Ebola vaccination campaign in Mbandaka, Équateur Province (DRC) during an outbreak over the summer.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) recorded its first case of Ebola on Sunday in Butembo – a city that was one of the epicenters of the last Ebola outbreak – since its last outbreak ended in June 2020. 

A woman with Ebola-like symptoms was detected in Butembo, a city in North Kivu Province, after seeking treatment at a health center on 1 February. She died in the hospital two days later, reported the Ministry of Health of the DRC. 

The patient was married to a man who had contracted Ebola during the previous outbreak. 

“The provincial response team is already hard at work. It will be supported by the national response team which will visit Butembo shortly,” the Ministry of Health said in a statement.

This new case comes nearly eight months after the country’s 10th Ebola outbreak, which ended after two years with a total of 3481 cases, 2299 deaths and 1162 survivors reported. Local and national authorities, along with the WHO, are investigating the case, contact tracing, and disinfecting sites visited by the patient.

During the previous outbreak, WHO trained laboratory technicians, contact tracers, and vaccination teams, leaving behind a strong local and provincial health system with the capacity to mobilize and lead the current response.

“The expertise and capacity of local health teams has been critical in detecting this new Ebola case and paving the way for a timely response,” said Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, in a press release. “WHO is providing support to local and national health authorities to quickly trace, identify and treat the contacts to curtail the further spread of the virus.”

Samples from the patient have been sent to the National Institute of Biomedical Research to sequence the genome, identify the strain of the Ebola virus and establish its link to the previous outbreak. 

“It is not unusual for sporadic cases to occur following a major outbreak,” said WHO in a statement, however it is unclear if this is evidence of a flare up or a new outbreak.

“While there is hope that this early identification of an infection may help with quickly containing this outbreak, back-to-back Ebola outbreaks and Covid-19 has stretched Congo’s health systems to the limit and this could put far greater strain on an already exasperated system,” Jason Kindrachuk, assistant professor at the department of medical microbiology and infectious diseases at Canada’s University of Manitoba, told the Guardian

More than 70 contacts have been traced by local health authorities, the Ministry of Health, and WHO epidemiologists on the ground in an effort to detect, contain and treat any other cases.

“So far, no other cases have been identified, but it is possible there will be further cases because the woman had contact with many people after she became symptomatic,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, at a press briefing on Monday. 

Ebola vaccines are being sent to the area and a vaccination program will begin shortly, supported by a rapid response team sent by WHO. 

Image Credits: WHO/Junior D. Kannah.

AstraZeneca’s multi-stage manufacturing and quality testing process for its COVID-19 vaccine, which was developed with Oxford researchers.

The World Health Organization (WHO)’s expert group on immunisations remains confident in the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine’s efficacy against severe SARS-CoV2 disease – despite the enormous worldwide concerns triggered by a small South African study that showed it had little effect in stemming mild disease from the B.1.351 variant first identified in that country.

“It is very clear that the vaccine has efficacy against severe disease, hospitalizations and deaths,” Dr Katherine O’Brien, WHO director of Immunization, told the body’s bi-weekly media briefing on Monday after WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) meeting to decide on whether to grant the vaccine an emergency use license earlier in the day. 

“There is also evidence that the likelihood of meaningful impact against severe disease is a very plausible scenario against the B.1.351 [South African identified] variant,” O’Brien added, explaining that SAGE had met earlier in the day with investigators from Oxford/ AstraZeneca trials in the UK, Brazil and South Africa.

Dr Katherine O’Brien, WHO Director of the Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals.

Stressing that the situation was dynamic, O’Brien said that evidence unfolding from the trial of people with mild disease, might seem to contradict expert opinions that the vaccine could still prevent  severe illness – but that was because “we’re painting the picture in parts and pieces and bits”.  So  far the ongoing trials have not yielded clear evidence of the AstraZeneca’s efficacy on the South African variant. 

Last Friday, WHO officials said that they would be set to make a decision on approving the AstraZeneca vaccine for widespread rollout by the Global COVAX facility sometime this week.

WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described as “concerning” the news that the AstraZeneca vaccine was “minimally effective at preventing mild to moderate disease caused by a variant first identified in South Africa”.

COVAX Suppliers Need To Be Prepared to Adjust Products To Viral Evolution

Meanwhile, Dr Seth Berkley, CEO of the vaccine alliance, GAVI, stressed that pharma manufacturers supplying vaccines to the global COVAX facility “must be prepared to adjust to COVID-19’s viral evolution, including potentially providing future booster shots and or adaptive vaccines, if found to be scientifically necessary”.

Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

“COVAX has signed advanced purchase agreements with AstraZeneca and the Serum Institute of India, and we’ve published plans to distribute near nearly 350 million doses in the first half of the year, hopefully starting later this month, should the emergency use listing be forthcoming,” said Berkley, who added that while COVAX was currently dependent on AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines, other vaccines would be added to its portfolio later in the year.

Richard Hatchett, CEO of  the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) stressed that a diversity of vaccine candidates “provides us with a large number of tools which we need to explore to see which works best against the variants.”

“We can also look potentially at combinations of the vaccines and of course we must accelerate the development of new strain-specific vaccines. A large number of companies have already begun to undertake that work,” said Hatchett.

Image Credits: AstraZeneca, WHO.

Civil society organizations, pharmaceutical industries, and other stakeholders support the ratification of the AMA Treaty.

On the two-year anniversary of the establishment of the African Medicines Agency (AMA) Treaty, over 40 patient and civil society organizations, health and pharmaceutical industries, and product development partnerships called upon African Union member states to ratify the Treaty. 

Rapidly ratifying the Treaty, which was created to provide a unified approach to the approval of new medicines and vaccines, is a “matter of priority” and the failure to do so undermines patients’ access to effective therapies and vaccines, according to the numerous stakeholders representing patients, researchers and industry leaders. 

The Treaty was adopted at the 32nd African Union Assembly to enhance regulatory oversight across the continent’s 54 countries. It has been signed by 19 countries but only ratified by eight out of the required 15. 

“The African Medicines Agency is important for universal health coverage [UHC] in Africa. The 148th World Health Organization’s Executive Board has resolved to ask the 74th World Health Assembly to adopt the WHO Flagship Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021-2030,” Kawaldip Sehmi, CEO of the International Alliance of Patients Organisations (IAPO), told Health Policy Watch

“A cornerstone of this plan is that each Member State must have a competent institutional, legislative, policy, practice and standards framework in place for the regulation of safe and quality innovative medicines, health devices and other health products. The African Union, like the European Union and its European Medicines Agency, can ensure that all 54 African countries can place this cornerstone of their UHC together at the same time,” he added.

The AMA has a critical role to play, particularly in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, when a competent and efficient regulatory authority – similar to the European Medicines Agency or the US Food and Drug Administration – is needed to review, approve and monitor vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics and health technologies. 

“If we had the AMA, it would be working very closely with the WHO and other bodies to facilitate regulatory issues on drugs to help control the COVID-19 pandemic” and to ensure their rapid and streamlined introduction to markets, said John Nkengasong, Director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, at press briefing in October.

As COVAX, the global initiative to procure and equitably distribute COVID-19 vaccines, prepares to start shipping 90 million doses to Africa in February, the continent is almost two months behind vaccine rollouts that began in Europe and the US in December. 

