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March 25, 2024
BioNTech CEO on vaccine approval: It's the start of the end of the pandemic

US Covid-19 vaccine authorization is ‘a most important milestone,’ BioNTech CEO says

“This is a most important milestone,” Sahin told CNN in an exclusive interview. “I am really happy that we had such a good meeting and the FDA authorized the vaccine so that we are able to make our vaccine available to the US population.”

The FDA authorized the vaccine late Friday night after its advisers recommended the go-ahead. The US follows several other countries in authorizing the vaccine, including Britain, which has already immunized at least 2,000 people.

The EUA was lightning fast by US regulatory standards — especially for a vaccine using new technology.

BioNTech’s vaccine uses messenger RNA, genetic material that codes for a piece of the virus’s spike protein — the outside hook that attaches to the cells the virus attacks. This mRNA prompts the human body to produce little pieces of the protein, and then produce an immune response against it.

Clinical trials in more than 40,000 people showed it was 95% effective in preventing symptomatic disease.

“The most important result is that we expect that the vaccinated people will have a much lower risk of hospitalization. So that means we expect a lower risk of hospitalizations in the US,” Sahin said.

“We will not have a direct impact on the pandemic spread in the next few months since we need of course to reach a large proportion of the population to reduce the speed of the outbreak.”

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Pfizer has only been able to produce a few million doses for the US so far, so it will not immediately affect the pandemic, Sahin said. But after more people get vaccinated, the effects will kick in, he predicted.

“It could start depending on how fast we can do the roll out and depending also when other companies join us,” he said. “It could happen at the beginning of March, middle of March, end of March to see the first effects. And I hope that with the spring season we will have by nature a lower rate of infections. And the combination of both might help us to have a better summer than the situation is now.”

Allergic reactions

US vaccine advisers who discussed the EUA were worried about reports of allergic reactions to the vaccine — at least two in Britain — as well as reports that about 9% of people who received the shots in clinical trials suffered reactions including headache, fever and muscle aches that lasted as long as two days.

“Actually this is something which is well-known,” Sahin said.

“So people with a known anaphylactic reaction are known to be at risk for vaccination with any type of vaccine. So this is not a big surprise and there must be precautions. And one of the most important precautions is really that vaccination happens under the control of a physician,” he added.

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“So if severe reactions happen, the physician can react — can provide, for example, corticosteroids. And this happened exactly in the United Kingdom. The two participants recovered after getting corticosteroids and treatment, adrenaline treatment. And the most important thing is to understand the risk profile of the individual subject and then decide on a case-by-case basis whether the vaccine should be applied or not.”

Sahin said he was confident BioNTech and Pfizer had chosen the safest vaccine candidate out of a batch of possibilities.

“The safety data shows that this is a vaccine like any other anti-viral vaccine with a benign safety profile, mild and moderate side effects. Typical side effects are pain at the injection site, fever and headache in a proportion of participants. And based on the study we can say that this is a safe and highly effective vaccine,” he said.

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Some people have also worried that because the vaccine employs messenger RNA, it could somehow permanently affect a person’s genetic makeup.

“This will not happen; mRNA does not interfere and change the DNA,” Sahin said. “This is a well-known issue. It is a molecule which is transient. It is in most cells only in the cytoplasm and it degraded rapidly. So this is not a justified fear.”

Long-lasting protection?

One question that has yet to be answered is how long the vaccine can protect people for.

“This is important. How long the immunity lasts depends on two things: one is the vaccine itself, but on the other side also the virus,” Sahin said.

“We know that the virus tends to have a higher likelihood for reinfection in people who have not generated antibodies. And we also know that the antibody status required to neutralize this virus are relatively high. So that means we have to see how long the antibody response that is generated by our vaccine (lasts) — and we know that the antibody titers are high, but we now have to monitor that three months, six months, nine months, 12 months. We have three months’ data showing that the antibody titer is relatively stable but we will continue to monitor this.”

Questions also remain over vaccine production. Pfizer had hoped to have hundreds of millions of doses produced by now, but has far fewer.

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“We have planned to produce up to 1.3 billion doses in 2021,” Sahin said.

“And now understanding that more doses might be required, we started a few weeks ago to evaluate if we can produce more doses. And this of course means that we need to understand the constraints.

“For example, the availability of raw materials, the availability of machines, of production rooms, and of fill and finish capacity. And this is exactly happening. And I anticipate that end of January we will be able to clearly state if we can produce more doses and if yes, how many more doses.”

Sahin said the demand is there.

“This is needed. We anticipate that need, the worldwide need for our vaccine, is much higher than we initially estimated, since some of the vaccines that were planned for 2021 will come later,” he said,