 20 people in Kansas City.

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Coronavirus Vaccine: UPenn Testing New, Unproven Genetic Technology That Could Be Faster Than Traditional Vaccine Development - CBS Philly

Coronavirus live updates: White House to wind down task force – NBCNews.com

May 5, 2020

Tom Costello and Tim Stelloh

45m ago / 9:56 PM UTC

Researchers at Pfizer and New York University are working on a never-before-triedcoronavirusvaccine that the pharmaceutical company believes could be available by September.

The vaccine, which carries genetic code known as messenger RNA, attempts to reprogram the deadly pathogen rather than manipulating the live virus.

It is probably the fastest way of having a vaccine available to stem this pandemic, based on the data that I have seen, said Kathrin Jansen, who leads vaccine research for Pfizer.

Read the full story here.

Allan Smith

1h ago / 9:20 PM UTC

President Donald Trumpthinksall the states that need Congress to provideemergency relief fundingare "run by Democrats in every case" and he charged it's because they have been fiscally mismanaged.

That's not the case. Numerous Republican-led states are facingcoronavirus-caused financial crises, just like the Democrats.

Less than 24 hours after conducting an interview withThe New York Postin which Trump made those remarks, the president took off to visit a mask-making plant in Arizona a Republican-led state thatby its own projections could face a shortfallranging from $600 million to $1.6 billion by the end of the next fiscal year.

Arizona is not alone. COVID-19 has led to dramatic decreases in revenue for state governments across the country regardless of which party has its hand on the wheel. While many states are still crunching their numbers ahead of the next fiscal year, which begins in the summer for most, a handful of GOP-led states already have made clear the budget woes that face them.

Read the full story here.

Dylan Byers

2h ago / 9:11 PM UTC

The Walt Disney Company says the coronavirus pandemic cost the company as much as $1.4 billion in income during the first three months of the year, a disruption it says will only get worse in the months ahead. The most severe blow to the company came in its theme parks unit, which suffered an estimated $1 billion revenue hit.

Disney's per-share profit was down 63 percent, to 60 cents.

The losses reflect how vulnerable almost all of Disney's businesses are to social distancing measures. Its theme parks have been shuttered, cinemas have been closed and its content production has been put on hold. Its television unit, which relies heavily on ESPN's ability to broadcast live sports, has also been interrupted.

The pandemic has hit us hard, Disney chairman and former CEO Bob Iger said on an earnings call Tuesday afternoon. But he said he had "absolute confidence in our ability to get through this challenging period and recover successfully."

One bright spot was Disney+, the company's new streaming service, which has signed up more than 54 million subscribers since its launch in December.Disney also announced that it will reopen Shanghai Disneyland on May 11.

Doha Madani

2h ago / 8:59 PM UTC

Two men were charged in Rhode Island with fraudulently seeking more than a half-million dollars instimulus loans created as part of federal coronavirus protections.

David A. Staveley, 53, and David Butziger, 51, are the first in the nation to be charged with stimulus fraud involving the Small Business Administration's Paycheck Protection Program,according to the U.S. Attorneys Office for the District of Rhode Island. The two men allegedly conspired to obtain loans from the SBA using false information.

The investigation into the men was part of a directive to prioritize crimes related to the coronavirus pandemic, U.S. Attorney Aaron L. Weisman said in a press release Tuesday.

It is unconscionable that anyone would attempt to steal from a program intended to help hard working Americans continue to be paid so they can feed their families and pay some of their bills, Weisman said.

Read the full article here.

Ali Gostanian

57m ago / 9:44 PM UTC

Hundreds of hospital employees in New York participated in a candlelight vigil and walk to honor more than2,200Northwell Healthpatients and 19 staff members who have passed away from COVID-19.

The walk, the brainchild of hospital employees, was held Monday atNorthwell Healths New Hyde Park, Long Island campus.

Video of the vigil obtained by NBC News Social Newsgathering team shows hospital employees in masks holding candles in the air as songwriter Andra Days Rise Up plays in the background.

The walk spanned the entirety of the New Hyde Park campus, which is home to Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Cohen Childrens Medical Center and Zucker Hillside Hospital. After employees completed the walk, Michael Golberg, executive director of LIJ Medical Center, thanked employees for their hard work and dedication fighting on the front lines of the pandemic.

We have been very lucky in many ways that at Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Cohens Childrens, Northwell Health that we have saved many many more people than have lost their lives to COVID-19, Goldberg stated. And that is a true testament to the care you provide.

The Associated Press

23m ago / 10:18 PM UTC

They wanted the campus experience, but their colleges sent them home to learn online during thecoronavirus pandemic. Now, students at more than 25 U.S. universities arefiling lawsuits against their schools demanding partial refunds on tuition and campus fees, saying theyre not getting the caliber of education they were promised.

The suits reflect students growing frustration with online classes that schools scrambled to create as the coronavirus forced campuses across the nation to close last month. The suits say students should pay lower rates for the portion of the term that was offered online, arguing that the quality of instruction is far below the classroom experience.

Colleges, though, reject the idea that refunds are in order. Students are learning from the same professors who teach on campus, officials have said, and theyre still earning credits toward their degrees. Schools insist that, after being forced to close by their states, theyre still offering students a quality education.

Grainger Rickenbaker, a freshman who filed a class-action lawsuit against Drexel University in Philadelphia, said the online classes hes been taking are poor substitutes for classroom learning. Theres little interaction with students or professors, he said, and some classes are being taught almost entirely through recorded videos, with no live lecture or discussion.

Read the full story here.

Lucy Bayly

3h ago / 8:06 PM UTC

Airbnb will lay off 25 percent of its workforce, or 1,900 employees, the home-sharing company confirmed on Tuesday.

We are collectively living through the most harrowing crisis of our lifetime,"CEO Brian Chesky told employees on a group call.

Chesky said revenue for 2020 is expected to be less than half of what it was in 2019, with no clear idea whentravel will return, nor what it will look like.

"Travel in this new world will look different, and we need to evolve Airbnb accordingly," Chesky said.

The travel industry as a whole has been pummeled by the viral outbreak, with airlines, hotels and resorts, and cruise lines ground to a halt.

Airbnb had been hoping to start the process this spring to go public, either bydirect listing or via IPO.

Maura Barrett and Matt Wargo

3h ago / 7:54 PM UTC

While a recent CDC report suggests Pennsylvania has the highest number of meat facilities affected by COVID-19, there are no state requirements for facilities to report cases or deaths publicly.

