WASHINGTON (AP) - The Trump administration’s effort to impose new requirements on Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccine - the nation’s only traditional protein-based option for the coronavirus - is sowing uncertainty about updates to other vaccines, too.
FDA scrutiny of Novavax COVID-19 vaccine sparks uncertainty about other shots
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Trump administration’s effort to impose new requirements on Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccine - the nation’s only traditional protein-based option for the coronavirus - is sowing uncertainty about updates to other vaccines, too.
Novavax said Monday that the Food and Drug Administration was asking the company to run a new clinical trial of its vaccine after the agency grants full approval. The company said it had responded and that it believed its shot remains "approvable."
But a weekend post on social media by FDA Commissioner Marty Makary suggested the prospect of needing a new trial before the shots’ yearly strain update - something unlikely to be possible before fall. That’s raised questions about whether other vaccines will be caught in the turmoil.
"I don't think because there's a strain change that this is a new product," said Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University, a former FDA vaccine chief. If that's the new policy, "you'd always be doing clinical trials and you'd never have a vaccine that was up to date."