With the flu season just months away, it's nearly decision time for Michael
Hoover: Endure the pain of a vaccine shot or try to dodge the virus again this
year.
"I probably should get vaccinated, but who wants to get poked?" said the
44-year-old Treasury Department employee, who has forgone the shot for 10 years.
Squeamish consumers such as Hoover may soon find relief in a needle-free flu
vaccine that is squirted into the nose, rather than injected into the arm. The
Food and Drug Administration is expected to approve the vaccine, called FluMist,
by the end of next month, which would put it on pharmacy shelves in time for the
2003-2004 flu season.
FluMist's manufacturer, MedImmune Inc. of Gaithersburg, says the painless
alternative to the flu shot could dramatically increase the number of people who
seek flu immunization, preventing many of the 114,000 hospitalizations and
36,000 annual deaths from the disease.
Approval could hand MedImmune its second blockbuster drug and cement its
place in the highest ranks of the biotechnology industry. The 15-year-old
company, by far the Washington region's wealthiest drug developer, expects to
cross the $1 billion revenue mark this year, driven largely by sales of Synagis,
a drug that prevents a respiratory disease that can kill premature babies.
But questions linger about just how widely its nasal flu vaccine would be
used. Unlike the injectable flu vaccine, which contains a dead version of the
virus, FluMist contains a live but diluted virus that could pose a health risk
to people with weakened immune systems. So FluMist is expected to be approved
only for healthy people between the ages of 5 and 49 because federal regulators
still have concerns about its safety and effectiveness in the elderly and young
children, who are most vulnerable to flu.
That leaves out customers who are most likely to get a flu vaccine: adults
over 50 and anyone over 6 months old who has certain chronic conditions or
immune system diseases. MedImmune said it will seek clearance to sell FluMist to
people in those groups later, a task that industry analysts say will require at
least two years of further testing and paperwork.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that only 13
percent of healthy people under 50, or about 17 million Americans, got flu shots
last year. That included a relatively small number of children.
"The question is whether MedImmune will be able to get healthy adults to turn
off the football game, get off the couch and get a shot up the nose to prevent a
disease that, for most, is not life-threatening," said Joel Sendek, a
biotechnology analyst at Lazard Freres & Co.
James G. Hamilton, a family practitioner in Durham, N.C., who has written
extensively about fear of needles, says FluMist will sell itself. "People who
are frightened of needles will avoid doctors for years, so they will go without
immunization for years," he said. "There would be no fear with a nasal spray."
Price remains another potential barrier to widespread FluMist adoption
because a typical dose is expected to cost at least $30, more than twice that of
a flu shot.
MedImmune officials declined to be interviewed for this story because FluMist
is under FDA review. But in recent conference calls with Wall Street analysts,
the company has forecast revenue between $120 million and $140 million for
FluMist in 2003.
For the first flu season, MedImmune says it can only produce up to 6 million
doses because of manufacturing limitations, a number that analysts say the
company should have no trouble selling.
The bulk of first-year vaccinations will be given by pediatricians, primary
care physicians and pharmacists, the company said. But for now it is unclear
whether patients will be able to self-administer the vaccine, which is sprayed
into both nostrils with a small syringe.
Medical experts say FluMist offers stronger immunity against the flu than an
injectable precisely because of where it is administered. The live flu virus in
the vaccine can only grow in cooler temperatures in the nasal passages, where it
can prevent infection, but not in the warmer lungs where it might trigger
illness.
Tim Uyeki, a epidemiologist and flu expert with the CDC, said the result is
the same general immune response caused by an injected vaccine with "the added
benefit of an immune response at the points where natural infection occurs."
MedImmune's entry into the flu-vaccine market comes just as its partner,
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, is pulling back from it. Six months ago, Wyeth said it
would stop manufacturing its flu shot Flushield and called its sales performance
"very disappointing."
Wyeth's move is viewed as a vote of confidence for FluMist, but it also
highlights the financial and logistical difficulties that vaccine manufacturers
can encounter. They must reformulate their products each flu season to protect
against the most threatening strains, mount education campaigns to combat
persistent fears that vaccines cause the flu, and try to predict demand for a
product whose use varies each year.
Wyeth plans a three-year, $100-million education campaign about the
advantages of a nasal flu vaccine and the dangers of the flu. The goal,
executives said during a recent presentation to investors, is to turn FluMist
"into a household name."
A survey of 800 doctors carried out by brokerage SGCowen Securities last year
indicates that the vast majority would use the new vaccine and recommend it to
their patients, an important endorsement because much of FluMist's early use
will occur in doctors' offices, analysts said.
"The factor Wall Street is trying to gauge is whether premium pricing affects
sales of a flu vaccine," said Philip Nadeau, a biotechnology analyst at SG
Cowen, which said it may offer investment banking services to MedImmune in the
coming months. Nadeau predicts many patients will pay out of pocket to avoid a
flu shot.
Analysts suspect some may bristle at FluMist's higher cost, particularly the
first year after approval. But Gordon Grundy, senior medical director for Aetna
Inc.'s northeast region, said the insurer is likely to shell out more money for
what it considers preventive medicine.
FDA approval would mark the end of a long and often bumpy path for FluMist.
More than 40 years ago, scientists at the University of Michigan, backed by a
military grant, began researching new flu vaccines to prevent a recurrence of
the 1958 flu pandemic, which killed nearly 70,000 Americans. By 1967, an
epidemiologist at the university, Hunein F. Maassab, achieved the breakthrough:
a live virus that conferred immunity without causing infection.
Excited by the innovation, the National Institutes of Health took over the
vaccine's development during the next two decades, adding technology and
sponsoring large tests to study its safety and effectiveness in humans. In 1995,
Aviron of Mountain View, Calif., licensed the vaccine from the University of
Michigan with plans to bring it to market. It reformulated the vaccine as a
nasal spray and funded the large patient tests needed to prove its safety and
effectiveness to government regulators.
Still, FluMist failed to clear crucial regulatory hurdles until MedImmune
bought Aviron -- and with it FluMist -- in 2002 for $1.5 billion. Since then, an
FDA advisory panel charged with reviewing patient data endorsed the vaccine,
which typically paves the way for full agency approval.
DISCLAIMER: All
information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here is for
general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the
knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended
as providing medical or legal advice. The decision whether or not to vaccinate
is an important and complex issue and should be made by you, and you alone, in
consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"