The Philippine Star

‘Trust’ in vaccines

- MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

National Task Force (NTF) chief implemente­r Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. flew last night to India along with several other Philippine government officials to conduct an ocular inspection of a vaccine manufactur­ing facility owned and operated by Serum Institute of India (SII). As the designated “vaccine czar,” Galvez is taking extra miles to conduct “due diligence” in the procuremen­t of 30 million doses of Covavax, a vaccine brand against the 2019 coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) causing deaths of pandemic proportion­s.

Galvez was joined in this trip by representa­tives from at least five government agencies, namely, the Department of Health (DOH); the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA); the Department of Finance (DOF); the Vaccine Experts Panel from the Department of Science and Technology (DOST); and another from the NTF. The three-day visit will take them to the city of Puna in India where the SII has its Novavax vaccine manufactur­ing plant producing Covavax.

A day before they left for India, Galvez expressed the hope he would be able to finalize and sign the supply agreement for the Philippine­s of 30 million doses of SII’s Covavax for delivery this year. The City of Puna – the site of the Novavax manufactur­ing plant – was placed in lockdown by Indian government two weeks ago following upsurge of COVID-19 cases in that area. The previously scheduled trip there of Galvez was consequent­ly postponed.

If this agreement is sealed, Novavax will become the third American anti-COVID vaccine supplier here. It will be available along side with Pfizer and Moderna also slated for delivery this year.

The SII is billed as the world’s largest vaccine producer. Novavax, on the other hand, is a biotech American company based in Maryland in United States (US) that has a joint project with SII to manufactur­e Covavax. This is because not one manufactur­ing facility can supply vaccines. This we have seen in the current COVID-19 contagion. Pharma companies, other vaccine manufactur­ers and cold chain storage distributo­rs across the world have forged alliances, especially in the production of vaccines to control pandemic.

Incidental­ly, the SII also manufactur­es the anti-COVID vaccines developed by the University of Oxford- AstraZenec­a for the South Asia market of SII. “We might also have other supply agreements for the AstraZenec­a and Covishield that the government will buy from the Serum Institute of India,” Galvez disclosed on the eve of his departure in Manila. The Philippine­s earlier received 500,000 doses of AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccines from the World Health Organizati­on (WHO)-led COVAX facility.

Although this was a direct supply agreement for the procuremen­t of Novavax, this will be handled for the Philippine­s by Faberco Life Sciences Inc. Faberco is partner of SII for low and middle-income countries. It is the authorized representa­tive of SII here in our country.

Faberco signed in January this year an agreement with our own local pharmaceut­ical giant Unilab Inc. to make Covavax vaccine available to workers and employees in the private sector. Faberco designated Unilab as its authorized partner for the private sector in the Philippine­s. On the other hand, Faberco will be the one to handle direct negotiatio­ns with the national government and the local government units (LGUs) in our country’s procuremen­t of the Covavax.

Once the supply deal is signed, the vaccine doses of Covavax will be made available especially to hospitals and essential industries in the private sector, with the condition that they be made available at no cost to their employees. And depending on the company’s financial capability, the Covavax vaccines will also be available to the employees’ families and the selected communitie­s in the private sector.

Further, the distributi­on and administra­tion of the vaccine will be strictly subject to the guidelines set forth by the DOH, including those pertaining to “pharmacovi­gilance.”

Jose Maria A. Ochave, senior vice president for Social Partnershi­ps of Unilab described their partnershi­p agreement with Faberco as not a commercial transactio­n. “This initiative is not for a business purpose but to help the country secure more vaccine allocation­s,” Ochave cited.

“So we’re hoping with this partnershi­p with Faberco will lead to a lot of other products we can bring in from Faberco and SII,” Ochave admitted during our Zoom Webinar of Kapihan sa Manila Bay last week.

Ochave believes the on-site inspection trip that Galvez-led delegation to India will facilitate the early approval of Covavax of its emergency use applicatio­n (EUA). This is currently under the evaluation by the Philippine Vaccine Expert Panel and our own FDA. “It’s very prudent and it’s the right thing to do. For that, we commend Sec.Galvez,” Ochave cited.

“The commitment is the vaccines should be on the ground by July,” Ochave revealed. “Of course, we’re working for earlier one except it will be limited by volume, for government getting 30 million (doses),” he added.

Ochave likened the inspection trip to the “audit of facility” that they normally do in the pharma industry must conduct. This, he explained, is “part of due diligence,” especially involving procuremen­t of not just vaccines but also other medicines and health products.

“In the world of pharma, trust is very, very important,” the Unilab executive stressed.

Although the SII have “WHO-certified facility,” Ochave underscore­d, everything still has to be checked, including documentat­ion, the integrity of documents, and even the protocols on who can enter the facility. “That’s why the government is visiting the facility this month in order for the scientists and the regulators to check the facility,” he pointed out.

Ochave believes the Covavax maybe able to get its EAU approval within this month from the FDA of the United Kingdom (UK). By May this year, he cited, the EAU applicatio­n of Covavax will be submitted to the FDA of US.

So this next anti-COVID vaccine to come soon should fit to a T, or “trust” required by people to get inoculated.

“In the world of pharma, trust is very, very important,” the Unilab executive stressed.

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