The Pennsylvania Department of Health reported 2,032 positive cases for workers within the food industry at 120 facilities statewide Tuesday.These include processing and manufacturing facilities, retail facilities, warehouse and distribution facilities, restaurants and farms, according to the state.

But the specific facilities with COVID-19 cases have not been publicly identified.As a result,workers and members of the community are ignorant to the risk of potential exposure. There also isnt regulation that a plant needs to shut down if positive cases are discovered.The CDC referred an inquiry from NBC News to the state health department, which refused to release a full list of 22 affected plants with cases or clusters of cases, adding, There are no requirements that this information be reported to the public, but we would expect facilities to inform employees. The state also declined to provide a list of counties in which the plants are located.

Wendell Young of UFCW Local 1776 has been working with several plants that reported cases to members. The plants have followed a range of measures including shutting down for sanitization and reopening with new additions like Plexiglas dividers, temperature checks, and additional seating or spacing in areas like lunchrooms.

We have employers not doing the right thing right now that are concealing the cases, not informing workers, not implementing the right protocols, and nobody's prosecuting them. No one's holding them responsible for how they're putting people at risk, and possibly killing people. And that's our federal government's fault. That's our presidents fault, Young said.

Geoff Bennett and Dareh Gregorian

4h ago / 7:09 PM UTC

A top Health and Human Services official who says he wasshoved out of his key coronavirus response jobfor pushing back on "efforts to fund potentially dangerous drugs promoted by those with political connections" filed a whistleblower complaint Tuesday charging "an abuse of authority or gross mismanagement" at the agency.

In his complaint, Dr. Rick Bright, who until last month was deputy assistant secretary of Health and Human Services for preparedness and response and director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, described a chaotic response the virus at HHS.

The chaos was fueled largely by "pressure from HHS leadership to ignore scientific merit and expert recommendations and instead to award lucrative contracts based on political connections and cronyism," the complaint says.

Read the full story here.

Jane C. Timm

4h ago / 7:01 PM UTC

Sen. Rand Paul, the only senator known to have contracted COVID-19, defended his decision not to wear a mask on Capitol Hill Tuesday, citing his recovery from the disease.

I have immunity. Ive already had the virus, so I cant get it again and I cant give it to anybody, Paul, R-Ky., told reporters, referring to his March diagnosis. I cant get it again, nor can I transmit. So of all the people youll meet here, Im about the only safe person in Washington.

Paul's claims are unproven. Medical experts do not yet know what kind of immunity recovered patients have to COVID-19.

Broadly speaking, some infections result in lifelong immunity (think chicken pox) while other infections will produce short-term immunity in recovered patients. And while many experts do believe some kind of immunity will come with recovery, there are reports of recovered COVID patients who have tested positive again after testing negative.

Doha Madani

4h ago / 6:42 PM UTC

More than 700 employees at a Tyson Foods meat factory in Perry, Iowa, have tested positive for coronavirus as the nation braces for a possiblemeat shortagedue to the pandemic.

An Iowa Department of Public Health report released Tuesday showed that 58 percent of the factorys workforce had tested positive for the virus,according to NBC affiliate WHO. The news comes just days afternearly 900 workers were confirmed to have the virusat a Tyson Foods plant in Indiana.

Tyson Foods said in a statement that the pandemic hasforced the company to slow productionand close plants in Dakota City, Nebraska, and Pasco, Washington, and the Perry plant as well.

"We have and expect to continue to face slowdowns and temporary idling of production facilities from team member shortages or choices we make to ensure operational safety," the statement said.

Read the full story here.

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Coronavirus live updates: White House to wind down task force - NBCNews.com

Fears rise that Trump will incite a global vaccine brawl – POLITICO

May 3, 2020

You would think that, based on the past, that the U.S. would be a galvanizing, lead element in pushing for transparency and early planning on the vaccine front, said Stephen Morrison, who runs a global health program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. I dont think thats true in this administration.

A European ambassador said he and his colleagues remain hopeful that the United States will take the lead on ensuring fair global vaccine access. But we are a bit skeptical at the moment, he said, because we dont see the forthcoming attitude that weve seen in the past.

One disputed report in particular is driving much of the angst: that the Trump administration tried to acquire exclusive rights to the coronavirus vaccine business of CureVac, a German-based company. Trump aides and CureVac officials adamantly denied the mid-March report, but German officials confirmed and condemned it.

The U.S. is planning an intense push to create a vaccine and have enough doses available to cover most Americans by the end of this year, the president confirmed this week. The project is called Operation Warp Speed, according to Bloomberg News and other media reports, which described it as an effort to compress the usual process for developing a vaccine into a shorter timeline.

Asked about the project Thursday, Trump said he was in charge of it and that he was not overpromising. Whatever the maximum is, whatever you can humanly do, were going to have, the president said.

Health officials and analysts caution that its too early to go into full-fledged panic about a looming global vaccine fistfight.

An acceptable vaccine could be at least a year to 18 months away; companies across the world, especially in the United States, Europe and China, are in the hunt to find a vaccine, and some trials are already underway. Some diplomats carefully pointed out that by the time vaccines are ready for sale and distribution, Trump may no longer be president, and his America First ideas may be shunted aside.

You have the election in six months time -- you never know, an Asian diplomat told POLITICO.

But further blurring the picture is the fact that the global health infrastructure isnt entirely under the thumb of any one government. Its a complex amalgam of government bodies, private companies, NGOs, foundations and multilateral partnerships that at times do overlapping work.

Theres no binding treaty or other mechanism that governs how a vaccine will be produced and distributed worldwide. And while the World Health Organization has for decades offered a forum for coordination, discussion and standard-setting, its authority is still limited, including when it comes to private companies with profit motives.

Trump has also dealt a blow to the WHO by recently pausing Americas substantial funding for it. He alleges that the U.N. body effectively helped China cover up the extent of the crisis when the virus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan last year. The WHOs supporters say Trump is trying to deflect attention from his own downplaying of the crisis early on.

But the growing U.S. hostility to the WHO is hardly the only obstacle to international coordination on a vaccine rollout: China likewise did not express support last month for a new global partnership to coordinate research and development for vaccines, tests and coronavirus cures. The absence of the two pharma powerhouses from the April 24 gathering, led in part by the WHO, disappointed European leaders, who are pushing for a cooperative approach. French President Emmanuel Macron said he hoped they could reconcile this initiative with China and the U.S.

Officials involved in the April 24 gathering as well as Mondays planned EU-led conference stress that there is an American presence in such events even if the U.S. government itself doesnt formally take part. A number of foundations, companies and others playing a role are U.S.-based.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. | Thierry Monasse/Getty Images

There is a strong American footprint in the whole construction, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said about Mondays gathering in an interview with France 24. We have a lot of American scientists and philanthropists that are working with us in this global framework weve created. The government of the United States is informed. And I hope they consider to participate.

