CDC distribution roadmap, safety oversight plans, and other takeaways from FDA’s big COVID-19 vaccine meeting - ExBulletin

In less than a year, scientists around the world have rallied against COVID-19 and developed promising vaccines that could stem the pandemic. Concerns remain, however, and, against this backdrop, senior government experts took over Thursday to discuss vaccine safety and efficacy requirements, distribution plans and confidence.

Group Of Independent Experts To Advise FDA On Coronavirus Vaccine Approval - WUWM Milwaukee

It's up to the Food and Drug Administration to decide whether a COVID-19 vaccine is safe and effective enough for public distribution. Today, the agency convened a group of independent experts to offer advice on the way forward. NPR science correspondent Joe Palca has been listening in on that meeting, and he joins us now to talk about it. Hi, Joe.

JOE PALCA, BYLINE: Hi, Ari.

SHAPIRO: So I understand these committees are usually asked to provide advice about a specific product, but that's not the case with today's meeting. Explain what's happening.

FOUR TAKEAWAYS FROM THE FIRST COVID ADCOMM - POLITICO Prescription Pulse

The much-anticipated, nine-hour initial public meeting of FDA’s advisory committee on vaccines broached diversity in clinical trials, when placebo patients should get the real thing and how to counteract sinking public confidence in the government and vaccines.

This was the first of what will be a string of Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee meetings, with future ones centered on specific shots.

Here are the highlights:

Core Concept: The pandemic is prompting widespread use—and misuse—of real-world data - PNAS

COVID-19 has swept across the world, overwhelming healthcare systems and raising countless questions about how best to diagnose patients, treat infections, save lives, and contain the pandemic. In short order, researchers have launched randomized trials to uncover pharmacologic interventions that hold the promise of preventing or lessening the severity of the disease. But getting results takes time. And time was a luxury that doctors on the frontlines of the coronavirus fight could ill afford in the early months of the pandemic.

FDA study finds fear and distrust among front-line workers and minority groups around COVID-19 vaccines - Fierce Pharma

Powerful, illuminating and sobering—that’s the description from a research group summing up its initial listening sessions with front-line workers and minority groups about a vaccine.

Tasked with tapping key audiences to learn their questions and concerns about a COVID-19 vaccine—and determine how the FDA might best respond—the nonprofit Reagan-Udall Foundation for the FDA is currently in listening mode on the project, CEO Susan Winckler said.

What to expect from the official COVID-19 vaccine committee - ABC News

As the race for an effective COVID-19 vaccine continues, the public will get inside look at one a crucial part of the Food and Drug Administration's decision-making process: the first meeting of its normally obscure advisory committee.

Never before has much attention been paid this small group of vaccine experts whose job is to advise the FDA on whether a new vaccine should be green lighted.

 

FDA Applauds Role of Clinical Trials in Fighting COVID-19 - The Association of Clinical Research Professionals

“Clinical trials are critical” in the battle against the global COVID-19 pandemic, Amy Abernathy, principal deputy commissioner and acting CIO of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), told attendees of the Veeva R&D and Quality Summit on Tuesday (October 13).