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150K students missing, districts scramble to keep cash

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When school started this fall, Ana Troya got a list of 105 Alief Independent School District students who hadn’t shown up to Bush Elementary School.

She spent day after day driving around town trying to track down those students, each one of them worth about $5,500 in state funding for the district.

“We found a lot had moved and we assume it’s because they either couldn’t pay rent or they [found] job opportunities elsewhere,” said Troya, a student support specialist at Communities In Schools. “From the families, we did get to see, they were struggling financially.”

Most of Troya’s visits were met with empty apartments. She was only able to find about 25% of the students, but she’s not alone in the effort to get missing students back in the classroom.

Statewide, a 13 Investigates analysis found 2.9% of the state’s 5.5 million students are no longer enrolled in public schools. Those unenrolled students aren’t just losing valuable time learning, but also will cost districts $5,500 in state funding per student if current guidelines don’t change by the end of the year.

“I’m fearful on the financial side that the staffing decisions we may have to make as a result of the budget issues, as a result of the low enrollment, is going to impact and impede our ability to help [students],” Alief ISD Superintendent HD Chambers said.

Our analysis of 1,012 public school districts across the state shows 75% of them saw a decrease in enrollment during the 2020-21 year compared to 2019-20.

Statewide, there are nearly 159,000 fewer students enrolled in Texas public schools for the 2020-21 school year, according to our analysis of state enrollment data. Since Texas state funding of public schools is based on enrollment, districts are at risk of losing more than $872 million for the 2021-22 school year.

Under current guidelines, the TEA has a “hold harmless” period where district funding won’t be impacted by low attendance. They’re allowed to use their previous attendance rate for planning purposes, but that grace period ends on Dec. 31, and districts facing deep cuts are worried.

The TEA declined an interview to discuss state funding.

Congress working on two-day funding extension hours before government shutdown

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Congress moved perilously close to letting the government shut down as lawmakers failed Friday to put the finishing touches on a massive spending and coronavirus rescue package.

Ahead of the midnight Friday deadline to pass a spending bill, the House introduced a two-day stopgap bill to keep the government running. Lawmakers gave themselves about seven-and-a-half hours to get it through both chambers of Congress, including a Senate where one member’s objection can block its swift passage.

Leaders on Capitol Hill have said for days they are close to a deal on a $900 billion relief proposal that would accompany a $1.4 trillion spending bill. However, some new disputes have prevented Washington from sending fresh aid to struggling Americans for the first time in nearly nine months.

Reaching a deal on an enormous spending and pandemic aid plan, let alone stopping government spending from lapsing, looked challenging by Friday afternoon. While bipartisan House officials including Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., backed the temporary funding bill, the Senate will pose bigger problems.

Passing a temporary spending measure known as a continuing resolution “could prove to be a pretty heavy lift,” No. 2 Senate Republican John Thune of South Dakota told reporters Friday. To approve the measure quickly, the Senate would need the support of every senator. A handful of lawmakers have suggested they could hold up passage of a short-term spending bill.

Thune also signaled it could take days more to iron out a final coronavirus aid package as millions of Americans await help.

“It’s coming together, it’s just taking time, but it’s slower,” he said. “And you know I think we have to assume that even when there’s a deal announced, that by the time it gets written up and processed, we’re going to be pushing through the weekend.”

Just after 2 p.m. ET on Friday, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said the chamber would go into a recess until 5 p.m. while congressional leaders try to get a “clearer picture” of how to move forward. He told representatives to keep Friday night, Saturday and Sunday free.

If lawmakers can approve a spending bill before Monday, the damage from a lapse in federal funding would be limited.

Congressional leaders have pledged to work through the weekend and pass a bill before they head home for the holidays. The health and livelihoods of millions of Americans depend on Congress sending out more aid before the end of the year.

Only hours earlier, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. described an agreement as imminent.

“The talks remain productive,” McConnell said Friday morning. “In fact, I am even more optimistic now than I was last night that a bipartisan, bicameral framework for a major rescue package is very close at hand.”

As health-care workers start to receive Covid-19 vaccinations during a crushing wave of infections across the country, continued distribution of shots will require federal funding. The outbreak has killed more than 310,000 people nationwide as the U.S. struggles to contain its spread.

Meanwhile, 12 million people will lose unemployment insurance the day after Christmas if Congress fails to extend pandemic-era provisions that expanded benefits. If a federal eviction moratorium lapses at the end of the month, millions will face the threat of losing their homes.