“That is precisely what the AMA’s mission will be: to help African countries fight disease outbreaks by ensuring that only high-quality drugs, vaccines, and other health-related supplies reach the market and health systems from Cape to Cairo,” said Sehmi in a press release

Similarly, disruptions in the approval or rollout of vaccines could be investigated and solved by a regional regulatory agency. South Africa’s decision on Sunday to halt its use of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine will have serious implications for massive African vaccine rollouts planned by both the WHO co-sponsored COVAX facility as well as the African Union’s dedicated African Vaccine Acquisition Task Team (AVATT).

“The events this weekend, with South Africa suspending the AstraZeneca vaccinations and seeking new information and advice from the manufacturer and European medicines regulatory agencies, is exactly what we wanted to avoid in our call to action,” Ellos Lodzeni, Treasurer of the IAPO Governing Board and founder of the Patient and Community Welfare Foundation of Malawi, told Health Policy Watch.

“This has left vaccination programmes in the rest of Africa in a limbo. The African Medicines Agency could have been that competent pan-African medicines regulatory agency that could have resolved this matter very early. The African Union must have a competent regional medicines regulatory agency that can help us build back better faster and safer,” Lodzeni said.

Additionally, establishing the AMA could improve country participation in clinical research and scientific innovation, boost manufacturing capacities, and allow for greater collaboration and knowledge sharing.

While progress has been made over the past couple of months on increasing the ratification of the Treaty, less than half of countries that have signed it have ratified it and established it as part of their national law. Only eight countries have ratified the agreement – Rwanda, Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Seychelles, Guinea, Morocco, and Namibia.

Leading southern and eastern African nations, such as South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania, along with Cameroon, Nigeria, and Egypt have yet to sign onto the Treaty. 

Regional Challenges and Aims of the AMA

Over a quarter of the continent’s medicines are substandard or falsified, while only 2% are produced in Africa, according to the African Union Development Agency New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AUDA-NEPAD).

Weak regulatory systems have led to the circulation of falsified or substandard products, which pose a risk to public health and undermine confidence in health systems. The current network of separate national regulatory authorities has resulted in slow processes for new medicines to be approved by each country – time that is severely lacking during a public health emergency.

“No single country has enough resources and capability to efficiently and effectively regulate the whole supply chain system alone in this globalised world,” said Karim Bendhaou, who heads Africa Affairs for Merck and is chair of the IFPMA’s Africa Engagement Committee.

The main aims of the AMA are to:

  • Strengthen and harmonize efforts of regional health organizations and member states;
  • Provide evidence-based scientific regulatory decisions and guidance;
  • Improve patients’ access to effective, safe and quality medicines; 
  • Minimize administrative hurdles; and
  • Manage the prevalence of substandard and falsified medical products. 

A strong, unified regulatory system could coordinate market surveillance for falsified and substandard medical products, centralize information collection and sharing, strengthen national efforts to improve access to safe and innovative products, and optimize healthcare systems. 

“The establishment of the African Medicines Agency is a critical next step to enable all patients in Africa to have timely access to quality medicines that are safe and effective,” said Adam Aspinall, chair of the Fight the Fakes Alliance. 

-Updated on 9 February

Image Credits: Interpol, IFPMA.

Dr Mariângela Simão, WHO Assistant-Director of Access to Medicines and Health Products.

The World Health Organization (WHO) expects to make a decision next week on whether to issue emergency use licenses for the AstraZeneca/Oxford COVID-19 vaccine being produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII) and South Korea’s SK Bioscience on 15 February, according to Dr Mariangela Simão, the organisation’s assistant director general of Drug Access, Vaccines and Pharmaceuticals.

The WHO had only received the full dossier from SII on 15 January, and the SK Bioscience dossier last week, Simao told the biweekly WHO COVID-19 press conference on Friday.

Meanwhile, the two Chinese vaccine manufacturers, Sinopharm and Sinovac, both have COVID-19 vaccines in very advanced stages of WHO’s Emergency Use Listing process, with a decision expected in early March. 

“We have a team of inspectors in China since the second week of January. They are waiting for their quarantine to finish and then they will start inspections next week,” said Dr Simão.

Sinopharm’s full dossier has been accepted for review, while WHO is expecting additional data from Sinovac today and again at the end of February. 

Of the two vaccines, Sinopharm yielded efficacy results between 79.3% and 86% in Phase 3 multi-country trials and has been approved in China for general public use. But Sinovac, on the other hand, yielded wildly varied efficacy scores ranging from 50.3% – 91.3%.

Sinovac applied for conditional approval in China on Wednesday and said that the preliminary results showed an “efficacy rate [that] meets the standards of the WHO and the guiding principles for Clinical Evaluation on Preventive COVID-19 Vaccine (tentative) issued by the NMPA [National Medical Products Administration, China’s medicines regulatory agency].” 

Companies Can Issue Voluntary Licenses to Speed Up Manufacture, Says Tedros

However, the WHO is concerned that vaccine supply is still lagging way below demand and Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged companies and countries to use the options available to increase manufacturing capacity, particularly as 130 countries have not yet started vaccinations.

“Countries are ready to go. But the vaccines aren’t there,” said Dr Tedros. “We need countries to share those once they have finished vaccinating health workers and older people. But we also need a massive scale up in production.”

He praised last week’s announcement by Sanofi that it would make its manufacturing infrastructure available to support production of the Pfizer/ BioNtech vaccine. 

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director General, at the press briefing on Friday.

“We call on other companies to follow this example. Companies can also issue non-exclusive licences to allow other producers to manufacture their vaccine, a mechanism that has been used before to expand access to treatments for HIV and hepatitis C. The COVID-19 technology access pool or C-TAP enables the voluntary licencing of technologies in a non exclusive, and transparent way by providing a platform for developers to share knowledge, intellectual property and data,” said Tedros, stressing that this would help to build additional manufacturing capacity in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Meanwhile, WHO Chief Scientist Dr Soumya Swaminathan said that one of the top research priorities was whether different vaccines could be combined – for example, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that are both mRNA two-dose vaccines, or  “even more interesting would be to combine two different platforms so inactivated vaccine followed by an mRNA spike protein”.

“Information about vaccines both from the rollouts that are happening now in countries and observational studies, but also more randomised clinical trials are going to be needed to look at questions like the duration, and the gap between doses, as well as the combining different vaccines,” said Swaminathan, indicating that the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness (CEPI) had already issued a call for applications from researchers to examine these questions.

Dr Soumya Swaminathan, WHO Chief Scientist.

The WHO officials welcomed the fact that the new infections were reducing in many parts of the world, but Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, COVID-19 technical lead, said this could not be ascribed to vaccine rollouts alone.

The decline was “due to a combination of factors, most notably the public health and social measures” such as active case finding, using rapid antigen-based tests, isolation of cases, and good clinical care.

“What is really critical is that countries that are reducing transmission continue to take all measures they can to drive down transmission,” stressed Van Kerkhove. “Individuals have a role to play in this, with physical distancing that must continue, the wearing of masks, making sure that you open windows, you avoid crowded spaces. All of these actions are driving down transmission.”

