FDA approves Pfizer's Prevnar pneumonia vaccine for adults

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Fri Dec 30, 2011 3:10pm EST

(Reuters) - U.S. health regulators approved the expansion of Pfizer Inc's blockbuster Prevnar vaccine for use in adults 50 and older to fight pneumonia, meningitis and other diseases cause by pneumococcus bacteria.

Prevnar 13 is designed to fight 13 forms of a bacterium called streptococcus pneumoniae, or pneumococcus. Pneumonia caused by the pneumococcal organism is one of the biggest causes of death in older people and its incidence begins to increase after age 50.

The vaccine, which had been approved for children in the United States, is already one of Pfizer's biggest brands and an expanded population of adults could generate more than $1.5 billion in annual sales.

The Food and Drug Administration said about 300,000 adults in the United States in that older age group are hospitalized each year because of pneumococcal pneumonia.

"Pneumococcal disease is a substantial cause of illness and death," said Dr. Karen Midthun, director of FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. "Today's approval provides an additional vaccine for preventing pneumococcal pneumonia and invasive disease in this age group."

Pfizer's vaccine was considered under the FDA's accelerated approval process, meaning the agency believed the medicine represents an unmet medical need.

In November, the vaccine secured the support of FDA advisers, who found it safe and as effective as Merck & Co's Pneumovax, which is currently the only vaccine for pneumococcal bacteria approved in the United States for adults 50 years of age or older.

The FDA has said the older vaccine from Merck, known as a free polysaccharide vaccine, was effective against invasive pneumonia, but was not shown to have an effect on pneumococcal pneumonia, which is more common in adults.

Prevnar 13 belongs to a new generation of pneumococcal vaccines known as conjugates, which can trigger a stronger and longer-lasting immune response.

The vaccine can prevent against pneumonia, when the pneumococcus bacteria infects the lungs, and is also effective against the bacteria's spread to other parts of the body such as the blood or spinal fluid.

Side effects were similar to those for Merck's Pneumovax, including swelling at the injection site, fatigue, headache, and muscle and joint pain.

The vaccine is already approved for adults aged 50 and older in the European Union, Australia, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Thailand and the Philippines, Pfizer said.

In total, the Prevnar franchise - known as Prevenar in Europe and other countries - had about $3.7 billion in global sales last year.

Under the conditions for accelerated approval, Pfizer must conduct a study to confirm Prevnar 13 can actually prevent pneumococcal pneumonia in adults, not just cause the body to produce antibodies - which is typically used as a surrogate in clinical trials, the FDA said.

Results of the confirmatory trial, which enrolled more than 80,000 subjects in the Netherlands, are expected in 2013.

(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York and Anna Yukhananov in Washington, additional reporting by Alina Selyukh in Washington; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Gary Hill)

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Comments (1)
arianwen wrote:
My daughter was brain-damaged by the hep-B vaccine at birth. It caused four days and nights of endless screaming, encephalitis, and she was later diagnosed with autism. She was born in 2000, two years before the Prevnar vaccine started to be recommended for babies and toddlers. The autism rate has continued to rise, and I believe that the increase is primarily caused by Prevnar. Missouri school nurse Patti White testified before a sub-congressional committee investigating the (lack of) safety of the hep-B vaccine in 1999 that she and her organization of school nurses had come reluctantly to the conclusion that the sudden extreme increase of autism in the public schools starting in the late ’90s was caused by the hep-B vaccine being given starting at birth in 1991. The principal of my daughter’s school told me that three years ago there were four autistic children out of 700 at the school, but last year there were eight. The rate of autistic children in the U.S. went from one in 150 eight years ago to one in a hundred last year, and Touch Point says that in Missouri the rate is now one in 88, one in 48 boys. Rock City, near St. Louis, said that the rate of autism in their public schools had doubled in the last five years. What has changed? The Prevnar vaccine was added to the schedule for babies in 2002, those babies would have entered kindergarten in about 2007 or 2008. It’s also true that the flu vaccine started to be recommended even for healthy children around that time, and that has probably also contributed to the increase. Now they want to give the meningococcal vaccine to babies: what do you think will be the result? This is a cataclysm, and the only way for parents to keep their children from being thrown over the cliff is for them to become refusers.

Dec 31, 2011 11:57am EST  --  Report as abuse
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