While the developing $900 billion relief plan is set to extend those jobless benefits, it is unclear now how it will address eviction protections and any assistance for people who owe back rent.

The proposal is expected to reinstate a federal unemployment insurance supplement at $300 per week. A $600 per week federal payment put in place in March expired during the summer, sending the incomes of millions plummeting.

The package would include direct payments of $600, though it is unclear who will be eligible to receive them. Families are expected to get $600 sums for children, as well. Progressives in Congress and some Republicans have called the sum too low for people scraping by during the pandemic, noting that lawmakers easily approved a $1,200 direct payment in March.

White House advisors talked President Donald Trump out of making a last-second push to send checks of up to $2,000 to Americans, The Washington Post reported Thursday.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., tried to approve a measure that would send another $1,200 direct payment on Friday. He called the cash injection “the least that we can do” for working families.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., then objected to passing the measure due to national debt concerns, arguing tax cuts and deregulation would better help Americans who do not have jobs during the pandemic. It is unclear how those measures would help people struggling to afford food and housing now.

The exchange underscored the challenges Congress will face in both preventing a shutdown and passing a rescue package in the coming days. Johnson called even the $900 billion package, which includes only $600 checks, “way too big.”

Hawley said he would block a short-term government funding bill unless he sees a final relief proposal that includes direct payments.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., tried to pass a proposal that would send $1,200 direct payments later Friday afternoon. The senator, backed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said that “in this time of crisis, it is comical that our Republican friends discover once again that we have a deficit.”

Johnson objected again.

Congress’ relief plan would include at least $300 billion in small business support. It would also put funds into Covid-19 vaccine distribution and testing and offer relief to hospitals.

The proposal would put money into schools and the transportation sector, as well.

A handful of issues have tripped up the final stage of negotiations. They include a Federal Emergency Management Agency relief fund for states and restrictions Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., wants to put on the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending powers during the pandemic, according to NBC News.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said Republicans who support the provision are “sabotaging” President-elect Joe Biden’s ability to lead an economic recovery after he takes office on Jan. 20.

“Proposals to sabotage President Biden and our nation’s economy are reckless, they’re wrong, and they have no place in this legislation,” she said in a statement.

In a later statement, the chairs of the House Financial Services and Ways and Means Committees said an agreement “was within sight” before the GOP started pushing for what they called an “unacceptable provision.”

“Senate Republicans’ extreme demand threatens to derail this urgently needed action, and it must be immediately abandoned so that we can move forward,” Reps. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., and Richard Neal, D-Mass., said in a statement.

A Toomey spokesman did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request to comment on Democrats’ criticism.

Congress passed the more than $2 trillion CARES Act in late March, offering robust economic support in the early stages of the pandemic. But lawmakers failed to offer any new assistance in the ensuing months, even as the virus raged, financial lifelines fell to the wayside and cracks emerged in the economic recovery.

Democrats have pushed for significantly more relief. Biden has called the $900 billion plan a “down payment” and signaled he will try to approve more aid after he takes office on Jan. 20.

McConnell for months pushed for only about $500 billion in new spending. Many in his party resisted putting even that much money into a relief plan.

Next year, Democrats will likely push for new aid for state and local governments, which could have to lay off first responders as they face budget crunches. The GOP did not agree to send the relief without liability protections for businesses.

Congressional leaders agreed to set both issues aside as they negotiated the year-end package.

HOUSTON FIRE DEPARTMENT SCHEDULED TO REPLACE OVER 100 AGING VEHICLES WITH RECENT COUNCIL ACTION

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This week, City Council passed an ordinance that will allow the Houston Fire Department (HFD) to lease 105 light-duty vehicles for the Life Safety Bureau through a new pilot program. The program is designed to turnover fleet vehicles on an annual basis, which allows for the continuous introduction of new vehicles with upgrades in safety and emission standards while aiming for cost neutrality to the citizens of Houston.