In regard to the push for the anti-parasitic drug ivermectin to be repurposed for treating COVID-19, Van Kerkhove said that the WHO “haven’t made a recommendation on the use of ivermectin, but we’re closely following the research that is ongoing related to this drug, which has shown some promising results in some trials for the treatment of COVID-19.”

However, Swainathan said that ivermectin had not been prioritised for inclusion in the solidarity trial, which fastracks potential treatments and warned that small studies were open to misinterpretation. 

China Joins COVAX, Commits To Supply Vaccines to LMIC Countries

In another move to “make vaccines a global public good,” China has officially joined the COVAX Facility, a WHO co-led mechanism to ensure the equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, and has committed 10 million doses of vaccines to low- and middle-income countries, China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, Wang Wenbin, announced on Wednesday. 

We attach great importance to Director-General Tedros’ call to vaccinate priority populations in all nations within the first 100 days of this year,” said Wang Wenbin. “We also attach great importance to the difficulties facing the practical implementation of COVAX, in particular the huge vaccine supply gap in February and March.”

It has not yet been revealed exactly which Chinese-developed vaccines are committed to COVAX and the prices of the vaccines are currently unclear, but China pledges to “offer its vaccines at fair and reasonable prices,” said the Foreign Ministry Spokesperson. 

Over 24 countries have signed vaccine deals with Sinopharm and Sinovac so far, most of them low- and middle-income countries. Most recently, China decided to donate 100,000 doses of a Chinese-developed vaccine to the Republic of the Congo and to forgive US$13 million in public debt.

Sinopharm and Sinovac vaccines have already been exported to countries that have authorized the vaccines for emergency use, including the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Turkey, and Brazil. 

China is currently providing vaccine aid to 13 developing countries, including Pakistan, Palestine, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, Myanmar, and Brunei, according to Wang Wenbin. And the country plans to assist another 38 developing countries with vaccines.

China is also encouraging domestic vaccine companies to conduct joint vaccine R&D and production with foreign partners, an effort which is encouraged by WHO.

Decision on Olympics Will Be Made With Correct Data

Responding to Japan’s declaration that the Olympic Games would go ahead later this year, Dr Michael Ryan, executive director of Health Emergencies, said that  “there is a collective desire around the world to move ahead with the Olympics” as it is  “a massive, important symbol of unity and solidarity around the world”. 

Dr Mike Ryan, WHO Executive Director of Health Emergencies Programme.

“What I do know is that the government of Japan, the organising city of Tokyo, and the International Olympic Committee have been working diligently together,” said Ryan. “And I’m absolutely sure that they’re taking every ounce of data into consideration as they move towards the Olympics. We work with them. We input to their taskforce on risk management. We will continue to do so. 

“The desire to have the games is a laudable desire, and the will to move forward is laudable as well. But I am sure, the government of Japan will take all of their data into account as they move towards the games and they will make the correct decision on behalf of the people of Japan, the athletes and potential spectators.”

Image Credits: Sinopharm, WHO.

Vials of the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

The COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University offers similar levels of protection against the new, more contagious variant first discovered in the UK when compared to previous variants, Oxford researchers said in a paper released on Friday

The new variant of SARS-CoV-2, B.1.1.7, emerged as the dominant cause of COVID-19 infection in the UK from November 2020 with its high transmissibility when compared to previous strains of the virus. The variant has since been reported in more than 70 other countries.  

Preliminary findings from the paper show that vaccine efficacy against infection from B.1.1.7 was 74.6%, and its efficacy against other strains was 84%, though small sample sizes created a broad range of estimates. 

Andrew Pollard, Chief Investigator on the Oxford vaccine trial, said in a statement released on Friday, “The vaccine not only protects against the original pandemic virus, but also protects against the novel variant B.1.1.7, which caused the surge in disease from the end of 2020 across the UK.”

From 1 October 2020 to 14 January 2021, Oxford researchers used swabs taken from volunteers with both symptomatic and asymptomatic infection enrolled in their phase II/III vaccine efficacy study to determine which strain of the virus they had been infected with after receiving either the vaccine or the control. 

These are the first findings regarding the efficacy of the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccine against new variants, adding to preliminary data from the vaccines of Pfizer and Moderna that also suggest good protection against the B.1.1.7 variant. 

These findings come after Switzerland rejected AstraZeneca’s application for regulatory approval, the first European country to do so. Other European countries also have declared the data on the AstraZeneca vaccine insufficient to permit its use in people over the age of 65. 

However, in a statement released on Wednesday, AstraZeneca had published a primary analysis of its Phase III clinical trials, stating that its vaccine was safe and effective at preventing COVID-19, with no severe cases and no hospitalizations, more than 22 days after the first dose. 

Despite some hesitation over the vaccine, Sarah Gilbert, Chief Investigator on the Oxford vaccine trial, maintains the importance of modifying existing vaccines quickly to protect against the new variants. GlaxoSmithKline and CureVac have also announced an agreement to jointly develop a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine that targets new variants. 

Said Gilbert: “Coronaviruses are less prone to mutation than influenza viruses, but we have always expected that as the pandemic continues, new variants will begin to become dominant amongst the viruses that are circulating and that eventually a new version of the vaccine, with an updated spike protein, would be required to maintain vaccine efficacy at the highest level possible.”

“We are working with AstraZeneca to optimise the pipeline required for a strain change should one become necessary. This is the same issue that is faced by all of the vaccine developers, and we will continue to monitor the emergence of new variants that arise in readiness for a future strain change.”

Image Credits: University of Oxford, AstraZeneca.

The WHO team arriving at the Wuhan Institute of Virology on Wednesday.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) investigative team in Wuhan, China, visited the biosafety laboratory that has been at the centre of numerous conspiracy theories about the COVID-19 pandemic on Wednesday, making it the most controversial site for the team’s fieldwork so far. 

The team of 13 experts spent three-and-a-half hours at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV), one of China’s top virus research labs and the only one in mainland China with a Biosafety Level 4, the highest level of biocontainment. 

Visiting the lab that has an archive of genetic data on coronaviruses and bats, which are presumed reservoirs of coronaviruses, is an important part of the investigation into the origins of SARS-CoV2, the virus behind the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“Very interesting. Many questions,” said Thea Fischer, a Danish team member, as the group was leaving the site, responding to a question about whether the team had found anything. 

“Extremely important meeting today with staff at WIV, including Dr Shi Zhengli. Frank, open discussion. Key questions asked & answered,” said Peter Daszak, the British team member, zoologist, and president of EcoHealth Alliance, on Twitter

Dr Shi Zhengli is the director of the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Institute, and a well known virologist who specialises in bat-borne coronaviruses. The lab’s investigation into zoonotic viruses prompted speculations that deadly pathogens either escaped from, or were created in, the lab. 

Former US President Donald Trump was among those pushing these unfounded theories, claiming that he had seen evidence that gave him a “high degree of confidence that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was the origin of this virus”.

“We’ve said from the beginning that this was a virus that originated in Wuhan, China,” said former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in an interview with ABC News in early May. “China has a history of infecting the world and they have a history of running sub-standard laboratories… I can tell you that there is a significant amount of evidence that this came from that laboratory in Wuhan.”

