From Yahoo:
“The End of Vaccines at 'Warp
Speed'”
Operation Warp Speed, the
Trump-era program that poured billions of dollars into developing COVID shots,
seemed to signal a new dawn of American vaccine making, demonstrating how
decades of scientific grunt work could be turned into lifesaving medicine in a
matter of months. But as a third pandemic winter begins in the United States,
its vaccine-making effort has lost steam. Efforts to test and produce
next-generation COVID vaccines are bogged down by bureaucratic problems and
funding shortfalls. Foreign rivals have raced ahead in approving long-awaited
nasal-spray vaccines, including one invented in St. Louis, creating a scenario
in which Americans would have to travel abroad for the latest in American
vaccine technology.
The Biden administration has
launched an 11th-hour effort to restore the country’s edge. In a bid to
resurrect Operation Warp Speed, President Joe Biden asked the lame-duck session
of Congress this week for $5 billion for next-generation vaccines and
therapeutics, as part of a broader $9.25 billion pandemic spending request. But
Republicans, having blocked COVID spending packages since the spring amid
complaints about how the White House spent earlier allocations, have shown no
signs of dropping their resistance. As a result, even with the pandemic still
taking a heavy toll, prospects have dimmed for the two most coveted kinds of
next-generation vaccines: nasal sprays that can block more infections, and
universal coronavirus shots that can defend against a wider array of
ever-evolving variants. In the coming months, scientists project that COVID
could kill tens of thousands of Americans. The cost of infections keeps piling
up, too: Long COVID sufferers are battling persistent health problems. And
millions are missing work because they catch the virus, exacerbating labor
shortages.
No next-generation vaccines are
as close at hand, or as likely to reduce the spread of the virus, as those that
can be inhaled or sprayed into the nose. By generating immunity in people’s
airways, where the coronavirus first lands, those vaccines can potentially help
extinguish infections before they begin. Immunity delivered by a shot in the
arm, on the other hand, takes longer to attack the invading virus, giving
people good protection against serious disease but not to the infections that
spread the virus and let it evolve. China, India, Russia and Iran have all
approved vaccines delivered through the nose or the mouth, even though they
have not released much data about how the products work.
In the United States, nasal
sprays have been held back by the same funding constraints and logistical
hassles that, before the pandemic, often made developing vaccines a decadelong
ordeal. The delay could not only weaken the country’s defenses against a more
lethal coronavirus variant but also hurt preparations for a future pandemic,
depriving the world of an oven-ready nasal vaccine platform that could be
adapted to a new virus. “It went back to the pre-pandemic speed of vaccine
development,” said Florian Krammer, a virus expert at the Icahn School of
Medicine at Mount Sinai. His team’s nasal vaccine has undergone its most
advanced testing in Mexico; collaborating with a pharmaceutical company there
offered the fastest path to clinical trial funding. In the United States, he
said, “The funding situation is pretty dire.” The problems are not only
financial. The best next-generation vaccine studies often depend on using
existing mRNA shots, such as the COVID vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna. In
some cases, that is because researchers want to compare nasal sprays to
injectable vaccines. In others, it is because scientists need to know how well
nasal vaccines boost immunity after an earlier mRNA shot. But scientists aiming
to develop nasal vaccines as boosters have discovered that they are barred from
using leftover Pfizer or Moderna doses in their studies, despite tens of
millions of unused doses having been thrown away.
Purchase agreements with the
federal government prevent doses of the two vaccines from being used for
research purposes without the companies’ approval, scientists said. Those types
of provisions are generally intended to protect companies from the risks of a
poorly run experiment hurting their product, although they can also help insulate
firms from head-to-head studies that may flatter a competitor. Because the
government controls the supply of Pfizer and Moderna shots, nasal-vaccine
makers cannot independently purchase them. Instead, scientists have had to pay
outside manufacturers to make imitations. Among the researchers in that
position is Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at Yale University, whose
experimental nasal vaccine is intended to boost immunity in those previously
injected with mRNA shots. Her team’s vaccine appears to reduce viral
transmission in hamsters, a promising sign. But Iwasaki has not been able to
get Pfizer or Moderna shots for studies on monkeys, creating less reliable
conditions for measuring how animals receiving mRNA shots respond to nasal
boosters. “There are so many millions of doses being thrown down the drain, and
all we’re asking for is a couple of vials to be able to do some animal
research,” Iwasaki said. “That’s kind of held us back.”
Scientists within the federal
government have struggled to surmount the same legal barriers, despite
extensive taxpayer support for mRNA vaccines. For much of the past year,
federal officials negotiated with Moderna for permission to use its vaccine for
research studies that were not expressly approved by Moderna or done in
collaboration with the company, said Karin Bok, the acting deputy director of
the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases. Only about a month ago did government scientists get those doses, Bok
said. They are still unable to use Pfizer’s vaccine in the same way, she added.