Asked about the Trump administrations participation and plans for future international coordination on vaccines, a spokesperson for the U.S. State Department offered a vague comment that attacked the WHO.

Americas world-leading scientists are working hard on a Covid-19 vaccine, the spokesperson said. We welcome serious efforts to assist in that endeavor and look forward to learning more about the World Health Organizations proposal. We remain deeply concerned about the WHOs effectiveness, given that its gross failures helped fuel the current pandemic.

Spokespersons for the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services did not offer comment.

The United States has historically been a leader in global vaccine initiatives, often footing much of the bill. Its interest dates back decades and covers successful efforts to eradicate or dramatically constrain diseases such as smallpox, polio and measles. The focus has often been on vaccinating children so that they never fall ill and over time contribute to whats known as herd immunity in their broader communities.

But infectious disease crises that have arisen in more recent years have exposed weaknesses in a system that relies so much on goodwill and benevolence, rather than any particular set of international rules.

For example, the rise in 2009 of an H1N1 novel influenza led wealthier nations to put in large advanced orders for a vaccine and buy most of what was eventually manufactured, angering developing countries who lacked similar funds. The WHO and others managed to secure pledges of donations for the poorer countries, but even those were limited, according to research posted by the National Center for Biotechnology Information.

The Covid-19 crisis is in many ways more severe, with infections in more than 180 countries. Aside from the vaccine issue, it has exposed the frailty of global cooperation in other ways. Efforts to work together at the G-7, G-20 and United Nations level have had limited impact amid finger-pointing between Washington and Beijing.

Its not just the U.S. that has put the needs of its own citizens first. Dozens of countries, including the U.S. and some in Europe, have imposed travel restrictions as well as limits on the exports of masks and other critical medical equipment.

Global health leaders are trying to avoid a repeat of such nationalist tactics when it comes to vaccines and other types of medicines that could combat Covid-19. They warn in particular that leaving the virus to fester in one country could, simply due to migration patterns, mean it will re-emerge elsewhere. And they say that a globally coordinated approach to distributing a vaccine -- prioritizing at-risk populations, for instance -- would yield better results.

Melinda Gates told POLITICO in an interview that medical workers should be at the head of the line for vaccinations because of their regular exposure to the virus. She also praised European leaders for being out in front in coordinating on vaccines and therapeutics.

Its the European leaders, quite honestly, who understand that we need global cooperation, she said.

National security officials and public health experts also are increasingly concerned about the prospect of China developing a vaccine first, and how Americas unwillingness to take charge of global vaccine coordination might help both Chinas economy and its propaganda efforts.

China does have a head start in the global effort to come up with a vaccine, said one national security official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. government concerns. But they also have a pattern of theft and trying to steal everyone elses research. So you would think theyd be very benevolent [with the vaccine] so as not to be seen as a pariah.

A spike in hacking attempts on U.S. hospitals and labs, which intelligence and national security officials have attributed primarily to China, is a sign of how high the stakes are for the Chinese government especially as it attempts to repair its reputation amid accusations that it covered up the origins and severity of the novel coronavirus late last year.

They know that whoever finds a workable vaccine right now basically rules the world, said another national security official.

The propaganda coup alone is a strong incentive, experts said. But the economic and diplomatic implications of being the first to develop a vaccine, especially if the U.S. continues to retreat, would be enormous for the Chinese Communist Party.

Being able to vaccinate its own population first, for example, would serve as a strong economic rudder for China and allow it to fully open its economy to global companies, said Dr. Ross McKinney, Jr., the chief scientific officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges.

It would also yield diplomatic leverage, said Matt Kroenig, a former Pentagon and CIA official who now serves as deputy director at the Atlantic Councils Scowcroft Center.

Often, Chinese offers of aid come with strings attached, said Kroenig, whose new book examines American power competition with China. So they could use it as a way to try to increase their influence and further push out the U.S.

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But the question remains of whether the world would even trust a vaccine produced by China, Kroenig noted, given the recent episodes of China delivering faulty medical equipment to Europe.

One of the great advantages the U.S. has in this competition is that we have these 30 formal treaty allies with leading scientific research communities, Kroenig said. So we could and should be doing a much better job of galvanizing allies and bringing them together on the vaccine issue.

Having perceived a void in U.S. leadership in this area, the Atlantic Council convened an allied town hall on Tuesday to discuss how the U.S. and its allies could better cooperate on vaccine development but the fact that a think tank, rather than the Trump administration, organized the event only drove the point home for some attendees that the U.S. is not positioning itself as a leader in this space.

Meanwhile, as their governments have been sparring, American and Chinese scientists have actually been cooperating on Covid-19 research. Researchers in the U.S. and China have co-authored about 407 papers on coronavirus this year, according to data compiled by Axios, and Pennsylvania-based Inovio Pharmaceuticals announced in January that it was collaborating with Beijing Advaccine Biotechnology Co. on a Covid-19 vaccine.

Such collaboration can be positive as long as the information flows both ways, said McKinney, of the AAMC. But weve been finding that the information does not always flow both ways. So there is some asymmetry going on with regard to the research efforts that I think is the worry.

Other joint U.S.-China research efforts have spawned mistrust: The Trump administration recently cut off grant funding to an American NGO that had been working with Chinese scientists at a lab in Wuhan, China, that some in the Trump administration suspect was responsible for unleashing the virus on the world.

Some officials and diplomats argue that instead of waiting for Washington and Beijing to cooperate on a vaccine, its better to work with those who are willing to cooperate now, while leaving the door open for the U.S. and China to join later.

We can be in the camp of those who say without the U.S. and without China its useless, and we give up and we wait for the vaccine to maybe come one day, or we take action and find our third way, a French official said.

Jillian Deutsch, Rym Momtaz and Sarah Wheaton contributed to this report.

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Fears rise that Trump will incite a global vaccine brawl - POLITICO

Find a Vaccine. Next: Produce 300 Million Vials of It. – The New York Times

May 3, 2020

In the midst of national shortages of testing swabs and protective gear, some medical suppliers and health policy experts are looking ahead to another extraordinary demand on manufacturing: Delivering a vaccine that could potentially end the pandemic.

Making a vaccine is not easy. More than two dozen companies have announced programs to develop a vaccine against the coronavirus, but it may still take a year or more before one passes federal safety and efficacy tests in humans and becomes available to the public.