Several leading infectious disease experts, including WHO officials and Shi – who found that none of the viruses sampled in the lab matched the viral genome sequences of the SARS-CoV2 samples – refuted these conspiracy theories. 

Experts from the US, United Kingdom and Australia concluded that “SARS-CoV2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposefully manipulated virus” in a study published in the Nature Medicine journal in March 2020. 

Dr Peter Daszak, member of WHO’s investigative team in Wuhan and zoologist.

“I know that lab really well,” said Daszak, speaking from his experience working with Shi to investigate the origins of the SARS 2003 outbreak. “It is a good virology lab that was doing good work that got close to finding what the next SARS-related coronavirus would be. But it didn’t find it as far as I know. But you know, unfortunately, it maybe got so close that people now ironically start to blame it.”

In response to suspicions that WIV was the source of the virus, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Wang Wenbin, stressed that “the pandemic shall not be exploited to stigmatize others… We hope that like China, all parties will adopt a positive and science-based attitude towards close cooperation with WHO.” 

Despite China’s claims of avoiding the politicization of origin research, Chinese officials have continued to suggest that the virus originated elsewhere. 

More and more clues, reports and studies have indicated that the infections broke out in multiple places in the world in the latter half of the year 2019,” said Wang Wenbin at a press briefing on Tuesday. 

Wang Wenbin, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, at a press briefing on Tuesday.

“According to a US CDC report, COVID-19 antibodies were detected in blood donations collected in December 2019, which means that the virus may have already been spreading in the United States by then, earlier than January 21 when the first official confirmed COVID-19 case was reported in the country.”

The WHO team has not ruled out any possibilities and is reportedly looking into “all the key aspects of the Wuhan Institute of Virology,” as well as the possibility that the virus could have been circulating before it was identified in Wuhan. 

“If there are data that point towards any hypothesis, we’ll follow the data, we’ll follow the evidence where it leads us,” said Daszak in an interview on Tuesday with Sky News. “Everything’s on the table and we’re keeping an open mind.”

The WHO Mission is Collecting a “Wealth of Data”

With the world watching and governments politicizing WHO’s origin mission, the team has reported that it is getting valuable data from its consultations with its Chinese counterparts and from its week of fieldwork in Wuhan. 

“[Chinese scientists] are sharing data with us that we have not seen before, that no one has seen before. They are talking with us openly about every possible pathway,” Daszak told Sky News. “We are really getting somewhere.” 

The site visits, particularly to the Huanan market, are “beginning to help us look at the right directions for this virus,” according to Daszak.  

The market, where a cluster of COVID-19 cases were first detected in late 2019, has been heavily disinfected and shut down for nearly a year. Despite the time that has passed, team members expressed the value of visiting the site that has long been considered the potential origin of the outbreak. 

Wuhan’s Huanan seafood market that has been closed since early 2020. The WHO team visited the market on Sunday.

“Even if the place had been to some extent disinfected, all the shops are there – and the equipment is there. It gives you a good idea of the state of the market in terms of maintenance, infrastructure, hygiene and flows of goods and people,” Peter Ben Embarek, leader of the WHO team and a food safety specialist, told CNN

“It’s clear that something happened in that market. But it could also be that other places had the same role, and that one was just picked because some doctors were clever enough to link a few sporadic cases together,” he added. 

Team Needs to Explore Bat Caves To Trace Virus Origins

The next crucial step in the investigation is finding the “true wildlife origin” of SARS-CoV2, which will consist of tracing the genetic sequences of the virus in bat caves. Coronaviruses, including the 2003 outbreak of the SARS virus, have previously been linked to bats in caves in the southwest province of Yunnan. 

“The real work we are doing here is to trace back from the first cases back to an animal reservoir, and that’s a much more convoluted path, and may have happened over a number of months or even years,” Daszak told Reuters. 

Once the sources of the virus can be found, contact with the animal can be reduced. 

The team members are starting to see a “picture coming through of some of the scenarios looking more plausible than before,” said Daszak, although they continue to caution that the investigation will likely take a considerable amount of time.

The mission will result in a report, produced by the international team members and the Chinese team members, that will be based on the activities of the investigation, an analysis of the data gathered, and the findings of the early studies conducted.

“[The report] needs to be done by the scientists who are in the field…There are a number of studies that will be done and we will have some results but that’s just the start,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO COVID-19 Technical Lead, at a WHO press briefing on Friday. “The report itself will not provide all of the answers, it was never intended to because that’s just not possible, but it will provide a summary.”

Even if the origin is eventually discovered after several studies and missions, COVID-19 has become endemic and “will be with us forever,” warned Daszak. 

“But we’ll come to terms with it. We’ll have a vaccine that works and [if] we get an escape variant, we’ll modify the vaccine,” he added. 

Image Credits: CNN, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, Deutsche Welle.

The US decision to join COVAX “is likely to mean resources” to be able to get vaccines for people, Dr Tony Fauci, US President Joe Biden’s Chief Medical Advisor, told the International AIDS Society’s COVID-19 conference this week.

Fauci also told the conference that scientists were taking the SARS-COV2 variant identified in South Africa so seriously “that we’re actually going to make a version of that in an mRNA and do Phase One and Two clinical trial”. 

Anthony Fauci, The Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

He added that if vaccines already approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) needed to be modified to address the new variant, he hoped that the FDA would consider this as “a strain change” so that the vaccine did not have to go through a new approval process.

But Fauci expressed concern that, while modifying vaccines to address variants “immediately attacks the problem at hand.. the downside is that you don’t want to be chasing mutations over the next couple of months and making an upgrade, upgrade. 

“So the long game of what we want to do is to get a universal coronavirus [vaccine] that is specific for SARS-COV2 so that we don’t have to keep chasing every time there’s a relevant mutation.”

He said that it was “very scary” to see situations where some people who seemed to be adhering very closely to non-pharmacological interventions – like wearing masks and physically distancing – were still getting infections. 

“We have a lot of discussion in our country right now about the proper use of masks.”

An executive order signed by President Biden on 21 January, made it mandatory for everyone on public transport to wear a mask.

A Most Extraordinary, Cunning Enemy

Fauci also described the SARS-COV2 as “a most extraordinary, cunning enemy that has so many characteristics that have foiled us along the way”.

“It has the spectacular capability of spreading from person to person, and more than half of the people who get infected get infected from someone who has no symptoms, while about 40% of the people who are infected have no symptoms. 

“It then seeks out vulnerables, the elderly, and those with underlying conditions. It seeks out people who are in so many respects throughout their lives in compromised positions in the United States.

“So we’re in an unprecedented challenge. But there is light at the end of the tunnel if we can implement a global programme to get the world vaccinated, not just the rich countries, but the entire world.”

Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

Earlier on Tuesday, Dr Seth Berkley, CEO of the vaccine alliance GAVI, said that while he agreed with activists on the urgent need to get everyone vaccinated, he was not sure that the tactic trying to get intellectual property rights waived on COVID-19 related products at the World Trade Organisation would work for vaccines.

“For drugs and diagnostics, getting rid of the TRIPS arrangements and having patents freely available may be the solution. But the critical issue for vaccines is know how.”