“Leasing vehicles for this particular program is a sound government strategy and a more efficient and cost-effective use of taxpayer funds to replace light-duty HFD fleet at an appropriate time,” says Fire Chief Samuel Peña. “It will allow us to stretch limited budgets and we believe it will pay dividends in several key areas, including acquisitions, maintenance, and fuel expenditures.”
The agreement is a three (3) year term with two (2) one-year options with Enterprise Fleet Management. This is the first time the Houston Fire Department will successfully change out a complete division of aging vehicles at a wholesale rate.
“I have many to thank for the recent passing of Ordinance 31 this week, after 2 years of internal debate,” says Chief Peña. “First, Mayor Sylvester Turner for backing the vision of this request and supporting with the full weight of his office; Councilmember Peck and Councilmember Kamin who, among other councilmembers have supported the concept; Agenda Director Marta Crinejo who ensured a smooth process in getting the item on the last Council agenda of the year, and Assistant Fire Chief Ruy Lozano and staff, Director Jerry Adams, Director Vic Ayres, and Director Tantri Emo, who without their professionalism and dedication to fiscal responsibility this would not be possible.”

US sets single-day record in COVID-19 cases, deaths, hospitalizations

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The US on Wednesday broke daily records for new coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations, according to reports.

More than 247,000 new cases of the global pandemic were reported in the country, with a record high of more than 3,600 Americans dying from the deadly virus.

There are now in excess of 113,000 people hospitalized with the virus in the country.

The number brings the US total of coronavirus cases to 17 million with more than 307,000 deaths since the outbreak of the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The US has recorded the most COVID-19 deaths in the world, though it is currently 10th per capita, according to Statista.

The record-setting day comes as more than 2.9 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine created by Pfizer are being distributed throughout the country this week.

An FDA panel is expected to vote on recommending approval of a vaccine created by Moderna, found to be 94 percent effective in trials, during an all-day meeting on Thursday.

Here are the common side effects you should expect if you get Moderna’s coronavirus shot

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US regulators did not flag any major safety concerns with Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine candidate, paving the way for an expected emergency OK that could come later this week.

But that doesn’t mean the two-dose vaccine is side-effect free. More than nine in 10 people who got Moderna’s shot registered some side effects, which were mostly mild or moderate in severity and lasted one to three days after injection.

A 53-page briefing document on Moderna’s vaccine released Tuesday by the US Food and Drug Administration gave us the most detailed look yet at how safe and effective the shot is.

Most of these are commonly expected with vaccines, related to the shot generating an immune response in the body. On the whole, these reactions were unpleasant but not threatening.

The most common side effects were:

  • Pain at the injection site (91.6%)
  • Fatigue (68.5%)
  • Headache (63.0%)
  • Muscle pain (59.6%)
  • Joint pain (44.8%)
  • Chills (43.4%)

It’s tricky to directly compare Moderna’s candidate to Pfizer’s vaccine, which won an emergency OK from the US Food and Drug Administration last Friday.

The two clinical trials followed different protocols and split up their participants differently. For instance, Pfizer’s study divided results by age into two buckets: older and younger than 55. While setting the two studies side by side is like comparing apples and oranges, it appears that Moderna’s shot carried more common and severe side effects than Pfizer’s.

The most common reactions with Pfizer’s vaccine were pain at the injection site (84%), fatigue (63%), headache (55%), muscle pain (38%), chills (32%), joint pain (24%), and fever (14%).

These massive clinical trials — each enrolling tens of thousands of people — found both vaccines to be overwhelmingly protective against COVID-19. Pfizer’s shot is 95% effective, and Moderna’s shot is 94% effective. It’s not clear if either vaccine prevents transmission of the virus, and it’s unknown how long-lasting that protection will be.

An independent expert panel will vote Thursday on whether or not to recommend Moderna’s vaccine for emergency use authorization. The FDA intends to OK the shot on Friday, The New York Times reported, citing anonymous people familiar with the agency’s plans.

Holdups on COVID-19 relief talks may force weekend sessions

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Top congressional leaders have acknowledged they’ll have to pass another temporary government-wide funding bill to avoid a partial shutdown Friday at midnight.

 

It’s a hurry up and wait moment on Capitol Hill as congressional negotiators on a must-pass, almost $1 trillion COVID-19 economic relief package struggled through a handful of remaining snags on Thursday. The holdups mean a weekend session now appears virtually certain, along with a stopgap spending bill to avert a partial government shutdown at midnight Friday.

All sides appeared hopeful that the wrangling wouldn’t derail the legislation from becoming law. The central elements of a hard-fought compromise appeared in place: more than $300 billion in aid to businesses; a $300-per-week bonus federal jobless benefit and renewal of soon-to-expire state benefits; $600 direct payments to individuals; vaccine distribution funds and money for renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.