Here in the United States, more than 300 million people may need to be inoculated. That means at least as many vials and syringes or double that amount, if two shots are required. To meet that demand, companies will have to ramp up manufacturing; products that doctors give little thought to now could easily become obstacles to vaccine delivery in the future.

Were thinking about the vaccine, but what if the vials it is stored in, or rubber stoppers in the vial or the plungers in the syringes become the constraint? said Prashant Yadav, who studies health care supply chains at the Center for Global Development in Washington, D.C.

Timing the orders of medical products like syringes and all the raw materials required to make them will be essential. Medical device manufacturers could increase inventory or find alternative supply chains for products that are running low, but everything will need to be systematically planned. Adding the capacity to make millions more syringes could take a manufacturer as long as 18 months to complete such a large order, for example.

The Covid-19 pandemic is creating industrywide challenges, including expected delays in inventory replenishment for certain products, said Lucy Bradlow, a spokeswoman for Cardinal Health, a manufacturer that makes vials and syringes as well as other medical supplies.

Several manufacturers worry that the Trump administration may be waiting too long before ordering for an ample supply of medical equipment needed to deliver a vaccine. One manufacturer said they had recently received an order for syringes, but were concerned that the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, a branch of the Health and Human Services Department built to help with pandemic preparedness, was still soliciting too few supplies for nationwide vaccine delivery.

Elleen Kane, a spokeswoman for the H.H.S., said the department has been working daily with our manufacturers to secure those supplies and assist them with any anticipated obstacles in their supply chains.

In March, the H.H.S. set up a public-private partnership to find drug packaging solutions that were based in the United States. It could be adapted for future therapeutic or vaccine delivery for the Strategic National Stockpile, a federal cache of supplies and medicines held in case of emergencies.

The White House is also developing a plan, called Operation Warp Speed, to accelerate vaccine production and try to get manufacturing capacity set up in advance of a vaccine approval. But some experts say that it is unclear whether the plan will apply to vaccine delivery devices like syringes and details are still scarce about which federal agency would be responsible.

Earlier in April, New Hampshires senators, Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan, sent a letter addressed to Vice President Mike Pence, urging him to ensure that the federal government obtains the materials to meet the demand for a vaccine when it becomes available.

Of course, a lot will depend on the type of vaccine and when it is approved. A variety of RNA- and DNA-based vaccines are currently undergoing clinical trials, as well as more traditional types, which are made by placing instructions for coronavirus spike proteins inside a different dead or harmless virus.

RNA or DNA vaccines might have different storage and refrigeration requirements because the technology has never been used for an approved vaccine before. The final vaccine might be packaged in ready-to-use glass syringes, which are commonly used in flu campaigns in Europe, or in a single-dose or multi-dose vials that would be administered with disposable plastic syringes, which are standard for many vaccines in the United States.

The amount of vaccine manufactured by a company could also affect the number of delivery systems needed, said Michael Gusmano, a health policy expert at the Hastings Center and Rutgers School of Public Health. It is unlikely that a pharmaceutical company will be able to match demand immediately nationally or internationally.

The good news is we have time, Dr. Gusmano said. Medical device manufacturers could slowly scale up vials and syringes as a vaccine becomes more widely available.

Early estimates of the coronaviruss infectiousness suggest that at least 70 percent of the population will need to be immunized to reach what experts call herd immunity, when enough people are immune to a disease that they can also indirectly protect others who are not immune.

Thats a remarkably high number, and I dont think were anywhere close to that just with people who have been exposed to the virus and developed antibodies, Dr. Gusmano said. So youre talking about a fairly massive vaccination campaign.

Preliminary surveys in California and New York suggest that anywhere between 4 to 21 percent of people have developed antibodies to the coronavirus. But the accuracy of many antibody tests have been called into question. And it is still unclear whether having some of these antibodies provides effective and long-lasting immunity against the coronavirus. Plus, most vaccination campaigns aim to immunize a high proportion of the population around 90 percent to successfully prevent transmission of disease.

To produce the number of vials and syringes needed for a coronavirus vaccine, medical suppliers will need to increase manufacturing shifts and overtime for their employees, as well as collaborate with U.S. and foreign trade authorities to expedite shipments and shorten lead times.

A handful of manufacturers are based in the U.S., but many still have to import the glass tubing for vials, polypropylene for syringes and rubber or silicone for small parts like the stoppers and plungers in these devices. Becton Dickinson & Company, one of the worlds largest manufacturers of needles and syringes, said it made nearly all components of its needles and syringes in-house in the United States. Other companies may source from their factories and partners located largely in China and India, where lockdowns and export bans have already decreased production and exports.

Although syringe manufacturing is mostly automated, with parts like the barrel and plunger made from a mold and put together on an assembly line, Dr. Yadav said manufacturers in India had told him fewer employees were able to work than needed for full capacity.

At least 69 countries have also banned or restricted the export of medical devices, medicines and protective equipment, according to the Global Trade Alert project at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland, because of their own needs during the pandemic. Manufacturers of medical syringes may have to find new supply channels, including partnerships with glass and plastic manufacturers that operate outside of the health care industry.

Some lawmakers are concerned that without more federal coordination, individual companies will not have the capacity to match vaccine delivery to the overwhelming demand.

The Trump administration needs to prepare our domestic supply chain now for the delivery of an eventual vaccine that will need to be delivered to the entire country, Senator Shaheen said. Its vital that federal agencies exercise better foresight so that we dont see supply shortages like we continue to experience for testing and protective equipment.

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Find a Vaccine. Next: Produce 300 Million Vials of It. - The New York Times

Profits and Pride at Stake, the Race for a Vaccine Intensifies – The New York Times

May 3, 2020

WASHINGTON Four months after a mysterious new virus began its deadly march around the globe, the search for a vaccine has taken on an intensity never before seen in medical research, with huge implications for public health, the world economy and politics.

Seven of the roughly 90 projects being pursued by governments, pharmaceutical makers, biotech innovators and academic laboratories have reached the stage of clinical trials. With political leaders not least President Trump increasingly pressing for progress, and with big potential profits at stake for the industry, drug makers and researchers have signaled that they are moving ahead at unheard-of speeds.

But the whole enterprise remains dogged by uncertainty about whether any coronavirus vaccine will prove effective, how fast it could be made available to millions or billions of people and whether the rush compressing a process that can take 10 years into 10 months will sacrifice safety.

Some experts say the more immediately promising field might be the development of treatments to speed recovery from Covid-19, an approach that has generated some optimism in the last week through initially encouraging research results on remdesivir, an antiviral drug previously tried in fighting Ebola.