“AstraZeneca had enabled the Serum Institute of India to make its vaccine via a tech transfer and actually we want to pay for those tech transfers to other companies.”

Waiving intellectual property rights may prevent cooperation, whereas with tech transfers meant that,  “as problems in manufacturing have occurred, these have been discussed on a daily basis across the different manufacturers moving forward”.

“And that’s allowed this scale up, which has occurred in absolutely record time.”

Image Credits: R Santos/HP Watch.

Police seize bags of ivermectin illegally smuggled into South Africa

CAPE TOWN – The South African police have arrested six people in the past two weeks for trying to smuggle large quantities of the anti-parasitic medicine, ivermectin, into the country from India as demand for the drug as a treatment for COVID-19 surges internationally.

Ivermectin is only registered to treat parasitic infections in animals in the country, although it is used throughout Africa to treat people with river blindness and scabies. However, under pressure from doctors and patients, the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) announced late last week that it would allow doctors to apply to use it for COVID-19 patients on “compassionate grounds” via a complicated process. 

On Tuesday, following a court challenge by an organisation, Afriforum, a doctor and two patients, SAHPRA also agreed to allow doctors to use the medicine without waiting to be given permission. 

So far, over 500 doctors and health professionals have petitioned SAHPRA and President Cyril Ramaphosa to fast-track clinical trials and consideration of Ivermectin’s use on humans.

There is already widespread use of ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment – not only in South Africa, but throughout Latin America. Both Peru and Bolivia have already granted doctors permission to use it as a COVID-19 treatment.

But the head of the South African health minister’s advisory committee on COVID-19, Professor Salim Abdool Karim, said in a weekend media interview that  there was “no compelling case” to use ivermectin to treat COVID-19, available studies were “of really poor quality” and that “the amount of drug needed to kill the virus is toxic to humans”.

Last month, the US National Institutes for Health (NIH) held a special meeting to review data on the role of ivermectin in the prevention and treatment of COVID-19, and is considering the available data. 

Dr Andrew Hill from the University of Liverpool, who has been researching ivermectin for UNITAID and the World Health Organization (WHO), and representatives from the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance (FLCCC) presented the NIH with data from 18 randomized controlled trials involving over 2,100 patients, ranging from a 400-person, 5-day Egyptian study to 24-person one day study in Spain.

Small Studies Show Faster Viral Clearance, But Still Insufficient Evidence

Combined, these “demonstrated that ivermectin produces faster viral clearance, faster time to hospital discharge, faster time to clinical recovery, and a 75% reduction in mortality rates”, according to a press release from the FLCCC.

But Hill was cautious: “Many studies included were not peer-reviewed and meta-analyses are prone to confounding issues. Ivermectin should be validated in larger, appropriately controlled randomised trials before the results are sufficient for review by regulatory authorities.”

After the meeting, the NIH released a statement saying that there was “insufficient data to recommend either for or against the use of ivermectin for the treatment of COVID-19”. 

“Results from adequately powered, well-designed, and well-conducted clinical trials are needed to provide more specific, evidence-based guidance on the role of ivermectin for the treatment of COVID-19,” said the NIH.

Piero Olliaro, Professor of Infectious Diseases of Poverty at Oxford University’s Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, said: “There is experimental evidence from in-vitro studies that ivermectin has antiviral action against the SARS-CoV-2, but this requires giving humans doses which are much higher than those normally used for the current indications for ivermectin. So, the question is: will it be safe?”.

“A dose-escalating study of healthy adults given increasingly higher doses of ivermectin assessed for adverse events and the levels reached in blood with the different doses, concluded that it would be safe to give 10 times the highest FDA-approved dose of 200 micrograms per kilogram,” said Olliaro. “We need well-conducted, sufficiently-powered trials treating patients with increasing doses of ivermectin to see if a satisfactory compromise between efficacy and safety can be found”

So far, there are very few therapeutic options to treat COVID-19. Two drugs that were touted to be re-purposed as COVID-19 treatments – hydroxychloroquine and remdesivir – turned out not to be effective, despite hype from various health professionals.

There are currently over 50 trials on ivermectin at present involving over 7000 people, but it is hard to know whether any of these will provide the evidence needed to license ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19.

Image Credits: SA Police Service.

COVAX will begin shipping its COVID vaccinations to Africa this month.
COVAX will begin shipping its COVID-19 vaccine doses to Africa this month.

COVAX aims to start shipping nearly 90 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to the continent this month – in what will be Africa’s largest ever mass vaccination campaign, said WHO Regional Director for Africa Matshidiso Moeti at a press briefing Thursday.

COVAX has notified countries in Africa of the estimated dose allocation for the first phase of COVID-19 vaccine delivery, Moeti said. The global initiative is led by the World Health Organization (WHO), Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, and the Oslo-based Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI).

“Africa has watched other regions start COVID-19 vaccination campaigns from the side-lines for too long. This planned roll-out is a critical first step to ensuring the continent gets equitable access to vaccines,” said Moeti at the briefing. “We know no one will be safe until everyone is safe.”

AstraZeneca To Be Main COVAX Product Delivered For Now
AstraZeneca's COVID vaccine will be the bulk of the COVAX products shipped to Africa
AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine will be the bulk of the COVAX products shipped to Africa

The AstraZeneca/Oxford AZD1222 vaccine will comprise the bulk of the products to be shipped by COVAX. And that still remains subject to the vaccine being listed for emergency use by WHO. The organization is currently reviewing the vaccine and the outcome of the review is expected soon, WHO has said.

The AstraZeneca vaccine faced a setback yesterday when Swissmedic, the Swiss regulatory authority, gave it a thumbs down for the moment, saying that more evidence about efficacy was still needed.  At the same time the European Medicines Agency approved the vaccine last Friday – although half a dozen European Union countries have restricted the use of the vaccine in older people because data on people over the age of 55 was lacking in the vaccine’s Phase 3 clinical trials. At the same time, the United Kingdom, which was the first to give the vaccine regulatory approval, is rolling it out in older people.

COVAX notified countries through letters last week of their expected vaccine allocation.

Amid surging demand for COVID-19 vaccines, the initial allocations were based on a  “fair allocation strategy” developed by WHO, based around countries’ population, infrastructure readiness, mortality rates and trends, as well as and risks faced by health workers.

Initial Pfizer Vaccine Distribution To Countries That Can Handle Ultra-Cold Chain Requirement

In addition, around 320 000 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine have been allocated to four African countries -Cabo Verde, Rwanda, South Africa and Tunisia – which have more capacity to handle the vaccines ultra cold-chain requirement of storage at -70 C.

The Pfizer vaccine has received WHO Emergency Use Listing – and Pfizer’s CEO Albert Bourla recently offered 40 million vaccine doses to the Facility at-cost. Thirteen African countries submitted proposals for the vaccine, and were evaluated by a multi-agency committee based on the fair allocation criteria – as well as the vaccine’s ultra-cold chain needs.

“This announcement allows countries to fine-tune their planning for COVID-19 immunization campaigns. We urge African nations to ramp up readiness and finalize their national vaccine deployment plans. Regulatory processes, cold chain systems and distribution plans need to be in place to ensure vaccines are safely expedited from ports of entry to delivery. We can’t afford to waste a single dose,” said Dr Moeti.

