Title: Vaccine Safety: Vision for the Future
1Vaccine Safety Vision for the Future
- Jesse L. Goodman, MD, MPH
- Director, Center for Biologics Evaluation and
Research, FDA - April 10, 2007
2Purpose of Our Meeting
- Discuss approaches, methodologies and
opportunities to further enhance vaccine safety,
using both current and developing tools focus
is on post-licensure systems - Share international perspectives and experiences
- Identify data and research gaps and needs
- Update and articulate a vision of an ideal
vaccine safety system and help advance that vision
3Perspective Vaccine Accomplishments
As the specter of severe vaccine preventable
diseases becomes seemingly distant in developed
countries, vaccine safety concerns, always
important, gain prominence
4Partnerships in Safety
Public
VRPAC
ACIP
FDA
CDC
Industry
NIH
Healthcare system/providers
Other important governmental partners/contributors
HRSA, DoD, VA, CMS
5Assuring high vaccine safety involves more than
post-licensure surveillance
VACCINE SAFETY
PRODUCTION Manufacturing quality Inspections Tes
ting and Release FDA and industry
POST-APPROVAL CLINICAL SAFETY Planned (PMC)
Studies Surveillance AEs/VAERs/VSD Studies of
problems RISK COMMUNICATION CDC, FDA, industry
PRE-APPROVAL Animal Clinical Product quality
and manufacturing FDA, NIH and industry
6Result High Safety
- Vaccines are carefully evaluated pre-licensure,
manufactured and released under tight process
controls and with FDA oversight, typically
studied further post-approval and monitored
carefully. Information communicated and, where
needed, actions taken promptly. - Total 235 million vaccine doses distributed
annually in US, 2400 potential SAEs reported
7But Can We Do Better?
?
VACCINE SAFETY
POST-APPROVAL Automated and more rapid signal
detection Better studies Better determine
causality of signals and degree of risk Improve
risk communication Profile reduce individual
risk
PRODUCTION Better technologies and process
control New technologies for characterization and
testing
PRE-APPROVAL Better predictive studies, In
vitro, animal and clinical More defined
vaccines and components
FDA Critical Path Initiative
8Pre-approval Vision
- Vision Scientific advances predict safety risks
and efficacy based on molecular, cellular, animal
and human systemic and immune responses. Vaccine
technologies use fully molecularly defined
antigen(s) and other components that predict the
clinical response.
9Pre-approval Needs Opportunities
- Purer or molecularly defined vaccines
- Acellular pertussis
- Recombinant proteins, chemically synthesized
peptides/nucleic acids/conjugates - Currently often less immunogenic
- Better predictive models and markers
- Animal/cell models to identify rare events (e.g.,
gene expression responses, genetically prone
transgenic mice, cytokine responses) - Live vaccine virulence measures/models or
substitutes (e.g. OPV-IPV)
10Pre-approval cont.
- Enhanced information from clinical trials
- Non-clinical human trial markers from clinical
trials (e.g. PBMC, proteome, cytokines etc.) - Larger/simpler safety trials welcome where
appropriate (e.g. Rota 35K) - Focused follow up, major endpoints, short and
long term - Trade off should allow smaller intensely
monitored studies (could embed within LST) - More diverse populations (genetic perspectives
may help define future needs) - Still will never reliably detect/predict rarest
AEs lt 1/10,000 (e.g. possible GBS risk
1/1,000,000)
11Manufacturing and Quality Vision, Needs and
Opportunities
- Vision A completely defined product produced
consistently, with continuous process and product
monitoring that detects potential risks. - Needs and opportunities
- Further enhanced biologic process controls,
consistency - New process and product characterization tools
e.g. NMR, mass spect - Ability to predict what changes are meaningful
12Post-approval Vision
- All patients vaccinations and health experiences
are immediately and continuously accessible in
automated database(s) allowing optimal detection
and analysis of potential problems in vaccine
safety (and effectiveness). - Not there yet - both major limits and
opportunities in current health information
systems - Both problems and solutions to enhance vaccine
safety information/analysis should link to safety
initiatives for all medical products and
procedures
13Post-approval Needs - surveillance
- Access to more patients and better data (vs.