The hangups involve an effort by GOP conservatives to curb emergency lending programs by the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve, a Democratic demand to eliminate local government matching requirements for COVID-related disaster grants, and myriad smaller disagreements over non-pandemic add-ons, lawmakers and aides said.

The delays aren’t unusual for legislation of this size and importance, but lawmakers are eager to leave Washington for the holidays and are getting antsy.

“Do we want to lapse into politics as usual and let negotiations lose steam? Do we want to haggle and spar like this was an ordinary political exercise?” asked Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

The pending bill is the first significant legislative response to the pandemic since the landmark CARES Act passed virtually unanimously in March, delivering $1.8 trillion in aid and more generous $600 per week bonus jobless benefits and $1,200 direct payments to individuals.

The CARES legislation passed at a moment of great uncertainty and unprecedented shutdowns in a failed attempt to stymie the coronavirus, but after that many Republicans focused more on loosening social and economic restrictions as the key to recovery instead of more taxpayer-funded aid.

Now, Republicans are motivated chiefly to extend business subsidies and some jobless benefits, and provide money for schools and vaccines. Democrats have focused on bigger economic stimulus measures and more help for those struggling economically during the pandemic. The urgency was underscored Thursday by the weekly unemployment numbers, which revealed that 885,000 people applied for jobless benefits last week, the highest weekly total since September.

The emerging package falls well short of the $2 trillion-plus Democrats were demanding this fall before the election, but President-elect Joe Biden is eager for an aid package to prop up the economy and help the jobless and hungry. While Biden says more economic stimulus will be needed early next year, some Republicans say the current package may be the last.

“If we address the critical needs right now, and things improve next year as the vaccine gets out there and the economy starts to pick up again, you know, there may be less of a need,” said No. 2 Senate Republican John Thune of South Dakota.

The details were still being worked out, but the measure includes a second round of “paycheck protection” payments to especially hard-hit businesses, $25 billion to help struggling renters with their payments, $45 billion for airlines and transit systems, a temporary 15% or so increase in food stamp benefits, additional farm subsidies, and a $10 billion bailout for the Postal Service.

Some Democrats also mourned the exclusion of a $500 million aid package to help states run their elections. The money was seen as urgent this summer to help states more safely administer their elections in the middle of the pandemic. But with the election over, momentum for the money has gone away.

The emerging package was serving as a magnet for adding on other items, and the two sides continued to swap offers. It was apparent that another temporary spending bill would be needed to prevent a government shutdown. That was likely to pass easily, though possibly not until the last minute.

The emerging package would combine the $900 billion in COVID-19 relief with a $1.4 trillion government-wide funding bill. Then there are numerous unrelated add-ons that are catching a ride, known as “ash and trash” in appropriations panel shorthand.

One leading candidate is an almost 400-page water resources bill that targets $10 billion for 46 Army Corps of Engineers flood control, environmental and coastal protection projects. Another potential addition would extend a batch of soon-to-expire tax breaks, including one for craft brewers, wineries and distillers.

The end-of-session rush also promises relief for victims of shockingly steep surprise medical bills, a phenomenon that often occurs when providers drop out of insurance company networks.

“It’s been very thoroughly vetted,” said retiring Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., of the surprise medical billing measure. That measure, combined with an assortment of other health policy provisions, generates savings for federal funding for community health centers.

A key breakthrough occurred earlier this week when Democrats agreed to drop their much-sought $160 billion state and local government aid package in exchange for McConnell abandoning a key priority of his own — a liability shield for businesses and other institutions like universities fearing COVID-19 lawsuits.

The addition of the $600 direct payments came after recent endorsements from both President Donald Trump and progressives like Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., along with ambitious GOP Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri. The idea isn’t very popular in other corners since it’s extremely costly and would give money to millions of people who may not need it, but it has enormous political appeal and proved difficult to stop.

How Will Moderna Meet The Demand For Its COVID-19 Vaccine?

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Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine is expected to become the second to get the Food and Drug Administration’s green light. A decision could come within days.

But compared with pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, which was granted emergency use authorization last week, upstart Moderna doesn’t have a track record when it comes to mass production.

Pfizer makes hundreds of medicines and vaccines and operates at least 40 manufacturing facilities registered with the FDA around the world. Despite being founded a decade ago, Moderna has never had a product win FDA approval. And it only has one factory registered with the FDA — and the registration occurred just this week.