“That’s a big gap that we need to think about how to overcome for the next
pandemic,” Bok said. For now, she said, nasal vaccine makers and other
researchers would probably be unable to secure licensed mRNA shots until doses
become available on the private market next year.
Pfizer said in a statement that
it was not providing its vaccine to independent research groups, but that it
had worked with governments that wanted to resell or give away doses for
clinical trials. Moderna said that it evaluated research requests on a
case-by-case basis and collaborated with government scientists and several
academic laboratories on studies of its vaccines. There are no guarantees about
how effective a nasal vaccine would be or how long its protections would last.
It is not entirely clear how best to formulate the vaccines or deliver them to
people’s airways. Safety concerns stem from the nasal cavity's closeness to the
brain and the lungs. And there is no standard test for measuring immune
responses in the airways, as there is for gauging the systemic immunity that is
the goal of injectable vaccines.
The only approved nasal vaccine
in the United States is FluMist, for preventing influenza, and its use is
restricted to younger and healthier people. Last month, a nasal version of the
Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine failed in a trial, an outcome that investigators
said could have resulted from too much of the spray being swallowed and broken
down in the stomach. “It’s a fundamentally more difficult venture than a shot
in the arm, which we’ve been doing for over 100 years,” said Dr. Benjamin
Goldman-Israelow of Yale, who is working with Iwasaki on the team’s nasal
vaccine. The chances of any one candidate failing have discouraged America’s
largest vaccine makers from investing. While government funding protected
pharmaceutical companies in 2020 from the risks of pouring money into tricky
vaccine research, those assurances have evaporated.
The market for COVID vaccines has
also become less accommodating to new arrivals, industry experts said: Pfizer
and Moderna shots dominate, giving those companies little reason to spend
heavily on a competing vaccine and deterring their rivals. Foreign vaccine
makers have shown more interest, in part because nasal vaccines are expected to
be easier than mRNA shots to store and use in poorer nations. Eventually,
people may even be able to self-administer them at home. Two years ago, India’s
Bharat Biotech, a leading vaccine manufacturer, jumped on a promising early
study of a nasal vaccine designed at Washington University in St. Louis and
negotiated to make and test doses. India recently approved the vaccine based on
data that Bharat has presented to American government scientists, but not
released publicly. The vaccine has progressed more slowly in the United States.
Only last month did a smaller American company, Ocugen, secure the rights to
it. The team behind the vaccine “made multiple overtures to almost all of the
major vaccine players and there wasn’t any buy-in,” said Dr. David T. Curiel, a
researcher at Washington University in St. Louis who invented the vaccine with
a colleague, Dr. Michael Diamond. Curiel said that the White House had long
been calling for vaccine development funding. But, he said, “The Orwellian
aspect has been trying to find specifically where those funds are.”
Government scientists have been
pushing to speed up the process. Dr. Robert Seder, of the Vaccine Research
Center, recently launched a study in nonhuman primates that will compare
different nasal booster formulations to each other and to injectable boosters.
It will also test spraying the new vaccines into the nose or having them
inhaled through a mouthpiece. One candidate is a modified version of Moderna’s
shot. The company said it was collaborating with government scientists and
studying how to deliver mRNA medicines to the lungs. But federal health
officials said that they, too, have seen funding requests languish, leaving
much of the onus on academic researchers and their startup companies. Roughly
half a dozen American groups are testing nasal vaccines in people. “We don’t
have the resources of a Pfizer or BioNTech,” said Dr. Bruce Turner, the CEO of
Xanadu Bio, which he co-founded with Iwasaki at Yale. “We don’t have Operation
Warp Speed.” The leading American nasal vaccine candidates have been built on
decades of government funding for the underlying research. What is missing,
scientists said, is money for pushing those vaccines out of university
laboratories and into real-world studies now that they are urgently needed. “We’re
at the last mile,” said Biao He, a professor at the University of Georgia. His
company, CyanVac, based in Athens, Georgia, began an early-stage human study of
a nasal vaccine 15 months ago that is only now nearing completion. The costs of
speeding up testing, he said, paled in comparison to the risks of waiting. “When
so many people’s lives are at stake,” he said, “can’t we do something about
it?”
^ People (and Politicians) seem
to believe that everything is over and we are all fine regardless of what the
facts tell us. While the worst part of the Pandemic is behind us (thanks to
Vaccines) we should still work on perfecting newer Vaccines, including nasal sprays,
to make sure we aren’t shut off from the world again. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/end-vaccines-warp-speed-133658754.html
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