In an era of intense nationalism, the geopolitics of the vaccine race are growing as complex as the medicine. The months of mutual vilification between the United States and China over the origins of the virus have poisoned most efforts at cooperation between them. The U.S. government is already warning that American innovations must be protected from theft chiefly from Beijing.

Biomedical research has long been a focus of theft, especially by the Chinese government, and vaccines and treatments for the coronavirus are todays holy grail, John C. Demers, the assistant attorney general for national security, said on Friday. Putting aside the commercial value, there would be great geopolitical significance to being the first to develop a treatment or vaccine. We will use all the tools we have to safeguard American research.

The intensity of the global research effort is such that governments and companies are building production lines before they have anything to produce.

We are going to start ramping up production with the companies involved, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the federal governments top expert on infectious diseases, said on NBC this week. You dont wait until you get an answer before you start manufacturing.

Two of the leading entrants in the United States, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna, have announced partnerships with manufacturing firms, with Johnson & Johnson promising a billion doses of an as-yet-undeveloped vaccine by the end of next year.

Not to be left behind, the Britain-based pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca said this week that it was working with a vaccine development project at the University of Oxford to manufacture tens of millions of doses by the end of this year.

With the demand for a vaccine so intense, there are escalating calls for human-challenge trials to speed the process: tests in which volunteers are injected with a potential vaccine and then deliberately exposed to the coronavirus.

Because the approach involves exposing participants to a potentially deadly disease, challenge trials are ethically fraught. But they could be faster than simply inoculating human subjects and waiting for them to be exposed along with everyone else, especially as the pandemic is brought under control in big countries.

Even when promising solutions are found, there are big challenges to scaling up production and distribution. Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, whose foundation is spending $250 million to help spur vaccine development, has warned about a critical shortage of a mundane but vital component: medical glass.

Without sufficient supplies of the glass, there will be too few vials to transport the billions of doses that will ultimately be needed.

The scale of the problem and the demand for a quick solution are bound to create tensions between the profit motives of the pharmaceutical industry, which typically fights hard to wring the most out of their investments in new drugs, and the publics need for quick action to get any effective vaccines to as many people as possible.

So far, much of the research and development has been supported by governments and foundations. And much remains to be worked out when it comes to patents and what national governments will claim in return for their support and pledges of quick regulatory approval.

Given the stakes, it is no surprise that while scientists and doctors talk about finding a global vaccine, national leaders emphasize immunizing their own populations first. Mr. Trump said he was personally in charge of Operation Warp Speed to get 300 million doses into American arms by January.

Already, the administration has identified 14 vaccine projects it intends to focus on, a senior administration official said, with the idea of further narrowing the group to a handful that could go on, with government financial help and accelerated regulatory review, to meet Mr. Trumps goal. The winnowing of the projects to 14 was reported Friday by NBC News.

But other countries are also signaling their intention to nationalize their approaches. The most promising clinical trial in China is financed by the government. And in India, the chief executive of the Serum Institute of India the worlds largest producer of vaccine doses said that most of its vaccine would have to go to our countrymen before it goes abroad.

George Q. Daley, the dean of Harvard Medical School, said thinking in country-by-country rather than global terms would be foolhardy since it would involve squandering the early doses of vaccine on a large number of individuals at low risk, rather than covering as many high-risk individuals globally health care workers and older adults to stop the spread around the world.

Given the proliferation of vaccine projects, the best outcome may be none of them emerging as a clear winner.

Lets say we get one vaccine quickly but we can only get two million doses of it at the end of next year, said Anita Zaidi, who directs the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundations vaccine development program. And another vaccine, just as effective, comes three months later but we can make a billion doses. Who won that race?

The answer, she said, is we will need many different vaccines to cross the finish line.

At 1 a.m. on March 21, 1963, a 5-year-old girl named Jeryl Lynn Hilleman woke up her father. She had come down with the mumps, which had made her miserable with a swollen jaw.

It just so happened that her father, Maurice, was a vaccine designer. So he told Jeryl Lynn to go back to bed, drove to his lab at Merck to pick up some equipment, and returned to swab her throat. Dr. Hilleman refrigerated her sample back at his lab and soon got to work weakening her viruses until they could serve as a mumps vaccine. In 1967, it was approved by the F.D.A.

To vaccine makers, this story is the stuff of legend. Dr. Hilleman still holds the record for the quickest delivery of a vaccine from the lab to the clinic. Vaccines typically take ten to fifteen years of research and testing. And only six percent of the projects that scientists launch reach the finish line.

For a world in the grips of Covid-19, on the other hand, this story is the stuff of nightmares. No one wants to wait four years for a vaccine, while millions die and economies remain paralyzed.

Some of the leading contenders for a coronavirus vaccine are now promising to have the first batches ready in record time, by the start of next year. They have accelerated their schedules by collapsing the standard vaccine timeline.

They are combining trials that used to be carried out one after the other. They are pushing their formulations into production, despite the risk that the trials will fail, leaving them with millions of useless doses.

But some experts want to do even more to speed up the conveyor belt. Writing last month in the journal Vaccines, the vaccine developer Dr. Stanley A. Plotkin and Dr. Arthur L. Caplan, a bioethicist at NYU Langone Medical Center, proposed infecting vaccinated volunteers with the coronavirus the method known as challenge trials. The procedure might cut months or years off the development but would put test subjects at risk.

Challenge trials were used in the early days of vaccine research but now are carried out under strict conditions and only for illnesses, like flu and malaria, that have established treatments.

In an article in March in The Journal of Infectious Diseases, a team of researchers wrote, Such an approach is not without risks, but every week that vaccine rollout is delayed will be accompanied by many thousands of deaths globally.

Dr. Caplan said that limiting the trials to healthy young adults could reduce the risk, since they were less likely to suffer serious complications from Covid-19. I think we can let people make the choice and I have no doubt many would, he said.

In Congress, Representative Bill Foster, Democrat of Illinois and a physicist, and Representative Donna E. Shalala, Democrat of Florida and the former secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, organized a bipartisan group of 35 lawmakers to sign a letter asking regulators to approve such trials.

The organizers of a website set up to promote the idea, 1daysooner.org, say they have signed up more than 9,100 potential volunteers from 52 countries.

Some scientists caution that truly informed consent, even by willing volunteers, may not be possible. Even medical experts do not yet know all the effects of the virus. Those who have appeared to recover might still face future problems.

Even without challenge trials, accelerated testing may run the risk of missing potential side effects. A vaccine for dengue fever, and one for SARS that never reached the market, were abandoned after making some people more susceptible to severe forms of the diseases, not less.

