The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has received results from two studies of subclinical heart inflammation following Moderna COVID-19 vaccination, but is refusing to release them to the public—at least for now.
Moderna has shared the results of the P203 study with the FDA, an FDA spokeswoman told The Epoch Times in an email. But she declined to provide them. To obtain the results, she said, The Epoch Times would need to request them under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
“The FDA doesn’t post PMR/PMC study reports,” she said, using acronyms for postmarketing requirements and postmarketing commitments, or requirements and commitments pharmaceutical companies make when receiving FDA clearance for their products. “They may be requested under FOIA.”
The spokeswoman did not disclose why the FDA doesn’t release the results absent a FOIA request.
Moderna has not responded to requests for comment.
The Epoch Times has submitted a FOIA request for the results but has not yet received them.
The FDA did not deny it has received the results from the P301 study.
The Epoch Times submitted a FOIA request for the results from that study in July. It has not yet received them.
The FDA’s postmarketing database lists all three studies it directed Moderna to run on subclinical myocarditis as “ongoing.”
The matter “represents an urgent and imminent threat to young people who may be mandated to take this vaccine,” Ms. Adams told the FDA.
A number of U.S. colleges have required COVID-19 vaccination for attendance. Some are requiring the newest version of the shots from Moderna, Pfizer, and Novavax, even though they were authorized with human data from just 50 people.
The FDA rejected the bid for quick processing.
“You have not demonstrated a compelling need that involves an imminent threat to the life or physical safety of an individual,” Sarah Kotler, an FDA FOIA official, told Ms. Adams. “Neither have you demonstrated that there exists an urgency to inform the public concerning actual or alleged federal government activity.”
An appeal was also turned down.
“Neither your original request nor your appeal provided any information demonstrating that immediately prior to making your request on July 5, 2023, that the incidence of ’subclinical myocarditis’ in youth from the administration of either Pfizer’s COMIRNATY or Moderna’s SPIKEVAX vaccine products was the subject of breaking or currently unfolding news stories,” Martina Varnado, an FDA official, said in the letter rejecting the appeal.
“It shouldn’t take a FOIA request to obtain these study results that are relevant to potentially update the benefit-risk profile,” Ms. Adams told The Epoch Times via email. She added, “I really don’t think FDA has a leg to stand on here.”
With quick processing out of the question, Ms. Varnado said it would take at least two years for Ms. Adams to receive materials responsive to her request.
Pfizer
The FDA also directed Pfizer to carry out studies on subclinical myocarditis, but permitted the company to push back the deadline to report the results from the study with the earliest deadline. The revised deadline was set to June 30. The FDA spokeswoman suggested to The Epoch Times that the FDA has still not received the results. The agency’s database lists the current status as “delayed.”The Epoch Times submitted FOIA requests concerning the Pfizer study in January.
The requests are “pending” at the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Ms. Kotler told The Epoch Times in an email.
“That office has a large backlog due to the many COVID vaccine related FOIA requests and litigations,” she said.
Pfizer has not responded to requests for comment.
The study in question is a prospective one aimed at examining the incidence of subclinical myocarditis in people aged 16 to 30 following receipt of a third dose of Pfizer’s vaccine.
Pfizer’s other study is not due until 2024. That study is supposed to examine the incidence of subclinical myocarditis after a second Pfizer dose in people aged 5 to 15,