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1.
Vaccine ; 40(9): 1215-1222, 2022 02 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35180993

RESUMO

The COVID-19 pandemic has shown itself to be an unprecedented challenge for vaccines which are widely recognized as the most important tool to exit this pandemic. We have witnessed vaccine scientists, developers, manufacturers, and stakeholders deliver several vaccines in just about a year. This is an unprecedented achievement in an environment that was not ready to manage such a global public health crisis. Indeed, the pandemic has highlighted some hurdles that need to be addressed in the system in order to streamline the regulatory processes and be in a situation where life-saving pharmaceutical solutions such as vaccines can be delivered quickly and equitably to people across the globe. More precisely, trade-offs had to be made between the need for regulatory flexibility in the requirements for manufacturing and controls to enable rapid availability of large volumes of vaccines vs the increased stringency and the lack of harmonization in the regulatory environment for vaccines globally. It is also characterized by a high heterogeneity in terms of review and approval processes, limiting equitable and timely access. We review and highlight the challenges relating to several topics, including process validation, comparability, stability, post-approval-changes, release testing, packaging, genetically modified organisms and variants. We see four areas for accelerating access to vaccines which provide solutions for the regulatory concerns, (1) science- and risk-based approaches, (2) global regulatory harmonization, (3) use of reliance, work-sharing, and recognition processes and (4) digitalization. These solutions are not new and have been previously highlighted. In recent months, we have seen some progress at the health authority level, but still much needs to be done. It is now time to reflect on the first lessons learnt from a devastating pandemic to ultimately ensure quick and wide access to medicines and vaccines for the citizens and patients.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Vacinas , Humanos , Pandemias/prevenção & controle , Saúde Pública , SARS-CoV-2
2.
Vaccine ; 40(9): 1223-1230, 2022 02 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35180994

RESUMO

Vaccine discovery and vaccination against preventable diseases are one of most important achievements of the human race. While medical, scientific & technological advancements have kept in pace and found their way into treatment options for a vast majority of diseases, vaccines as a prevention tool in the public health realm are found languishing in the gap between such innovations and their easy availability/accessibility to vulnerable populations. This paradox has been best highlighted during the unprecedented crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of a two series publication on the vaccine industry's view on how to accelerate the availability of vaccines worldwide, this paper offers a deep dive into detailed proposals to enable this objective. These first-of-its-kind technical proposals gleaned from challenges and learnings from the COVID-19 pandemic are applicable to vaccines that are already on the market for routine pathogens as well as for production of new(er) vaccines for emerging pathogens with a public health threat potential. The technical proposals offer feasible and sustainable solutions in pivotal areas such as process validation, comparability, stability, post-approval changes, release testing, packaging, genetically modified organisms and variants, which are linked to manufacturing and quality control of vaccines. Ultimately these proposals aim to ease high regulatory complexity and heterogeneity surrounding the manufacturing & distribution of vaccines, by advocating the use of (1) Science and Risk based approaches, (2) global regulatory harmonization, (3) use of reliance, work-sharing, and recognition processes and (4) digitalization. Capitalizing & collaborating on such new-world advancements into the science of vaccines will eventually benefit the world by turning vaccines into vaccination, ensuring the health of everyone.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Vacinas , Humanos , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2 , Vacinação
3.
Vaccine ; 39(5): 790-796, 2021 01 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33422378

RESUMO

Vaccines continue to play a central role in our ability to prevent disease, save lives, and improve health. The scientific community, including our own researchers, are driven by a shared purpose to improve vaccine technologies and bring the benefits of immunization to everyone, regardless of where they live - as soon as possible, especially when the medical need is considerable. Vaccine developers and manufacturers (sometimes referred to as "study sponsors" or "applicants") are exploring technological advancements to translate breakthrough discoveries into novel vaccines which have the potential to provide protection from life-threatening and debilitating infectious diseases. Developing new vaccines is a lengthy process regulated by guidance provided by independent organizations, National Regulatory Authorities (NRAs) and the World Health Organization. As most infectious diseases can span a considerable area of the world, clinical trials are often conducted across different countries and regions. Regulatory requirements for clinical trials (both Chemistry Manufacturing & Controls - CMC, nonclinical and clinical) vary significantly between the different countries and regions adding to the complexity of vaccine development and leading to significant delays in the development of novel vaccines and ultimately equitable access for populations to these innovations. Without progress in terms of regulatory convergence and harmonization the benefits from these scientific advancements will not be fully realized. There is an urgent need by global bodies such as WHO to partner with and the NRAs to establish and implement.


Assuntos
Saúde Global , Vacinas , Organizações , Vacinação , Organização Mundial da Saúde
4.
Vaccine X ; 6: 100075, 2020 Dec 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32995745

RESUMO

A comparison of the regulations and guidelines from 33 countries, across different regions, on the requirements and procedures for the management of chemical, manufacturing and control (CMC) changes for vaccines, also known as post- approval changes (PACs), reveals significant variability and lack of predictability of timelines for regulatory review and approval. These shortcomings imply that multiple data packages have to be prepared for submission to different authorities, generating a complex regulatory environment. Moreover, the timelines for approval by individual national regulatory authorities are variable, which results in manufacturers keeping various stocks of vaccines produced in accordance with the various approved specifications and procedures, in the different countries. This can seriously affect timely availability of vaccine in those countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on procedures and data requirements for changes to approved vaccines provide a consensual framework for alignment, but are still underused. Reliance on both the review and approval by the regulatory authority in the country of manufacturing, or on the review performed by other national regulatory authorities, recognized by WHO as stringent, or on WHO prequalification dossier, offer alternative ways forward. These and other options to improve the management of post-approval changes during the product lifecycle of vaccines are discussed in this report, and aimed at improving guidelines alignment and regulatory convergence to advance immunization equity and coverage.

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