“As the CEO I am always thinking about the next game, and the next game is manufacturing,” Moderna’s Stéphane Bancel told. “This is a big week at the FDA. But I am not worried about the EUA [emergency-use authorization], because the data is the data. I am worried about making more product.”

So how will Moderna make the 200 million doses it has contracted to provide the federal government for $3.2 billion by the end of June? A big part of the answer is outsourcing production to contract manufacturers that will make the vaccine on Moderna’s behalf.

Moderna is ultimately responsible for making sure the vaccine is made in compliance with regulations, and the FDA periodically inspects facilities around the world to make sure they are up to snuff. Still, the use of multiple companies to help make and package the vaccine stretches the supply and production chain and could add some risk to the fulfillment of orders.

Producing finished vaccines

Vice President Mike Pence traveled to Bloomington, Ind., on Tuesday to tour Catalent, a contract manufacturing facility expected to help produce millions of Moderna coronavirus vaccines in the coming weeks and months. Catalent is probably the biggest drugmaker you’ve ever heard of. It has dozens of factories around the world and makes more than 70 billion doses of all kinds of drugs each year. The company’s facility in Pence’s home state is working with Moderna on filling vials with the vaccine and preparing them for distribution.

“Two-thousand people of this facility are working tirelessly to deliver on that promise, volunteering for a production shift over Thanksgiving, over Christmas,” Catalent president and COO Alessandro Maselli told Pence during a discussion after the tour. “Because everybody understands the mission we are on at this facility.”

Catalent is processing 500,000 doses per day, but the factory is hoping to ramp up to a million doses a day to fulfill its contractual obligations and deliver 100 million doses by the end of March, Denis Johnson, Catalent Bloomington’s general manager, told the vice president.

It’s a big job, but Catalent and the other contract manufacturers have long histories of doing it.

“There are no fly-by-night new manufacturing facilities that are being set up to make these products by definition because there are only so many manufacturers who could make these products to begin with,” says Rena Conti, a health economics professor at Boston University whose research includes the pharmaceutical supply chain. “And many of them are known. They’ve been making vaccines for the U.S. population for a very long time and have a proven safety record and quality record.”

Still, FDA inspectors visited Catalent’s Bloomington facility in October 2019 and found that it had problems with making sure sterile products weren’t contaminated with bacterial or fungal particles. Inspectors also wrote that the facility had problems storing pharmaceuticals at the right temperature and humidity levels.

That could mean problems for the quality of the plant’s products, Conti says.

“There were production and process control failures that make it possible that the product itself is not what it purports to be,” Conti says. “So the safety identity, the strength, the quality or the purity of the product that is being manufactured may not meet the specifications or the attestation the company is making to the U.S. public that the product is what it says it is. So this is quite serious.”

However, the findings didn’t result in more serious punitive steps by the FDA, which can include formal warning letters and, in rare cases, injunctions and product seizures.

At the time, of course, the Catalent facility wasn’t working on coronavirus vaccines. But the company announced that it would be helping Moderna make its vaccine in June of this year. In September, the Indiana facility received another visit from the FDA.

Inspectors again found that the employees weren’t following rules to prevent microbial contamination. For example, employees weren’t making sure sterile forceps didn’t touch non-sterile surfaces, and they didn’t follow rules around sanitizing gloved hands in certain situations involving vials and syringes.

By itself, the finding is fixable. It’s a simple lapse in training, says Dinesh Thakur, a former drug company executive turned whistleblower. The fact that Catalent didn’t appear to have fixed its microbial contamination procedures a year earlier is what bothers him.

“These are easy to fix,” says Thakur, who raised the alarm about quality-control problems at generics drugmaker Ranbaxy, resulting in a 2013 guilty plea and a $500 million settlement. “This is like, you know, within a week, you can try and get this thing wrapped up properly.”

He called it “really concerning.” “If you’re told in 2019 to fix it, you have a year to fix it and we have to make the same observation another time? Then that would cause me to become a little concerned.”

Catalent spokesperson Chris Halling told NPR in an email that the facility was able to resolve its findings and satisfy the FDA in 2019 and 2020.

“The Agency’s latest Establishment Inspection Report (EIR) does not reflect that it was a repeat finding of the earlier observation and relates to a different concern for a process in a different part of the facility.

