Pfizer COVID-19 pill may not see approval for 'months' despite 'impressive' data
The Pfizer vaccine saw 9 months between the end of trials and full authorization
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The new Pfizer COVID-19 pill may not see Emergency Use Authorization for another month as health officials continue to highlight the promising effects it may bring.
Dr. Anthony Fauci praised the data presented by Pfizer regarding the COVID pill, which someone would take within 48 hours of showing symptoms and continue to take for three to five days.
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Initial trial data indicates that the pill is up to 90% effective at preventing serious illness and death, which has prompted Pfizer and officials to seek Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). Under the authorization, hospitals could administer the pill for treatment in extreme cases.
"If you look at that data, the data are really quite impressive," Fauci said on ABC’s "This Week." "If you get an antiviral, that up to 90 percent will prevent you from going from clinically recognizable infection to blocking. You're getting to the hospital or dying in a 90 percent chance if you get treated within the first three days of the onset of symptoms."
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"That is big deal," he stressed, but the timeline for approval may prove frustrating.
The Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine concluded its Phase III trials and released data on Nov. 18, 2020. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) took around one month to review the data and pass the EUA on Dec. 11.
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The vaccine did not receive full approval until Aug. 23, 2021, which presents a very grim expectation for the pill’s availability.
That means the FDA would still need three to four weeks to pass the EUA for the Pfizer pill, and Fauci cautioned that it may be months before the public sees widespread availability. He also pointed to the production needs, which also took a month or two for Pfizer to reach mass-production and led to the initial prioritization of vaccinations at the end of last year.
"It's going to be months," Fauci explained. "If you look, it's a very complicated synthetic process to make the drug. It is not something that's simple."
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"So the companies revving up and getting more and more, but we're not going to see widely available for at least a few months," he added.