proprietary issues, costs) - Given diversity of sources, innovative more
Google - like approaches to retrieval of key
data may have great potential vs. single unified
systems - Better background rates, comparable control
populations - More consistent event/disease nomenclature, IT
architecture, data interchangeability/quality - Differences between adult and child immunization
- Increase in non-medical data sources e.g.
pharmacy, supermarket, employer vaccination
14Post-approval Areas of Opportunity
- Data Health systems e.g. VA, DoD, CMS, managed
care - More in this meeting
- Global data regulatory, review, inspectional,
health systems, international surveillance/pharmac
ovigilance - Better analytic tools and methods
15Post-marketing Safety- Other Approaches
- Roll-out e.g. slower/initial uptake in high
disease burden population(s) - but n to detect and analyze is still the same n
- Large(r) simpler studies (as for premarket)
- More pts. for same/less focus on key data
- Major endpoints (medical care, hospitalization,
death) - Enhanced VSD type studies
- New reporting strategies
cell phone, internet
16Post-marketing Safety- Other Approaches continued
- Personalized Vaccination Identifying patients
at risk for rare AEs and either not
vaccinating, changing dose, or using alternate
vaccine strategy - Population defined risk factors
- Genetic risk factors
- Whole genome, someday
- Risk loci/signatures/SNPs/Immune
response genes
17Communications and Transparency
- Respect and autonomy of patients should be a
guiding principle - Early, open and continuing
- communication of possible
- safety signals is expected and
beneficial to consumers/HCPs/science - Critical to confidence in integrity of the
vaccine safety system, government and industry,
and the safety of vaccines - Enhances reporting and informs consumer/HCP
decision-making - Initial information and medical/scientific
opinion and assessments often evolve and can be
wrong
Not an option!
18Modern Vaccine Safety Meeting Challenges to
Detect, Analyze and Communicate Early
- Rotavirus- earlier vaccine approved in 1998
- Though no excess pre-licensure, intussusception
(IS) noted as possible AE term specifically
added to VAERs - Post-license likely excess IS noted through
VAERs and ACIP recommendation withdrawn in 98
(likely 1 in 5-11k) - Next generation vaccine, licensed 2006
- Larger pre-licensure studies gt 70,000, no excess
IS - Larger post-licensure studies sponsor 44k VSD
90k - Careful VAERS monitoring/analysis in place in
first year 17 cases reported w/in 21 days vs. 52
expected - Transparency though below expected, label and
patient info updated 1/07, FDA provided early
Public Health notification 2/12 FDA/CDC publish
MMWR 3/16
19Meeting Challenges to Detect, Analyze and
Communicate cont
- Meningococcal conjugate vaccine - licensed 1/05 -
prevents life threatening disease - No GBS seen pre-licensure in 7k recipients but
5 cases reported to VAERS by 9/05 triggering
concern re potential safety signal - Rapid investigation, communication, with
cooperation/info sharing among FDA, CDC,
manufacturer and public transparency - FDA statement 9/05 MMWR label update 10/05
- Current information uncertain but possible GBS
risk 1.25 cases/million doses (CI 0.058--5.99) - Challenges uncertainties in background rate,
VAERs reporting - studies continuing, no cases
seen in VSD - Continued joint FDA/CDC monitoring/analyses and
updates x 3 in MMWR, last 10/06, label update
9/06
20Transparency and Risk Literacy
- Risk literacy very difficult and non-intuitive
to understand risk and causal association
statistically vs. individually - There are risks in conveying uncertainties,
including potential decreased use of safe vaccine - Major behavioral science, educational system and
risk communication scientific needs
21Conclusion
- While todays vaccines are very safe and safety
systems and activities are stronger and more
transparent than ever, there are opportunities to
apply advances in laboratory, manufacturing,
clinical and population sciences, and in health
informatics, to meet our highest expectations.
22Vision
- Completely defined vaccines are found safe in
sensitive, predictive pre-clinical and clinical
studies, are manufactured to the highest possible
quality using new technologies, and given to
individuals with a low likelihood of serious
adverse events. Populations are actively
monitored for vaccine adverse event signals which
are analyzed accurately allowing potential risks
(and benefits) to be communicated rapidly and
effectively.
23Thanks!
- We look forward to sharing information
and insights concerning tools for vaccine safety
- and to working together to achieve our shared
vision both during - this workshop and in the future.