- Wisconsin pharmacist sentenced to 3 years in prison for tampering with COVID-19 vaccine doses (cbsnews.com)
A former pharmacist in Wisconsin who intentionally tampered with more than 500 doses of a COVID-19 vaccine was sentenced to three years in prison on Tuesday. Steven Brandenburg, 46, pleaded guilty in February to two felony counts of attempting to tamper with a consumer product...He had admitted to intentionally removing the doses manufactured by Moderna from a refrigerator for hours at Aurora Medical Center in Grafton, located just north of Milwaukee...READ MORE
- Vaccination with Sputnik V launched in India (worldpharmanews.com)
The Russian Direct Investment Fund announces the launch of vaccination with the Russian Sputnik V vaccine against coronavirus in India...Sputnik V has become the first foreign-made vaccine that is used in India contributing to the world’s largest COVID-19 vaccination campaign. Inoculations with Sputnik V in Hyderabad...followed the arrival of the first batch of the vaccine in India on May 1, 2021...Sputnik V was approved for use in India on April 12, 2021 and granted an emergency use authorization...READ MORE
- Pfizer eyes $26B in COVID-19 vaccine sales for the year, with $3.5B already in the bag (fiercepharma.com)Pfizer Owes Massive $14.6 Billion Q1 Revenues to Vaccine Rollout (biospace.com)
In the first three months of 2021, Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine pulled in as much revenue as some pharma blockbusters make in an entire year. That’s just the beginning, as Pfizer eyes sales from more than a billion additional doses before the end of 2021...The mRNA-based shot Comirnaty—first to market in the U.S.—reeled in $3.5 billion globally in the first quarter...For the full year, Pfizer projects a whopping $26 billion in Comirnaty sales, based on the 1.6 million doses the company has pledged worldwide...READ MORE
- Emails show high-powered teachers union pressured CDC to change school reopening guidance (washingtonexaminer.com)The CDC’s cruel, irrational guidance traps our kids in the forever pandemic (nypost.com)
The American Federation of Teachers successfully lobbied the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to change its guidance on school reopenings, emails show...As the CDC was preparing to issue guidance that it was safe to reopen schools fully in February, emails obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request revealed that the AFT was behind the scenes, lobbying the agency and the Biden administration to adjust the guidance to make it friendlier to school closures and hybrid learning...The CDC was preparing to update its guidance to reflect its belief that schools could fully reopen, regardless of community spread of COVID-19...READ MORE
- After breakout year, Moderna on track to generate $15B+ in 2022 thanks to more demand, higher prices: analysts (fiercepharma.com)
Moderna is hard at work ramping up production of its mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, which is projected to reap over $19 billion for the company by year’s end. But given that the pandemic is easing in parts of the world, what’s less certain is how 2022 will play out…After a breakout year, Moderna sees strong reason to believe 2021 won't be a one-off boom year. That's thanks to the predicted need for booster shots and additional supply deals coupled with stronger pricing power…READ MORE
- Pfizer, AstraZeneca COVID vaccines probed in Europe after reports of heart inflammation, rare nerve disorder (fiercepharma.com)
Europe’s drug regulator says it’s evaluating an assortment of potential side effects following inoculation with leading COVID-19 vaccines, including heart inflammation, facial swelling and a rare nerve-degenerating disorder. Yet in most circumstances, it’s not clear whether the vaccines are to blame...In AstraZeneca’s case, the European Medicines Agency’s safety committee...said it’s examining reports of Guillain-Barre syndrome among people who received the drugmaker’s COVID-19 vaccine...The agency is tracking the data for all coronavirus shots as part of its routine safety procedures...READ MORE
- Eli Lilly faces employee complaints, FDA troubles at factory making COVID-19 drug: report (fiercepharma.com)
Quality control problems have already plagued one COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer in Baltimore, Maryland. Now, it appears they’re threatening to trip up a major pandemic therapeutic supplier as well...Eli Lilly employees have accused an executive at the drugmaker’s Branchburg...manufacturing site of altering FDA-required documents in an effort to downplay serious quality control problems...citing internal complaint documents...The complaint, dated April 8, said the executive tasked with quality controls rewrote findings from Lilly’s technical experts at the facility, which produces doses of the company’s COVID-19 antibody treatment bamlanivimab, in order to make them look more favorable...READ MORE
- COVID-19 Update: New Naming System, Support for Investigation and More (biospace.com)
News continues to come out about COVID-19, including support for an investigation into the origins of the virus, a new naming system, and legal discussions of whether employers can mandate vaccination. Here’s a look...READ MORE
- WHO Creates Naming System for COVID-19 Variants
- Scientists Support Full Investigation of Viral Leak Theory
- US Companies Can Legally Mandate Vaccinations
- New Variant from Vietnam is Highly Contagious
- Moderna Initiates Rolling Submission to FDA for Full Approval of COVID-19 Vaccine
- Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine scores FDA nod in adPfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine scores FDA nod in adolescents, enabling a wider rolloutolescents, enabling a wider rollout (fiercepharma.com)
In a first for the U.S., the FDA has authorized the use of Pfizer's BioNTech-partnered COVID-19 vaccine for use in adolescents between the ages of 12 and 15—months ahead of the upcoming school year in the fall...The FDA will amend the existing emergency authorization for the vaccine, which was first issued in December, the agency said. Pfizer’s vaccine is currently the only shot allowed in the U.S. for Americans as young as the age 16. The vaccine's two-dose regimen will be the same for adolescents as it is for adults, the agency said...READ MORE
- Denmark removes J&J from vaccination program over clot fears (apnews.com)
Denmark...removed the single-dose Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 shot from its vaccination program to investigate reports of rare but potentially dangerous blood clots...Denmark, which has been very cautious with all vaccines, has already taken the AstraZeneca shot out of its vaccination program for the same reason. Both the J&J and AstraZeneca shots are made with similar technology...The Danish Health Authority said in a statement that it “has concluded that the benefits of using the COVID-19 vaccine from Johnson & Johnson do not outweigh the risk of causing the possible adverse effect.”...READ MORE