The initial phase of 90 million doses to be delivered over the first half of 2021 will support countries to immunize 3% of the African population most in need of protection, including health workers and other vulnerable groups. As production capacity increases and more vaccines become available the aim is to vaccinate at least 20% of Africans by providing up to 600 million doses by the end of 2021.

To complement COVAX efforts, the African Union has secured 670 million vaccine doses for the continent which will be distributed in 2021 and 2022 as countries secure adequate financing. The African Export-Import Bank will facilitate payments by providing advance procurement commitment guarantees of up to US$2 billion to the manufacturers on behalf of countries.

Image Credits: GovernmentZA/Flickr, Tim Reckman/Flickr.

Sputnik V is 91.6% effective in all age groups and 100% effective against moderate and severe disease

News of the successful trial results of the Russian Sputnik vaccine, published on Wednesday by The Lancet has shored up the prospects of quick vaccine access for dozens of countries that have pinned their hopes on Russian or Chinese vaccine alternatives – as rich countries buy up the bulk of supplies of high-tech vaccines and new coronavirus variants supercharge transmission around the globe.

But for now, at least, the Russian vaccine has pulled far ahead of the Chinese candidates – not only in terms of price – USD$ 10 per dose – but also reported efficacy and safety – in the wake of the published Phase 3 trial results for the Sputnik vaccine. 

The study, which was based on almost 22,000 participants, found that Sputnik was safe, and 91.6 % effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 cases, trailing behind Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines by just a few percentage points. It was also effective in preventing severe COVID amongst clinical trial participants, which included a significant number of trial participants over the age of 60 and some even older than 80. The vaccine was developed by Russia’s Gamaleya National Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology.

The wave of interest comes at a time when large additional vaccine contributions by pharma companies based in rich countries to the international COVAX facility have failed to materialize. That has left many countries around the world scrambling on the open market for bilateral vaccine deals – sealed at uneven prices. 

Not incidentally, neither China nor Russia have so far offered any vaccines to the COVAX facility. 

Meanwhile, delivery timelines for AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines across high-income Europe have been delayed. Johnson and Johnson’s one-shot vaccine delivered lackluster results. And one of the world’s most storied vaccine-makers, Merck, recently reported that neither of its coronavirus vaccine candidates stimulates the immune system.

Not only are countries seeking quick access and affordability, they are also seeking alternatives that can be distributed to energy-strapped health facilities without the need for ultra-cold freezers, which is a requirement for Moderna’s and Pfizer’s expensive mRNA vaccines.

Russia’s Sputnik vaccine now seems to be checking all the right boxes. That makes it a significant alternative to the pricier and more temperature-sensitive mRNA vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer. 

If the clinical trial results published in The Lancet hold up to scrutiny, Sputnik’s results appear to be more robust, so far, than AstraZeneca’s already approved vaccine, not to mention the next Johnson & Johnson and Novavax vaccine candidates which are due to submit requests soon for US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulatory approval, and which are similarly affordable and easy to store – but with poorer efficacy results.  

President Putin announced Sputnik’s approval to Government members in August 2020

Many Factors Need to be Considered in Choosing a Vaccine 

“Many decisions need to be factored into selecting a vaccine as well as efficacy and safety,” Sheena Cruickshank, an immunologist at University of Manchester, told Health Policy Watch in an interview. “It’s important to think of the cost, storage, transport and feasibility of a vaccine too [so that] it can be readily administered in remote communities, without the need for refrigeration.”

Jens Spahn, Germany’s health minister has said that he saw no fundamental obstacle to the use of Russian or Chinese vaccines, if the vaccines were to be approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA). Sputnik has reportedly considered that – but not yet submitted a dossier. Spahn’s comment came against reports of worldwide distrust of Russian and Chinese vaccines, according to a recent poll by YouGov. 

As noted by Judy Twigg, global health expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, in a recent Op-Ed in the Moscow Times: “Sputnik V appears to be a sound vaccine, but Russia damaged its scientific credibility with premature and exaggerated claims of success.”

“Regardless of the country in which a vaccine is manufactured, if they are safe and effective, they can help cope with the pandemic,” Spahn told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper Sunday, adding that any vaccine would have to be approved by the EMA before being rolled out in the bloc.

Russia Squarely in the Competitive Ring – While China Muddying Waters With Propaganda Campaign  

Researcher prepares Sputnik V vaccine

While Russia’s often boastful marketing campaign, with the RDIF CEO referring to it as “the best vaccine in the world,” raised bristles – the decision to take the route of a peer reviewed publication means that the Sputnik vaccine has now placed itself squarely in the competitive ring of western countries. 

In contrast, results of the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine’s multi-country trials, reportedly yielding results of 79.3% – 86% efficacy, remain unpublished. 

A second Chinese vaccine, by Sinovac, also has failed to publish peer reviewed results.  Company announcements of Phase 3 results in four different countries have also yielded wildly varied efficacy scores ranging from 50.3% – 91.3%.  

The poor showing of Sinovac’s vaccine in Brazil was particularly disappointing; researchers at Brazil’s independent Butantan biomedical centre said the vaccine displayed a mediocre 50% efficacy result in the second interim analysis of a late-stage clinical trial in Brazil.  

China also has muddied the waters by launching its own propaganda campaign attacking the products of its western competitors. It has claimed that the shots by Pfizer and Moderna are ineffective, risky or even deadly. While the campaign by so-called “wolf warrior” diplomats was intended to reinforce the image of the Chinese home-brews, it may also undermine  confidence in the Chinese vaccines – even if they do ultimately show robust results. 

However, even if Chinese vaccines perform less well than others, if they can at least meet the WHO and US FDA baseline of 50% efficacy, they might still be a “really great thing to have” in regions that are “absolutely desperate,” says Hilda Bastian, a public health researcher at Australia’s Bond University.  

“When you’ve got communities that are absolutely desperate, and have no other choice, then this is a really great thing to have,” she told Nature, referring to China’s Sinovac candidate.

News on the Chinese vaccines is not all bad either. A recent preprint paper, which has not undergone peer review, suggests that Sinopharm’s vaccine held up well against a South African SARS-CoV2 variant (501Y.V2). In the analysis of blood samples from a dozen vaccinated participants, the vaccine’s neutralizing power was only reduced by a factor of 1.6 when it was exposed to the variant.

In comparison, a similar study by Moderna of blood samples tested against the same variant reported a sixfold reduction – although Moderna scientists have said that the vaccine is still effective: “Despite this reduction, neutralizing titer levels with B.1.351 remain above levels that are expected to be protective,”  Moderna’s Chief Scientist Tal Zaks told a recent investors’ session. 

  

First shipment of Sinopharm vaccine reached Peru for clinical trials in September last year

More Than 50 Nations Have Eyed Russian Vaccine & 24 Have Requested Two Chinese Vaccines 

According to the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which is marketing the Sputnik vaccine abroad, some fifty countries have already requested over 1.2 billion doses of the Sputnik vaccine.

Meanwhile, at least 24 countries have sealed deals with Sinovac and Sinopharm’s leading vaccine candidate, BBIBP-CorV, co-developed with the Beijing Institute of Biological Products. Like Sputnik, both can be stored in a conventional refrigerator. 