Catalent takes its responsibility to comply with CGMPs [Current Good Manufacturing Practices] extremely seriously, and hosts hundreds of audits each year, including those by customers, the U.S. FDA, and other global regulatory bodies. The company utilizes regulators’ observations as a means to continuously improve its operations and to assure ongoing compliance with all appropriate standards.

Catalent is on track to manufacture and package 20 million doses of Moderna’s vaccine candidate by the end of this month, and the facility in Bloomington, IN, is ramping up production to supply another 100 million doses in the first quarter of 2021. Globally, the company is working on more than 75 Covid-19-related programs including antivirals, vaccines and treatments.”

Moderna declined to comment and suggested NPR speak with officials with the FDA and Operation Warp Speed, the more than $12 billion federal effort to make a vaccine widely available in record time. Operation Warp Speed has committed to spending $4.1 billion on researching and developing the Moderna vaccine as well as buying 100 million doses to be delivered by the end of March and another 100 million to be delivered by the end of June.

Operation Warp Speed didn’t respond to requests for comment, and the FDA said it typically doesn’t comment on “compliance matters.”

Making the key ingredients

Catalent is filling vials and getting them ready to send around the country, but other facilities are responsible for making the mRNA, the key substance at the heart of the vaccine, that Catalent puts in those vials.

Another well-known contract manufacturing company, Lonza, told investors in October that it is working with Moderna to make its coronavirus vaccine drug substance. Lonza is using two sites: one in Portsmouth, N.H., and another in Visp, Switzerland, and was aiming to complete the first batches by late October and early November, respectively.

Following an FDA inspection in February 2018, Lonza’s plant in Portsmouth did not receive a document detailing observations called a Form 483, implying inspectors mostly liked what they saw.

Lonza spokesperson Sanna Fowler says it was also inspected in October 2020 and has an “exemplary track record” with the FDA and international regulatory bodies that conduct similar inspections. “The FDA has used the Portsmouth site as a training site for their inspectors, given its high standards,” she wrote in an email to NPR. “Should the FDA decide an inspection of the Moderna facility is required, we are of course ready to receive them.”

The other Lonza facility’s inspection wasn’t as spotless. In October 2019, FDA inspectors found problems with microbial control during certain plant processes. They also found inadequacies in the way the plant measured impurities like toxins released by bacteria. The facility has received several 483s in recent years as well as two import refusals, meaning the FDA twice detained drug product shipments for being out of compliance.

To do work on the Moderna vaccine, Lonza is setting up operations in “a new premises” in Visp, Switzerland, rather than using its existing facility there, Fowler says. She points out that although the FDA has found problems at its existing facility, they didn’t result in a warning letter from the agency. Instead, the inspectors’ findings were “successfully resolved.” She says the import refusals were the results of problems further up the supply chain, rather than because of problems at the Lonza plant.

Furthermore, the Moderna vaccine substance the new Swiss that facility makes won’t be bound for the United States, according to Fowler. Instead, it will go to the European Union and Canada, for example.

Using a new facility

Moderna has said that it’s using a relatively new facility in Norwood, Mass., to make the vaccine.

“The vast majority of the U.S. production will be done in Massachusetts,” Moderna co-founder Noubar Afeyan told.

Although the facility was built in 2018, it wasn’t registered with the FDA until this week and has never been inspected, records show. Typically, new facilities need to be inspected before the agency will allow their products to be released.

“While the design of the facility is based on current standards for biotechnology facilities, it has not been reviewed or pre-approved by any regulatory agency, nor has the facility been inspected by any regulatory agency such as the FDA,” the company wrote in a June 2020 regulatory filing.

“We have only recently begun producing drug substance and drug product at the MTC [Moderna Technology Center] for our preclinical and clinical use,” the filing continues. “We could incur delays in implementing the fully operational state of the facility, causing delays to clinical supply or extended use of third-party service providers, resulting in unplanned expenses. In constructing the MTC facility, we have incurred substantial expenditures, and expect to incur significant additional expenditures invalidating and operating the facility in the future.”

The FDA doesn’t speak publicly about specific compliance matters except with the firms involved. However, agency spokesperson Alison Hunt said that the FDA regularly interacts with manufacturers to help resolve regulatory compliance issues when they crop up, and it has a number of tools to accomplish this.

