Future vaccine modifications that respond to new
variants of coronavirus to be made available quickly to UK
recipients, without compromising on safety, quality or
effectiveness.
Authorised COVID-19 vaccines that are modified in response to new
variants will not need a brand new approval or “lengthy” clinical
studies, according to new
guidance from the ACCESS Consortium – a coalition of
regulatory authorities from the UK, Australia, Canada, Singapore
and Switzerland. The guidance, developed by the MHRA and its
ACCESS partners, lays out what information the medicines
regulators would need to approve any modifications to authorised
COVID-19 vaccines, should virus mutations make them less
effective at preventing the disease.
According to the guidance, vaccine manufacturers would need to
provide robust evidence that the modified vaccine produces an
immune response, but time-consuming clinical studies that do not
add to the regulatory understanding of a vaccines safety, quality
or effectiveness would not be needed. This is because researchers
are now better able to measure protection by looking at
antibodies in the blood following vaccination, reducing the need
to wait and see whether or not people in a trial become infected
with the disease. This would significantly reduce the length of
time taken for the modified vaccine to be ready for use.
Alongside data on the immune response, the vaccine manufacturer
would also be expected to provide evidence showing the modified
vaccine is safe and is of the expected quality. In addition, data
from the original robust clinical trials and the ongoing studies
on real-world use in millions of people could be used to support
any decision by the regulators.
This approach is based on the tried and tested regulatory process
used for seasonal flu vaccines, for which annual modifications
are needed to match the strains circulating each year.
MHRA Chief Scientific Officer, Dr Christian Schneider said:
“Our priority is to get effective vaccines to the public in as
short a time as possible, without compromising on safety. Should
any modifications to authorised COVID-19 vaccines be necessary,
this regulatory approach should help to do just that.
“The announcement today also demonstrates the strength of our
international partnerships with other regulators and how our
global work can help ensure faster access to life-saving vaccines
in the UK and around the world.
“The public should be confident that no vaccine would be approved
unless the expected high standards of safety, quality and
effectiveness are met.”
Notes
The MHRA joined the Access consortium in
October 2020. The consortium’s goal is to maximise
international co-operation between partners in the consortium,
reduce duplication, and increase each agency’s capacity to ensure
patients have timely access to high quality, safe and effective
therapeutic products.