Top Food and Drug Administration officials resigned Tuesday over the Biden administration's announced plans to roll out COVID-19 booster shots before the agency had approved the inoculations.The two top virologists at the FDA that just resigned are about to go public, reports are they have said
— Darla Shine (@DarlaShine) September 2, 2021
"kids don't need this shot, that's why we resigned." Whoa!!
An @US_FDA spokesperson confirms departure of @FDACBER's Dr. Marion Gruber and Dr. Phil Krause
— Alexander Tin (@Alexander_Tin) August 31, 2021
Email from Dr. Peter Marks announcing the "two retirements" calls Dr. Gruber's departure "a huge loss" and thanks Dr. Krause for "incredible contributions to public health" https://t.co/Ko5KzfhZzc pic.twitter.com/e5aolUwQ6v
Two top vaccine regulators have resigned from the Food and Drug Administration, revealing anger, frustration, and turmoil at the federal agency as it faces intensifying pressure to authorize COVID-19 vaccine booster shots and doses for children under the age of 12.
The two regulators leaving are Marion Gruber, director of the FDA’s Office of Vaccines Research and Review (OVRR), and OVRR Deputy Director Phil Krause. Gruber has been with the FDA for more than 30 years, and Krause has been at the agency for more than a decade.
Their resignations, first reported by pharmaceutical trade publication BioCentury, were apparently sparked by frustration that the Biden administration had overstepped the FDA in announcing plans to offer COVID-19 booster shots beginning on September 20. The pair also clashed with higher-up Peter Marks, who reportedly went along with the administration's plans. Marks is the director of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), which includes the OVRR.
Marks announced the two resignations in a letter sent to FDA staff. Gruber's planned departure on October 31 is a "huge loss" for the agency, Marks wrote. Krause, who will depart in November, played a "key role in our interactions to address critical vaccine-related issues," he added. The letter was published in full by biopharmaceutical outlet Endpoints News.
Regulatory rebellion
As news spread of the high-profile resignations, current and former FDA regulators were quick to reveal growing tensions coming from some in the agency who see the Biden administration's booster plan as premature, unnecessary, and out of step with regulators' opinions. Politico, which spoke with 11 former and current health officials, described the situation at the FDA as a "potential mutiny" among agency staff and outside vaccine experts.
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