It will be extremely important to determine that does not happen, said Michel De Wilde, a former senior vice president of research and development at Sanofi Pasteur, a vaccine maker in France.

When it comes to the risks from flawed vaccines, Chinas history is instructive.

The Wuhan Institute of Biological Products was involved in a 2018 scandal in which ineffective vaccines for diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough and other conditions were injected into hundreds of thousands of babies.

The government confiscated the Wuhan institutes illegal income, fined the company, and punished nine executives. But the company was allowed to continue to operate. It is now running a coronavirus vaccine project, and along with two other Chinese groups has been allowed to combine its safety and efficacy trials.

Several Chinese scientists questioned the decision, arguing that the vaccine should be shown to be safe before testing how well it works.

Nationalism Versus Globalism

In the early days of the crisis, Harvard was approached by the Chinese billionaire Hui Ka Yan. He arranged to give roughly $115 million to be split between Harvard Medical School and its affiliated hospitals and the Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory Diseases for a collaborative effort that would include developing coronavirus vaccines.

We are not racing against each other, we are racing the virus, said Dr. Dan Barouch, the director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and a professor at Harvard Medical School who is also working with Johnson & Johnson. What we need is a global vaccine because an outbreak in one part of the world puts the rest of the world at risk.

That all-for-one sentiment has become a mantra among many researchers, but it is hardly universally shared.

In India, the Serum Institute the heavyweight champion of vaccine manufacturing, producing 1.5 billion doses a year has signed agreements in recent weeks with the developers of four promising potential vaccines. But in an interview with Reuters, Adar Poonawalla, the companys billionaire chief executive, made it clear that at least initially any vaccine the company produces would have to go to Indias 1.3 billion people.

The tension between those who believe a vaccine should go where it is needed most and those dealing with pressures to supply their own country first is one of the defining features of the global response.

The Trump administration, which in March put out feelers to a German biotech company to acquire its vaccine research or move it to American shores, has awarded grants of nearly half a billion dollars each to two U.S.-based companies, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna.

Johnson & Johnson, though based in New Jersey, conducts its research in the Netherlands.

Paul Stoffels, the companys vice chairman and chief scientific officer, said in an interview that the Department of Health and Human Services understood we cant pick up our research and move it to the United States. But it made sure that the company joined a partnership with Emergent BioSolutions a Maryland biological production firm to produce the first big batches of any approved vaccine for the United States.

The political reality is that it would be very, very hard for any government to allow a vaccine made in their own country to be exported while there was a major problem at home, said Sandy Douglas, a researcher at the University of Oxford. The only solution is to make a hell of a lot of vaccine in a lot of different places.

The Oxford vaccine team has already begun scaling up plans for manufacturing by half a dozen companies across the world, including China and India, plus two British manufacturers and the British-based multinational AstraZeneca.

In China, the governments instinct is to showcase the countrys growth into a technological power capable of beating the United States. There are nine Chinese Covid-19 vaccines in development, involving 1,000 scientists and the Chinese military.

Chinas Center for Disease Control and Prevention predicted that one of the vaccines could be in emergency use by September, meaning that in the midst of the presidential election in the United States, Mr. Trump might see television footage of Chinese citizens lining up for injections.

Its a scenario we have thought about, one member of Mr. Trumps coronavirus task force said. No one wants to be around that day.

Traditional Versus New Methods

The more than 90 different vaccines under development work in radically different ways. Some are based on designs used for generations. Others use genetic-based strategies that are so new they have yet to lead to an approved vaccine.

I think in this case its very wise to have different platforms being tried out, Dr. De Wilde said.

The traditional approach is to make vaccines from viruses.

When our bodies encounter a new virus, they start learning how to make effective antibodies against it. But they are in a race against the virus as it multiplies. Sometimes they produce effective antibodies quickly enough to wipe out an infection. But sometimes the virus wins.

Vaccines give the immune system a head start. They teach it to make antibodies in advance of an infection.

The first vaccines, against diseases like rabies, were made from viruses. Scientists weakened the viruses so that they could no longer make people sick.

A number of groups are weakening the coronavirus to produce a vaccine against Covid-19. In April, the Chinese company Sinovac announced that their inactivated vaccine protected monkeys.

Another approach is based on the fact that our immune system makes antibodies that lock precisely onto viruses. As scientists came to understand this, it occurred to them that they didnt have to inject a whole virus into someone to trigger immunity. All they needed was to deliver the fragment of a viral protein that was the precise target.

Today these so-called subunit viral vaccines are used against hepatitis B and shingles. Many Covid-19 subunit vaccines are now in testing.

In the 1990s, researchers began working on vaccines that enlisted our own cells to help train the immune system. The foundation of these vaccines is typically a virus called an adenovirus. The adenovirus can infect our cells, but is altered so that it doesnt make us sick.

Scientists can add a gene to the adenovirus from the virus they want to fight, creating whats known as a viral vector. Some viral vectors then invade our cells, stimulating the immune system to make antibodies.

Researchers at the University of Oxford and the Chinese company CanSino Biologics have created a viral vector vaccine for Covid-19, and theyve started safety trials on volunteers. Others including Johnson & Johnson are going to launch trials of their own in the coming months.

Some groups, including the American company Inovio Pharmaceuticals, are taking a totally different approach. Instead of injecting viruses or protein fragments, theyre injecting pure DNA, which is read by the cells machinery, making a copy as an RNA molecule. The RNA is then read by the cells protein-building factories, making a viral protein. The protein in turn comes out of the cell, where immune cells bump into it and make an antibody to it.

Other teams are creating RNA molecules rather than DNA. Moderna and a group at Imperial College London have launched safety trials for RNA vaccines. While experimental, these genetic vaccines can be quickly designed and tested.

It is one thing to design a vaccine in record time. It is an entirely different challenge to manufacture and distribute one on a scale never before attempted billions of doses, specially packaged and transported at below-zero temperatures, to nearly every corner of the world.

If you want to give a vaccine to a billion people, it better be very safe and very effective, said Dr. Stoffels of Johnson & Johnson. But you also need to know how to make it in amounts weve never really seen before.

So the race is on to get ahead of the enormous logistical issues, from basic manufacturing capacity to the shortages of medical glass and stoppers that Mr. Gates and others have warned of.

Researchers at Johnson & Johnson are trying to make a five-dose vial to save precious glass, which might work if a smaller dose is enough for inoculation.

Each potential vaccine will require its own customized production process in special clean facilities for drug making. Building from scratch might cost tens of millions of dollars per plant. Equipping one existing facility could easily cost from $5 million to $20 million. Ordering and installing the necessary equipment can take months.

