Regulatory reliance pathways during health emergencies: enabling timely authorizations for COVID-19 vaccines in Latin America

Publication date

2022-08-18

Authors

van der Zee, Ivar T.ORCID 0000-0003-1149-8177
Vreman, Rick A.ISNI 0000000492512512
Liberti, Lawrence
Garza, Mario Alanis

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Objectives: To map the timing and nature of regulatory reliance pathways used to authorize COVID-19 vaccines in Latin America. Methods: An observational study was conducted assessing the characteristics of all COVID-19 vaccine authorizations in Latin America. For every authorization it was determined whether reliance was used in the authorization process. Subgroups of reference national regulatory authorities (NRAs) and non-reference NRAs were compared. Results: 56 authorizations of 10 different COVID-19 vaccines were identified in 18 countries, of which 25 (44.6%) used reliance and 12 (21.4%) did not. For the remaining 19 (33.0%) it was not possible to determine whether reliance was used. Reference agencies used reliance less often (40% of authorizations with a known pathway) compared to non-reference agencies (100%). The median review time was just 15 days and does not meaningfully differ between reliance and non-reliance authorizations. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that for these vaccines, despite reliance pathways being associated with numerous rapid authorizations, independent authorization review times were not considerably longer than reliance reviews; reliance pathways were not a prerequisite for rapid authorization. Nevertheless, reliance pathways provided rapid authorizations in response to the COVID-19 emergency.

Keywords

Regulatory frameworks, COVID-19, health priorities, Latin America, global health, drug approval, COVID-19vaccines, drug utilization review, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

van der Zee, I T, Vreman, R A, Liberti, L & Garza, M A 2022, 'Regulatory reliance pathways during health emergencies: enabling timely authorizations for COVID-19 vaccines in Latin America', Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica/Pan American Journal of Public Health, vol. 46, e115, pp. 1-7. https://doi.org/10.26633/RPSP.2022.115