FDA tells Johnson & Johnson to discard millions of vaccine doses

EU regulator says batches made around time of contamination at Baltimore plant will not be used

Healthcare workers prepare doses of the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine in Houston in  March. File photograph: Go Nakamura/The New York Times
Healthcare workers prepare doses of the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine in Houston in March. File photograph: Go Nakamura/The New York Times

The US Food & Drug Administration on Friday said Johnson & Johnson must throw away millions of doses of its Covid-19 vaccine that were manufactured at a problem-plagued Baltimore factory but also cleared millions for use.

Two sources familiar with the situation told Reuters that the agency had cleared about 10 million doses. The New York Times said that the batches being discarded amount to about 60 million doses, citing people familiar with the matter.

Without disclosing or confirming the number of vaccine doses, the FDA said in a news release that it had authorised two batches of the vaccine for use, that several other batches were not suitable for use and that others were being evaluated.

The agency said it was not yet ready to authorise Emergent BioSolutions Inc’s plant for manufacturing the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Production of the vaccine at the Baltimore site was halted by US authorities in April and Johnson & Johnson was put in charge of manufacturing at the plant.

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One source familiar with the matter told Reuters that the Johnson & Johnson doses are expected to be exported to other countries. The doses are already in vials and ready for use, the other source said.

Safety concerns about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine paired with flagging US demand for vaccinations in general have slowed rollout of the one-shot vaccine to a crawl. Close to half of the 21 million doses produced for the US sit unused.

The FDA said its decision allows for the Johnson & Johnson doses to be used in the US or exported. The agency said the drugmaker and Emergent must agree that the FDA can share relevant information about the manufacturing of the doses with regulators where the vaccine is shipped.

Johnson & Johnson, in a statement, confirmed that the FDA authorised the two batches, but did not acknowledge the doses regulators decided should be tossed.

"Today's decisions represent progress in our continued efforts to make a difference in this pandemic on a global scale," Kathy Wengel, Johnson & Johnson's chief global supply chain officer, said in the statement.

The FDA declined to comment beyond its statement.

Last month, Emergent Chief Executive Robert Kramer said it was his understanding that there were 100 million doses of Johnson & Johnson's vaccine ready for FDA review and that regulators had begun the review process.

The April halt followed the discovery that ingredients from AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine, also being produced at the plant at the time, contaminated a batch of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine. AstraZeneca’s shot is no longer being made there.

An FDA inspection also turned up a long list of sanitary problems and bad manufacturing practices at the Emergent plant.

Separately, Europe’s drug regulator said on Friday that batches of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine made for the region around the time the contamination issues were revealed at the Baltimore plant would, as a precaution, not be used.

The European Medicines Agency did not say how many shots were affected, but Reuters has reported it involves millions of doses, making it harder for J&J to meet a target of delivering 55 million to Europe by end of June. The EMA said batches of the vaccine that were already released in the region had not been affected by the cross-contamination, based on the information it has. – Reuters