Together, Sinopharm and Sinovac aim to produce two billion doses this year, which is on par with the total number of doses that the international COVAX facility hopes to supply to countries in need this year – although neither company has offered COVAX any vaccine supplies.    

Summary of features of Sputnik, Sinovac and Sinopharm vaccine. (HPW/Svet Lustig)

Sputnik’s Technology Delivers A Double Whammy   

Sinovac’s vaccine reaches Brazil’s Sao Paolo airport

Sputnik’s vaccine technology relies on a chemically crippled common cold virus to deliver double-stranded DNA that codes for the SARS-CoV2 spike protein, sparking an immune reaction.

According to RDIF’s CEO, this platform represents a safe bet compared to novel delivery strategies that have never been tested in humans, like AstraZeneca’s use of a monkey adenovirus or even Pfizer’s and Moderna’s mRNA technologies.

Another feature that sets Sputnik apart from other adenoviral vaccines is its delivery strategy. Instead of delivering the same virus in both shots, Sputnik consists of two distinct adenoviruses to prime and then boost the immune response. 

“Its clever design bases its two doses on different viral vectors, in principle producing a strong, long-term immune response,” noted Twigg in her recent op-ed.

Its’ advocates claim this might help it achieve longer-lasting protection against the coronavirus – but this has yet to be demonstrated, particularly for older people and those with chronic diseases – “seems promising, however, we await to see what happens in people over 60 with underlying conditions,” observed Tracy Hussell, a University of Manchester immunologist.

At the same time, AstraZeneca hopes to take advantage of this method to bolster its own vaccine with a “booster” shot of Sputnik.

Important Data Still Missing For Sputnik 

Russian military personnel receives Sputnik V vaccine

Despite the recent fanfare around the Lancet publication of Sputnik results, important data is still missing from the Sputnik file. Preclinical data, including from animal trials, remains unpublished and some of those trials may be methodologically flawed, Cruickshank from the University of Manchester has said.

In these studies, Sputnik reportedly conferred a protection of “100%” after hamsters and marmosets were injected with a large quantity of SARS-CoV-2 virus. 

And although other Phase I/II trial data was also published in The Lancet, it was met with rebuke for its open-label methodology, failure to randomize patients, and exclusion of women and older people – all of which may have overestimated Sputnik’s performance, noted Cruickshank. 

While the chief author of The Lancet piece, Gamaleya’s Denis Logunov, has acknowledged these shortcomings, in an interview with Health Policy Watch, he stressed that ongoing Phase III trials that are larger and more robust should help answer these questions. 

Apart from the late-stage trial in Russia, others are underway in over 40,000 participants in the UAE, Egypt, Venezuela, Belarus and India.

Prices Also Make Sputnik and AstraZeneca Most Accessible For Now 

Vaccine prices per dose based on developer, compiled from various sources. (HPW/Svet Lustig)

What is clear for now is that AstraZeneca and Sputnik vaccines seem to be the most accessible to low- and middle-income countries. At USD$3 per dose, AstraZeneca’s vaccine produced by India’s Serum Institute, is still three times cheaper than Sputnik, which is priced at USD$10 per dose. Nonetheless, Sputnik’s has become more competitive after Uganda agreed to pay USD$7 per dose – USD$14 for two doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, plus another USD$3 for shipping. 

In comparison, prices of Chinese vaccines are extremely high – at least officially. Sinovac’s vaccine is officially priced at USD$30 per dose and Sinopharm’s vaccine at USD$70 per dose.  

That makes Sinopharm’s vaccine more than twice as expensive as those from Pfizer and Moderna, eight times more than Sputnik – and twenty times more than AstraZeneca. Thus, unless Chinese vaccine-makers reduce their prices for low- and middle-income countries, they may fail to make a dent into existing vaccine vacuums.

Sputnik: Distribution Plans See Expansion Beyond Russia   

Kirill Dmitriev, head of the RDIF

So far, Russia has used its supply of Sputnik to vaccinate over a million Russians, less than 1% of its population of 144 million. Meanwhile, Argentina has already vaccinated 300,000 people. 

As a next stage, the RDIF plans to begin exporting the vaccine, Dmitriev told Health Policy Watch in a November interview. Local production of the vaccine has already begun in India, South Korea, Brazil, China, and is set to begin in Kazakhstan and Belarus – although Turkey and Iran are also expected to produce the vaccine, said Dmitriev on Tuesday.

“Our strategy right now is that most of the vaccines produced in Russia will be used for the Russian market…hopefully within a year, we could start exporting our vaccine also to the rest of the world…to satisfy the demand across the globe,” he said last year. 

So far, the vaccine has been approved by 18 regulatory agencies across the world, including: Turkmenistan, Belarus, Serbia, Hungary, Nicaragua, Mexico, Venezuela, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Palestine, UAE, Iran, Republic of Guinea, Tunisia, Algeria and Armenia. In the wake of The Lancet publication, up to 26 countries are expected to approve the vaccine, said Dmietriev at the press conference on Tuesday.

Countries that have struck firm deals with RDIF include:

Country Deal Source
Argentina Has bought 10 million doses. Reuters
Bolivia Has bought 5.2 million doses. RDIF
Brazil Plans to produce 150 million doses in 2021. RDIF
Guinea Has bought 2 million doses Africa News
India Plans to manufacture 100 million doses a year. Reuters
Kazakhstan Plans for domestic production of 2 million doses in 2021 RDIF
Mexico Has bought 24 million doses. Reuters

Israel, a high-income country that has already vaccinated a fifth of its population and almost three quarters of people over 70, has also eyed Sputnik. Zeev Rotstein, the head of Israel’s Hadassah Medical Center, has asked the Ministry of Health to purchase one million vaccine doses. 

“The diversification of vaccine sources is the kind of policy that we feel is important,” Rotstein said in an interview with Health Policy Watch in mid-November. Although Israel has since rolled out its campaign almost exclusively around the Pfizer vaccine – Rotstein has continued to tell the media that the Sputnik vaccine can remain a useful alternative – either domestically or for use in the hospital’s Russian medical center affiliate.

Right next door, the Palestinian Authority has approved the Sputnik vaccine and is expecting delivery of the first 50,000 doses this month, followed by AstraZeneca vaccines in mid-March. It has also received 5,000 Pfizer vaccines from Israel immediately for front-line health workers. There had, however, been some hesitancy around the use of the Sputnik vaccine – which the peer reviewed results may now help to dissipate.   

Sinovac –  Struck Deals for over 380 Million Doses  – Even Though Most Recent Trials Had Poor Showings

Healthcare worker in Chile opens up Sinovac vaccine

Among all of the vaccines under development, including Sputnik, the technology being used in the Chinese vaccines is also the oldest. It is based on a century-old practice in which an “inactivated” strain of the SARS-CoV-2 that cannot replicate in human cells is injected into the body, says the WHO. 

Even so, the research institutions backing the vaccines are not unknown to the west.  One of the two Chinese vaccines is being developed by Sinovac, a firm that has successfully marketed a WHO-approved hepatitis vaccine.  