Governments as well as organizations like the Gates Foundation and the nonprofit Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations are putting up money for production facilities well before any particular vaccine is proven effective.

Whats more, some vaccines including those being tested by the American companies Moderna and Inovio rely on technology that has never before yielded a drug that was licensed for use or mass-produced.

But even traditional processes face challenges.

Because of staff illnesses and social distancing, the pandemic this spring slashed productivity by 20 percent at the MilliporeSigma facility in Danvers, Mass., that supplies many drug makers with the equipment used for brewing vaccines.

Then, about three weeks ago, the first clinical trials for new proposed vaccines started. Urgent calls poured from customers around the world. Even before the first phase of the first trials, manufacturers were scrambling.

Demand went through the roof, and everybody wanted it yesterday, said Udit Batra, MilliporeSigmas chief executive, who has expanded production and asked other customers to accept delays to avoid becoming a bottleneck.

Treatments Versus Vaccines

Even as the world waits for a vaccine, a potential treatment for coronavirus is already here and more could be on the way.

Remdesivir showed modest success in a federally funded clinical trial, slowing the progression of the disease, but without significantly reducing fatality rates.

The F.D.A.s decision to allow its use comes as hundreds of other drugs mainly existing medicines that are being used for other conditions are being tested around the world to see if they hold promise. The F.D.A. said there are currently 72 therapies in trial.

Studies of drugs tend to move more quickly than vaccine trials. Vaccines are given to millions of people who are not yet ill, so they must be extremely safe. But in sicker people, that calculus changes, and side effects might be an acceptable risk.

As a result, clinical trials can be conducted with fewer people. And because drugs are tested in people who are already sick, results can be seen more quickly than in vaccine trials, where researchers must wait to see who gets infected.

Public health experts have cautioned there will likely be no magic pill. Rather, they are hoping for incremental advances that make Covid-19 less deadly.

Almost nothing is 100 percent, especially when you are dealing with a virus that really creates a lot of havoc in the body, said Dr. Luciana Borio, a former director of medical and biodefense preparedness for the National Security Council under President Trump.

Antiviral drugs like remdesivir battle the virus itself, slowing its replication in the body.

The malaria drug hydroxychloroquine which has been enthusiastically promoted by Mr. Trump and also received emergency authorization to be used in coronavirus patients showed early promise in the laboratory. However, small, limited studies in humans have so far been disappointing.

Many in the medical community are closely watching the development of antibody drugs that could act to neutralize the virus, either once someone is already sick or as a way of blocking the infection in the first place.

Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a former F.D.A. commissioner, and others said that by the fall, the treatment picture for Covid-19 could look more hopeful.

If proven effective in further trials, remdesivir may become more widely used. One or two antibody treatments may also become available, providing limited protection to health care workers.

Even without a vaccine, Dr. Borio said, a handful of early treatments could make a difference. If you can protect people that are vulnerable and you can treat people that come down with the disease effectively, she said, then I think it will change the trajectory of this pandemic.

David E. Sanger reported from Washington, David D. Kirkpatrick from London, Carl Zimmer and Katie Thomas from New York and Sui-Lee Wee from Singapore. Denise Grady and Maggie Haberman contributed reporting.

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Profits and Pride at Stake, the Race for a Vaccine Intensifies - The New York Times

The Coronavirus Vaccine May Have a Shortcut: Infecting Volunteers – The New York Times

May 2, 2020

This article is part of the Debatable newsletter. You can sign up here to receive it Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Scientists at Oxford Universitys Jenner Institute raised hopes this week when they announced plans to expand testing for a potential coronavirus vaccine that if proven effective could be ready for emergency use as soon as September. But as my colleague Stuart Thompson explains, thats an enormous if: Most vaccines take a decade or longer to make, and none has ever been developed in less than four years.

Cutting that record down to 12 or even 18 months would already require moving at pandemic speed. But last week, 35 members of Congress proposed an extraordinary practice that some scientists think could compress the timeline even further: deliberately infecting volunteers. Heres what people are saying about the idea, known as human challenge.

As it happens, the Jenner Institute is named for Edward Jenner, who invented the worlds first vaccine by doing just this. In 1796, more than a century before anyone even knew what a virus was, Mr. Jenner suspected that cowpox, a mild disease that milkmaids sometimes contracted, might confer immunity against the far more deadly smallpox. To test his theory, he inoculated an 8-year-old boy with the first virus (courtesy of a Gloucester cow named Blossom) and then deliberately infected or challenged him with the second.

Mr. Jenners theory proved correct vaccine derives from vacca, the Latin word for cow but his method has always been ethically fraught. Today, human-challenge studies are subject to strict oversight and authorized only for diseases that have treatments, like malaria or the flu. Any potential vaccine now also has to undergo three phases of clinical trials. Efficacy is tested in the third phase, where instead of being deliberately infected, participants simply go about their daily lives and researchers see whether those who received the vaccine prove less likely to contract the disease than those who received a placebo.

But the pandemic has raised two concerns with the process:

Right now, most people are trying not to get sick: The Jenner Institutes director has said that if the infection rate continues to slow in Britain, researchers may not be able to determine whether the vaccine works.

Trials take time: The first phase typically takes months, and the second two take years.

As a result, some experts have called for replacing conventional Phase III testing with human-challenge trials. In The Journal of Infectious Diseases last month, the bioethicist Nir Eyal and the epidemiologists Marc Lipsitch and Peter Smith argued that the idea, while risky, could shave months off the process. Every week that vaccine rollout is delayed will be accompanied by many thousands of deaths globally, they wrote. If the use of human challenge helped to make the vaccine available before the epidemic has completely passed, the savings in human lives could be in the thousands or conceivably millions.

In the authors proposed design, the study would rely entirely on young, healthy volunteers who fully understand the risks of participating. (To the authors, young might mean 20 to 45; to others, 18 to 30 or even 18 to 25.) Conventional Phase III trials typically require thousands of volunteers, but a human-challenge trial might need only 100. All participants would remain isolated in comfortable state-of-the-art facilities, with access to excellent health care.

Actually, a lot of people, according to Josh Morrison and Sophie Rose, the co-founders of an organization called 1DaySooner, which has gathered signatures from over 8,000 potential volunteers. In The Washington Post, Mr. Morrison and Ms. Rose argue that the idea is not as radical as it sounds: According to one study, the coronaviruss fatality rate for 20- to 29-year-olds in China was 3 in 10,000 the same as that of kidney donation surgery and roughly twice that of childbirth in the United States.