When the FDA is weighing whether to grant emergency use authorization of a COVID-19 vaccine, it takes manufacturing into account.

“FDA expects manufacturers to submit sufficient data to ensure the quality and consistency of the vaccine product,” Hunt wrote. “FDA uses available tools and information, including records reviews, site visits, on-site investigations, and previous compliance history to assess compliance with current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) requirements.”

Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial data debated at U.S. hearing before expected authorization

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U.S. health secretary says 6 million doses ready to ship as soon as the FDA approves vaccine’s use

A panel of outside advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is expected to endorse emergency use of Moderna Inc.’s coronavirus vaccine during a meeting on Thursday, as the nation prepares to roll out a second vaccine.

The panel vote on whether the vaccine’s benefits outweigh its risks is likely to come in the late afternoon, with an FDA authorization expected as soon as Friday.

It is the same committee of expert advisers that last week backed the COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer Inc. and German partner BioNTech SE, clearing the way for the FDA emergency use authorization (EUA) a day later.  A massive inoculation program began at U.S. hospitals on Monday.

The Moderna vaccine uses similar messenger RNA technology but with less onerous cold storage requirements than the Pfizer/BioNTech shot, making it a better option for remote and rural areas. Both vaccines were about 95 percent effective in preventing illness in pivotal clinical trials.

SVB Leerink analysts said the Moderna vaccine appears less tolerable than the Pfizer/BioNTech shot, but noted that is not a proper comparison across trials and unlikely to stand in the way of a EUA.

The FDA staff did not raise any serious concerns about safety in documents published on Tuesday in preparation for the meeting. It said a link between Bell’s palsy, which causes temporary paralysis of facial muscles, and the vaccine could not be ruled out after some cases were reported in trials of both vaccines.

Moderna is seeking authorization for people aged 18 and older.

Some cases of allergic reactions to the Pfizer-BioNtech shot have been reported in the United States and Britain since the rollout began.

No cases suggestive of anaphylaxis to Moderna’s vaccine were identified after analyzing safety data from clinical trials, Moderna executive David Martin said at Thursday’s meeting.

Two cases of the severe, potentially life-threatening allergic reaction occurred in Moderna’s large clinical study, one among those who received the vaccine and the other in the placebo group, Martin said.

The vaccine recipient with the allergic reaction had a history of asthma and a shellfish allergy, he said.

U.S. government eager to deploy the vaccine

The Massachusetts-based company, which has never produced a vaccine on this scale, is working with multiple partners to produce its vaccine, including Switzerland’s Lonza.

Initial Moderna vaccine supply would likely go to the United States, which has signed deals to secure as many as 200 million doses and is expecting the first 20 million this month. The vaccine is administered in two doses about four weeks apart, a longer interval than Pfizer’s three-week period before the second shot.

Meanwhile, the FDA said it is working with Pfizer to revise fact sheets and prescribing information on the Pfizer-BioNTech shot after two health care workers in Alaska experienced allergic reactions minutes after receiving the vaccine, FDA official Doran Fink said at Thursday’s panel meeting.

“We anticipate that there may be additional reports, which we will rapidly investigate,” Fink said.

The White House is eager to deploy the Moderna vaccine, given the toll the virus has exacted on the U.S. There were 3,400 deaths attributable to the coronavirus across the country, the COVID Tracking Project from The Atlantic magazine reported on Wednesday. The death toll since the start of the pandemic in the U.S. recently passed 300,000 Americans.

The U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Thursday said nearly 6 million doses of Moderna Inc.’s experimental COVID-19 vaccine were poised to ship nationwide as soon as it secures Food and Drug Administration approval.

“We’re ready to start shipping this weekend to them for rollout Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday of next week. We’re ready to go,” Azar said.

The company has also signed supply deals with Canada, the European Union, and the U.K. The vaccine is undergoing a “rolling review” by regulators for all three.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said this week it is expected Canada will receive 168,000 doses of Moderna’s vaccine before the end of the year, contingent on an expected approval soon from Health Canada.

In total, six million Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are expected to be delivered to Canada by the end of March 2021, the government has said.

Unlike the Pfizer vaccine, which is being delivered directly by the company to points of use, the federal government will be responsible for the logistics associated with importing the Moderna shot and distributing the product to the provinces and territories.

Publicación 1186 de HOUSTON – Revista Digital 17 de diciembre – 23 de diciembre / 2020

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