Imported vaccines may be fasttracked

Companies could get leeway in Indiaspecific tests and trials, says DBT’s guidance document
Indian companies looking to import or test potential COVID19 vaccines that have been developed internationally, could get leeway in the number of Indiaspecific tests and trials they would need to conduct, says a guidance document from the Department of Biotechnology (DBT). Normally, a vaccine that has been licensed in another country, would still need to repeat all human safety tests in India. Use of earlier data “Data generated outside India will be considered and examined and an abbreviated pathway may be considered for COVID19 vaccine based on scientific rational and level of completeness of data in human trials in addition to satisfactory preclinical data. Phase I/II or phase III multicentric study on statistically significant sample size may be considered based on, initial safety studies, proof of concept and dose finding data,” says the document that was published on May 23, but has only now been made public. The Punebased Serum Insitute of India (SII), which has a partnership with AstraZeneca to manufacture a potential vaccine being developed at Oxford University, has announced plans to conduct phase II/III clinical trials, meaning it will test the potential vaccine in Indians to determine if the vaccine iscapable of stimulating an immune response and if it is capable of protecting people from the infection. However the SII’s application to the Drug Controller General of India is partly premised on promising data on the vaccine candidate generated in the United Kingdom. Hyderabadbased Bharat Biotech has also begun testing its product Covaxin — based on a SARSCoV2 strain sourced from ICMRNational Institute of Virology, Pune — at different sites on volunteers, but these are early phaseI and phaseII trials. The same company has also been funded by the DBT to test a vaccine candidate utilising the inactivated rabies vector platform, developed with the Jefferson Vaccine Centre (JVC) in Pennsylvania in the U.S. In an interview to The Hindu, Secretary, DBT, Renu Swarup had said regulatory approvals would be accelerated but no important stages would be skipped. This would include different stages of vaccine tests being conducted in “'parallel.” Parallel tests The clause also finds mention in the guidelines. “The applicant may submit parallel application for conducting appropriate phase of clinical trial to CDSCO (the drug regulator) for consideration... However, the application for clinical trial will be approved subject to ‘No objection certificate' from RCGM after examination of data of preclinical studies.” The RCGM is the Review Committee on Genetic Manipulation, a DBT body that approves trial procedures on biological products that involves genetic manipulation. These can include DNA or modified vaccine candidates.
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