Operation Warp Speed

Operation Warp Speed’s opaque choices of COVID-19 vaccines draw Senate scrutiny

Science’s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center.

The leaders of Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration’s well-funded project to develop COVID-19 vaccines at record speed, have said they are running a transparent project. They have bristled at critics who say they make major decisions behind closed doors. But at a Senate subcommittee hearing today that focused on Warp Speed, scientists at the front of the effort, after repeated questioning, gave limited answers about the vaccine candidates they have chosen as frontrunners in the race and their selection criteria.

At the opening of the hearing—held by the Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies—Senator Patty Murray (D–WA) put the witnesses on notice that she wanted straightforward answers on many issues. “We’re going to need to hold this administration accountable to avoid repeating mistakes and delays,” Murray said. “The administration still has not provided any explanation of how it is selecting vaccine candidates, what the risks are of narrowing down that shortlist or addressed concerns about potential conflicts in contracts that predate this crisis.”

The administration’s three witnesses are the heads of different branches of the Department of Health and Human Services. Senator Tammy Baldwin (D–WI) asked Gary Disbrow, who oversees Warp Speed vaccine investments as the acting director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), about the vaccines in the program’s portfolio. “Can you just quickly list for me the vaccine prospects that are being invested in right now?” Baldwin asked. (In May, Warp Speed revealed it had selected 14 candidates and planned to advance  “about eight” to clinical trials;  a New York Times article on 3 June that cited senior administration officials said that list had been whittled down to five.)

“I cannot specifically mention the companies,” Disbrow said. “We’re in active negotiations with many of them.” He named only AstraZeneca, which the administration revealed in May had been awarded a BARDA contract that could total up to $1.2 billion. He did not mention that BARDA had earlier made public two other major contracts with COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna, that could total nearly $500 million each.

“So those company names in terms of the vaccine prospects are not public?” Baldwin asked.

Disbrow replied only that BARDA has made public its other COVID-19 vaccine investments. “I think your specific question may be the composition of the portfolio under Operation Warp Speed,” he said. “That I cannot today talk about, but we are very quickly moving and negotiating contracts.”

When Baldwin asked how many candidates Warp Speed ultimately would select, Disbrow said, “More than one.” He laughed and apologized. “I’m sorry, it really is procurement sensitive,” Disbrow added, stressing that the stock market is affected by these negotiations. “You will see the press releases when we award these contracts.”

Another witness, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Francis Collins, said a group of vaccine experts his agency convened to work with Warp Speed did a scientific review of 50 candidate COVID-19 vaccines. This review has not been made public, and NIH did not reply to a request for a copy. Members of that group have also expressed surprise at some of Warp Speed’s choices.

Collins did mention that NIH has collaborated on the development of the Moderna vaccine, noting that, “This month, we plan to launch a Phase 3 clinical trial that will seek to enroll 30,000 volunteers with results expected in a few months.” No date has been announced for the start of the trial, and Moderna says it cannot reveal that information because of regulations about publicly traded companies. (Based on anonymous sources, STAT today reported the trial was “delayed” from a 9 July start date previously suggested by a university working with Moderna, but the company had never confirmed more than that the trial would begin this month.)

At the outset of the hearing, Murray noted she had concerns about why BARDA “has chosen to invest solely in vaccine technologies that have only been studied experimentally and never made it to market, while not pursuing older proven technologies.” Murray was referring BARDA’s funding for vaccines that either synthetically produce the surface protein of SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen that causes COVID-19, or deliver the gene for it into a person’s body. Moderna, for example, injects an RNA form of the gene, a method that has not yet produced an approved vaccine.

Several Chinese companies, in contrast, have developed vaccines that “kill,” or inactivate, the entire, intact virus. Inactivated vaccines have a long track record, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved them for use against many diseases. But in 1955, an infamous accident—known as the Cutter incident—involving an inactivated poliovirus vaccine made by Jonas Salk harmed some children who received it. Although no inactivated polio vaccine has had that problem again, Senator Dick Durbin (D–IL), who said he was concerned about maintaining the “confidence of the American people of the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine,” asked Collins about the Cutter incident. “I could reassure you and the American people that that strategy of trying to administer a killed vaccine is not currently being pursued for SARS-CoV-2 because of those risks,” Collins said, emphasizing that the vaccines Warp Speed and NIH are considering are not made from intact viruses.

Durbin asked Collins, Disbrow, and the third witness, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield, whether any felt political pressure from the White House or other agency in terms of the selection of vaccine companies or the timing of vaccine development. They each answered no.

Last month, in testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, General Gustave Perna, a co-leader of Operation Warp Speed, said that he would not work with China on a vaccine. So far, four of the 18 candidate COVID-19 vaccines that have entered clinical trials are inactivated products made in China. Three of those are slated to start phase III trials

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 16, 2020
Contact: HHS Press Office
202-690-6343
media@hhs.gov

Fact Sheet: Explaining Operation Warp Speed

What’s the goal?

Operation Warp Speed (OWS) aims to deliver 300 million doses of a safe, effective vaccine for COVID-19 by January 2021, as part of a broader strategy to accelerate the development, manufacturing, and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics (collectively known as countermeasures).

How will the goal be accomplished?

