Ethics Watchdogs Want Vaccine Czar In Charge Of ‘Operation Warp Speed’ To Reveal Pharma Ties
Moncef Slaoui reportedly has extensive ties with the pharmaceutical industry, but since he's technically not a federal employee he doesn't have to reveal them to their full extent. In other news: Novartis agrees to manufacture a potential vaccine, a vaccine based on gene therapy technology gains support, and experts break down the complications that come with distributing a vaccine even if one is proven effective.
Watchdog groups want President Trump's new coronavirus vaccine czar to disclose all of his ties to drug companies. Moncef Slaoui, who leads "Operation Warp Speed," the administration's initiative to find a COVID-19 vaccine, has extensive ties to the pharmaceutical industry and has come under fire from advocates and Democrats including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) for potential conflicts of interest.聽However, his position in the administration is on a contract and he is not considered a government employee. As such, he is not subject to the same federal disclosure rules that would require him to list his stock holdings and other potential conflicts. (Weixel, 5/28)
When it was announced two weeks ago that Moncef Slaoui would head up "Operation Warp Speed" to find and distribute a vaccine, the administration described him as 鈥渃hief advisor,鈥 but did not explicitly say he would not be a formal government employee. As a private contractor, he is not bound to the same disclosure regulations and criminal ethics laws as many formal executive branch employees, ethics experts told ABC News. (Kim, Rubin, Faulders and Mosk, 5/29)
Novartis AG has agreed to manufacture a gene-based coronavirus vaccine being developed by scientists at Massachusetts Eye and Ear hospital, Massachusetts General and the University of Pennsylvania, paving the way for human testing to begin later this year. The Swiss drugmaker鈥檚 gene therapy unit AveXis is already making test batches of the vaccine and plans to start producing doses later in the summer that can be used for a clinical trial, said Dave Lennon, the unit鈥檚 president. (Roland, 5/28)
An early stage vaccine against Covid-19 based on the same basic technology used in gene therapy is gaining some support from some of that field鈥檚 biggest names. Earlier this year, James Wilson, a gene therapy pioneer, got a call from Luk Vandenberghe, who had been a graduate student in Wilson鈥檚 lab two decades ago. Vandenberghe wondered if a virus they had worked on as a potential component of gene therapies might work as part of a vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes Covid-19. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great idea,鈥 said Wilson, who heads the Gene Therapy Program at the University of Pennsylvania. 鈥淲hat can I do to help?鈥 (Herper, 5/28)
Now that there are glimmers of hope for a coronavirus vaccine, governments, NGOs and others are hashing out plans for how vaccines could be distributed once they are available 鈥 and deciding who will get them first. (O'Reilly, 5/29)