We and many others are willing to take on what we see as an acceptable individual risk to serve the public and the people we care about, they write. As willing and well-informed volunteers, whose autonomy ought to be respected, we feel challenge trials are justified if they mean a vaccine arrives even one day sooner.

We already allow people to risk their lives for the collective good, Dr. Lipsitch, Dr. Eyal and Dr. Smith say. Firefighters, for example, are routinely called upon to rush into burning buildings. (And today, of course, delivery drivers and grocery clerks are being asked to accept a level of risk they did not sign up for.) The question, then, is whether the studys potential cost would be low enough to warrant its potential benefit. Besides recruiting only healthy, young volunteers and guaranteeing them the best care, the authors delineate four ways in which the study would minimize net risk:

The vaccine may protect some of those who receive it.

Absent an effective vaccine, a high proportion of the general population is likely to get Covid-19, so some volunteers may simply be pushing their illnesses forward.

Only people who already have an especially high risk of exposure would be recruited (e.g., New Yorkers).

Volunteers would get priority for any treatments that may become available.

But many researchers and bioethicists balk at the idea of coronavirus human-challenge trials, Jon Cohen writes in Science magazine. For one thing, the risks are hard to gauge, since the virus is so new that we dont know how often people get seriously ill or what its long-term complications are. Where youre going to give somebody a virus on purpose, you really want to understand the disease so that you know that what youre doing is a reasonable risk, Matthew Memoli, an immunologist who stages human-challenge studies of influenza, told Mr. Cohen.

There are also thorny ethical questions beyond risks and benefits, according to Seema Shah, a medical ethics professor at Northwestern University. Justice considerations also matter, such as whether the risks are fairly distributed, she told Vox. There are also other criteria: community engagement, fair selection of participants, robust informed consent, and payment that compensates for time and inconveniences. And there lies another point of contention: Dr. Eyal advises against using high payments, which he says could take advantage of the poor.

Its possible that human-challenge trials wouldnt actually speed up the process, according to Myrone Levine, a vaccine researcher at the University of Maryland who has conducted challenge trials since the 1970s. Infections are still climbing rapidly in many places, so conventional trials could reveal a vaccines efficacy on the same timeline. I cannot imagine that this would be ethical and would really speed up what we have to do, Dr. Levine told Mr. Cohen.

The benefit would also hinge on getting a lot of administrative ducks in a row, Dr. Shah said. For example, researchers would need to coordinate globally to ensure consistency across trials and to ascertain whether the Food and Drug Administration would even accept the results. And as Dr. Lipsitch, Dr. Eyal and Dr. Smith acknowledged, even if all goes well, more studies might be needed to prove the vaccine is safe and effective for older populations.

Were all looking for a Hail Mary, and its easy to see challenge studies as exciting and having a lot of promise, Dr. Shah said. But a lot of things need to fall into place to achieve that promise.

Do you have a point of view we missed? Email us at debatable@nytimes.com. Please note your name, age and location in your response, which may be included in the next newsletter.

Heres what readers had to say about the last edition: Bidens vice-presidential pick

John C. Kornblum, a former U.S. ambassador to Germany, from Berlin: What about Val Demings, representative from Florida? She is experienced, well spoken and did very well during impeachment hearings. Demographically, who could be against a black, female former police chief from FLORIDA. (Tom Coleman, a former Republican congressman, also wrote in to recommend Ms. Demings.)

Alma from New Mexico: You did not mention Michelle Lujan Grisham, governor of New Mexico and former chair of the congressional Hispanic caucus. She has received national accolades for her handling of Covid-19. She is popular with both progressives and moderates.

Bruce from Hong Kong: I cant understand why no one is mentioning Susan Rice, who should be the front-runner. Highly intelligent and effective and demographically appropriate, Rice would be the perfect foil for Biden.

Deb from Minnesota: What prior experience did Trump have to qualify him?

Originally posted here:

The Coronavirus Vaccine May Have a Shortcut: Infecting Volunteers - The New York Times

Health officials eyeing at least one of 14 potential coronavirus vaccines to fast-track – NBCNews.com

May 2, 2020

WASHINGTON There are 14 potential coronavirus vaccines under development as part of President Donald Trump's administration's program to fast-track one for use as early as January, senior administration officials tell NBC News.

That number was whittled down several weeks ago from 93 vaccines in development that were studied as part of the program, known as Operation Warp Speed, officials said.

Over the next two weeks, the 14 remaining vaccines will undergo additional testing and officials expect that anywhere from six to eight of them will make it to a subsequent round of clinical trials. Ultimately, the officials said, the goal is to have three or four vaccines make it through final testing and cleared for use early next year.

The officials, who discussed the programs progress on the condition of anonymity, said there is no guarantee that any of the 14 remaining coronavirus vaccines will make it to the end of the process, but they are optimistic about the chances.

Can I say with 100 percent certainty? No, one of the officials said. There is a reasonable probability that one or more of these vaccines will be successful.

The bigger concern, officials said, is how to quickly make the vaccine for more than 300 million Americans once they find one that works.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings.

Trump has hailed the program and said Thursday that he is personally overseeing it and promised to fast-track it like you've never seen before.

The senior administration officials who agreed to discuss the details said the 93 vaccines from several weeks ago came from more than 80 pharmaceutical companies. They said the next major milestone in the project will be in two weeks when the government will seek participants for clinical trials on the vaccines that make it out of the 14 that currently remain.

From there, the officials said those viruses will be scrutinized at a microscopic level for further winnowing down.

Its a constant reevaluation, one of the officials said.

They reiterated that the program will cost billions of dollars that they said would come from pre-existing government funds, but they didnt give a specific figure. They added American taxpayers will cover much of the financial burden instead of working out a deal with drug companies as a way to expedite the process.

At this point it will not require congressional approval.

The officials didnt guarantee that any vaccine that comes out of the program would be free to all Americans though they suggested that could be part of the return on the governments investment as part of the public-private partnership.

Officials said they are able to fast-track the vaccine because multiple phases of the process to get one are happening at the same time, such as clinical trials and working out a distribution chain.

They said one approach to distribution initially could be to dispense it in a way designed to stop transmission of the virus as fast as possible, such as first to nursing home facilities, first responders and other people who interact often with the public.

A number of agencies are working on the project, including the Health and Human Services Department, Veterans Affairs, the Agriculture Department and the Pentagon.

Carol E. Lee is an NBC News correspondent.

Kristen Welker is a White House correspondent for NBC News.

Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner is a producer in the NBC News Washington bureau.

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Health officials eyeing at least one of 14 potential coronavirus vaccines to fast-track - NBCNews.com

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