By investing in and coordinating countermeasure development, OWS will allow countermeasures such as a vaccine to be delivered to patients more rapidly while adhering to standards for safety and efficacy.

Who’s working on it?

OWS is a partnership among components of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), and the Department of Defense (DoD). OWS engages with private firms and other federal agencies, including the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Veterans Affairs. It will coordinate existing HHS-wide efforts, including the NIH’s Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV) partnership, NIH’s Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) initiative, and work by BARDA.

What’s the plan and what’s happened so far?

Development: To accelerate development while maintaining standards for safety and efficacy, OWS has been selecting the most promising countermeasure candidates and providing coordinated government support.

Protocols for the demonstration of safety and efficacy are being aligned, which will allow the trials to proceed more quickly, and the protocols for the trials will be overseen by the federal government, as opposed to traditional public-private partnerships, in which pharmaceutical companies decide on their own protocols. Rather than eliminating steps from traditional development timelines, steps will proceed simultaneously, such as starting manufacturing of the vaccine at industrial scale well before the demonstration of vaccine efficacy and safety as happens normally. This increases the financial risk, but not the product risk.

Select actions to support OWS vaccine development so far include:

  • March 30: HHS announced $456 million in funds for Johnson & Johnson’s candidate vaccine, with Phase 1 clinical trials set to begin this summer.
  • April 16: HHS made exit disclaimer icon up to $483 million in support available for Moderna’s candidate vaccine, which began Phase 1 trials on March 16 and received a fast-track designation from FDA.
  • May 21: HHS announced up to $1.2 billion in support for AstraZeneca’s candidate vaccine, developed in conjunction with the University of Oxford. The agreement is to make available at least 300 million doses of the vaccine for the United States, with the first doses delivered as early as October 2020 and Phase 3 clinical studies beginning this summer with approximately 30,000 volunteers in the United States.

As announced on May 15, the vaccine development plan is as follows, subject to change as work proceeds:

  • Fourteen promising candidates have been chosen from the 100+ vaccine candidates currently in development—some of them already in clinical trials with U.S. government support.
  • The 14 vaccine candidates are being narrowed down to about seven candidates, representing the most promising candidates from a range of technology options, which will go through further testing in early-stage clinical trials.
  • Large-scale randomized trials for the demonstration of safety and efficacy will proceed for the most promising candidates.

Manufacturing: The federal government is making investments in the necessary manufacturing capacity at its own risk, giving firms confidence that they can invest aggressively in development and allowing faster distribution of an eventual vaccine. Manufacturing capacity for selected candidates will be advanced while they are still in development, rather than scaled up after approval or authorization. Manufacturing capacity developed will be used for whatever vaccine is eventually successful, if possible given the nature of the successful product, regardless of which firms have developed the capacity.

Select actions to support OWS manufacturing efforts so far include:

  • The May 21, April 16, and March 30 HHS agreements with AstraZeneca, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson respectively include investments in manufacturing capabilities.
  • June 1: HHS announced a task order with Emergent BioSolutions to advance domestic manufacturing capabilities and capacity for a potential COVID-19 vaccine as well as therapeutics, worth approximately $628 million.

Distribution: Before the countermeasures are approved or authorized, the program will build the necessary plans and infrastructure for distribution.

HHS plans for a tiered approach to vaccine distribution, which will build on allocation methodology developed as part of pandemic flu planning and be adjusted based on experience during the first wave of the COVID-19 response, data on the virus and its impact on populations and the performance of each vaccine, and the needs of the essential workforce. OWS will expand domestic manufacturing and supplies of specialized materials and resources, such as glass vials, that can be necessary for distribution. DoD’s involvement will enable faster distribution and administration than would have otherwise been possible.

Select actions to support OWS distribution efforts include:

  • May 12: DoD and HHS announced a $138 million contract with ApiJect for more than 100 million prefilled syringes for distribution across the United States by year-end 2020, as well as the development of manufacturing capacity for the ultimate production goal of over 500 million prefilled syringes in 2021.
  • June 9: HHS and DoD announced a joint effort to increase domestic manufacturing capacity for vials that may be needed for vaccines and treatments:
    • $204 million to Corning to expand the domestic manufacturing capacity to produce an additional 164 million Valor Glass vials each year if needed.
    • $143 million to SiO2 Materials Science to ramp up capacity to produce the company’s glass-coated plastic container, which can be used for drugs and vaccines.

Who’s leading OWS?

HHS Secretary Alex Azar and Defense Secretary Mark Esper oversee OWS, with Dr. Moncef Slaoui designated as chief advisor and General Gustave F. Perna nominated to be chief operating officer. To allow these OWS leaders to focus on operational work, in the near future the program will be announcing separate points of contact, with deep expertise and involvement in the program, for communication with Congress and the public.

What are you doing to make these products affordable for Americans?

As a commitment to making countermeasures affordable for the American people, and as a condition of receiving support from OWS, companies will provide to the U.S. government an allocation of countermeasures developed.

How is this being funded?

Congress has directed almost $10 billion to this effort through supplemental funding, including the CARES Act. Congress has also appropriated other flexible funding. The almost $10 billion specifically directed includes more than $6.5 billion designated for countermeasure development through BARDA and $3 billion for NIH research.

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