Head of Pfizer pharmaceuticals says vaccine could be ready by October |
By NIna Larson |
With over 100 labs scrambling to develop COVID-19 vaccination, pharma executives hopeful for roll out before 2021, but cite ‘daunting’ challenges in producing billions of doses |
Head of Pfizer pharmaceuticals says vaccine could be ready by OctoberWith over 100 labs scrambling to develop COVID-19 vaccination, pharma executives hopeful for roll out before 2021, but cite ‘daunting’ challenges in producing billions of doses
AFP — Pharmaceutical company executives said Thursday that one
or several COVID-19 vaccines could begin rolling out before 2021, but
warned the challenges would be “daunting” as it was estimated that 15
billion doses would be needed to halt the pandemic.
Well over 100 labs around the world are scrambling to come up with a vaccine against the novel coronavirus, including 10 that have made it to the clinical trial stage. Albert Bourla, head of Pfizer, said that his company believed a vaccine could be ready before the end of the year. Pfizer is conducting clinical trials with German firm Biontech on several possible vaccines in Europe and the United States. “If things go well, and the stars are aligned, we will have enough evidence of safety and efficacy so that we can… have a vaccine around the end of October,” he said. “The hope of many people is that we will have a vaccine, hopefully several, by the end of this year,” Pascal Soriot, head of AstraZeneca, told a virtual briefing. His company is partnering with the University of Oxford to develop and distribute a vaccine being trialed in Britain. It can take years for a new vaccine to be licensed for general use, but in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, experimental vaccines shown to be safe and effective against the novel coronavirus could likely win approval for emergency use.
The International Federation of
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA), which organized
Thursday’s briefing, highlighted the “daunting” challenges facing the
industry in the push for a vaccine.
One challenge, which may seem counterintuitive, is that transmission
rates are rapidly declining in Europe where some of the trials are
taking place.
Soon they will be too low to properly conduct clinical vaccine trials in a natural setting, Soriot said, adding that so-called “human challenge” studies in which people are intentionally exposed to the virus to test efficacy, were not considered ethically acceptable with COVID-19.
“We are running against time,” he said.
The novel coronavirus has killed more than 358,000 people and infected at least 5.7 million worldwide in a matter of months.
IFPMA director Thomas Cueni pointed to
estimates that the world will need some 15 billion doses to stop the
virus, posing massive logistical challenges.
He stressed that the industry was committed
to ensuring equitable access to a future vaccine, but acknowledged that
“we will not have sufficient quantities as from day one, even with the
best efforts.”
Once a working vaccine is developed, one of
the biggest obstacles to putting out the amount needed could be,
surprisingly, that there are not enough glass vials to store the doses
in.
“There are not enough vials in the world,”
Soriot said, adding that AstraZeneca, like a number of other firms, was
looking into the possibility of putting multiple doses in each vial.
Paul Stoffels, vice chairman and chief
scientific officer at Johnson and Johnson, meanwhile said that if 15
billion doses were needed, a number of different vaccines would be
necessary to satisfy the initial demand.
“Not all vaccine candidates could go all
over the world depending on features, so somewhere between five and 10
will definitely be needed to serve the whole world,” he said.
One challenge could be that some of the
vaccines being worked on require storage at very low temperatures, which
could be difficult in places lacking the proper infrastructure.
While stressing the need for solidarity and
for ensuring fair and equitable distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine, the
pharmaceutical chiefs flatly rejected any suggestion that intellectual
property rights should be waived on vaccine research.
“IP is absolutely fundamental to our industry,” GSK chief Emma Walmsley said.
Soriot meanwhile pointed out that
pharmaceutical companies are currently investing billions of dollars
with little chance of recuperating the costs.
“If you don’t protect IP, then essentially there is no incentive for anybody to innovate,” he said.
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Friday, May 29, 2020
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