In late December, Sinovac proudly announced an efficacy of 91.3% in a Turkish trial, but since then, the vaccine’s performance has consistently gone downhill. Subsequent trials yielded 78% in Brazil, 65.3% in Indonesia – and most disappointingly – 50.3% in a second Brazilian trial. 

If Sinovac’s vaccine efficacy dips below 50%, it would fail to hold up to the WHO’s and FDA’s minimum efficacy threshold. And it could become even less useful against novel coronavirus variants that are already undermining the best vaccines that currently available – as per indicative results from studies and trials by Moderna, Pfizer and Novavax. 

Some experts, however, have floated the idea that Brazil’s second interim analysis included more people with milder infections than in the first, thus reducing its efficacy. They also noted that Brazil’s trial of 12,000 people – the largest so far – exclusively recruited healthcare workers that are more likely to report mild infections, in comparison to other trials that recruited members of the general public, like those in Turkey or Indonesia. 

In her interview with Health Policy Watch, Cruickshank observed that background infection rates in the country is another factor: 

“It’s important to consider how common the disease is in the area where trials are carried out…If there is little virus in an area then fewer people may contract disease to assess how well a vaccine works.”

The Sinovac analyses also varied in terms of the time interval between the administration of the first and second vaccine doses – which may have also affected efficacy, said a spokesman from Sinovac. And a small sub-group of the last Brazilian trial, which received their vaccine doses 3 weeks apart, showed a higher efficacy (70%) than the larger group in which the vaccine was 50% efficacious – after receiving shots 2 weeks apart.  

In total, about 30,000 participants are still taking part in late-stage trials in Chile, Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia and China. If results from those trials are analysed transparently – then some of the outstanding questions will be answered. 

Despite the mixed results, the Sinovac vaccine has been approved for emergency use in China, which has vaccinated 7 million citizens, as well as Turkey, where 1.3 million people have been vaccinated, Indonesia, where 15,000 people have been vaccinated, and Chile. 

And Sinovac has already struck deals for over 380 million doses with a dozen countries, including Indonesia, Brazil and Turkey, among other countries. 

The number of Sinovac doses ordered across the top 10 countries, compiled from various sources. (HPW/Svet Lustig)

Sinopharm Sealed Deals With At Least Six Countries in Latin America, Middle East & Europe 

In June last year, Governor of São Paulo João Doria announced a partnership between Sinovac and it’s Butantan Institute

Despite its price, Sinopharm has already sealed deals with Argentina, Jordan, Morocco, Hungary, Serbia and Pakistan – which first bought 1.2 million doses outright and later received half a million additional doses as a “gift” from China.

In terms of approval, China already approved Sinopharm’s vaccine for the general public late last year, and plans to extend it to minors by March. Outside China, countries that have already approved it include Argentina, Peru, Bahrain, Egypt, Hungary, Iraq, Jordan, Pakistan, Peru Republic of Serbia, Seychelles, and the United Arab Emirates, according to McGill’s COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker. And recently, the UAE extended the vaccine’s use to people aged 60 and above.

With respect to vaccinations, one million Chinese citizens have already been inoculated with Sinopharm’s vaccine; outside China, inoculations have begun in the UAE, and further vaccination campaigns are set to begin in Egypt as well as Serbia, which became the first European country to receive doses of a Chinese vaccine last week.

Sinopharm  – Efficacy, Safety & Clinical Trials 

In a similar vein, Sinopharm’s vaccine has also puzzled scientists, with an efficacy of 79.3% in China and 86% in the UAE. 

Like Sinovac, Sinopharm has tried to reassure the world that both efficacy results are “real” and “valid,” explaining that countries have distinct case definitions for COVID-19, thus affecting national estimates of efficacy. 

“Because the standards of diagnosis of infection cases and the review process of Phase III clinical trial vary in different countries, the 86% efficacy rate announced by UAE and 79.34% by China are both real and valid,” the firm said in a press release. 

In total, some 66,000 volunteers from 125 nations are taking part in the company’s late stage clinical trials, including Argentina, Peru, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, according to McGill’s vaccine tracker.

WHO Prequalification For Chinese & Russian Vaccines Another Route Of Approval   

In light of the results reported in The Lancet, the next question is whether the Sputnik vaccine might be submitted to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for regulatory approval.

Meanwhile, however, Gamaleya has submitted a dossier to WHO for “prequalification” of the Sputnik vaccine on WHO’s “Emergency Use Listing” – an avenue that offers another acceptable route to approval by a global health authority.  

Sinopharm and Sinovac also have submitted files to WHO, and these are currently under review as well, WHO officials said in late January.   

“We have full dossiers from three other drug companies right now, Sinopharm, Sinovac, and the Serum Institute of India and they are under assessment,” said WHO’s Dr Mariangela Simao, Assistant Director-General for Access to Medicines, who said the real time status of WHO review and approval for all vaccines can be tracked on the WHO’s website

“We have a mission in China right now, to do the inspections in Sinopharm, in Sinovac,” she added.

Still, for now, “nothing” can be said about the potential of these vaccines before vaccine makers reveal the datasets, warned Jarbas Barbosa in January, who is the assistant director of the WHO’s Regional Office of the Americas/Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), noting that neither the Russian nor the Chinese vaccine-makers have publicly released late stage clinical trial results – although they recently submitted their vaccine dossiers to WHO for review. 

“We only can say something about these vaccines when we reveal this data, before that we cannot say nothing based on press releases from the producers,” PAHO’s Jarbas Barbosa told Health Policy Watch at a press conference in January.

If WHO Pre-Approves Sputnik, Sinopharm & Sinovac – Will they Really Donate To COVAX? 

WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus

WHO’s director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghrebreyesus also recently warned member states against the purchase of vaccines that have not been approved by a strict regulatory authority.  

“We call on all countries introducing vaccines to only use vaccines that meet rigorous international standards for safety, efficacy and quality, and to accelerate readiness for deployment,” said Tedros, where he also called out rich countries for hoarding doses and vaccine producers for failing to provide WHO with timely data on vaccine efficacy. 

The WHO’s “prequalification” of a vaccine would also clear the way for the global COVAX facility, co-sponsored by WHO, to buy the vaccines in bulk. The COVAX initiative, also co-sponsored by UNICEF and Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, aims to distribute 2.3 billion vaccines following a new contribution from Pfizer. 

“What’s important to understand is that pre-qualification is done, so that the international organizations such as UNICEF and others are comfortable with vaccines and able to purchase them,” David Heymann, former WHO assistant director for Health Security and professor at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, told Health Policy Watch. “So if a vaccine doesn’t have a pre-qualification from WHO, it won’t be bought by organizations like GAVI or UNICEF.”

The initiative, designed to bolster equitable access to vaccines, is one that both Russia and China profess to support. In a global market where vaccine nationalism is running rampant – it remains to be seen if, in the event that Russia’s Sputnik, and China’s Sinopharm and Sinovac are greenlit by COVAX – whether they will follow the example of AstraZeneca and Pfizer – and offer their vaccines to the global market in bulk and at cost.  

Vijay Shankar contributed significant reporting on Sputnik.  

Image Credits: RDIF, Kremlin, Peruvian Ministry of External Affairs, São Paulo State Government, Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation, World Economic Forum, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, State of Sao Paolo, WHO / Christopher Black .