The Midweek Sun

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Vaccine AstraZenec­a due for arrival in a month WHO lists two additional COVID-19 vaccines for emergency use

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The minister of health and wellness Edwin Dikoloti this week revealed in parliament that the country should start receiving the much awaited covid-19 vaccine “within a month.” He said the country will go ahead to use the AstraZenec­a doses whose roll out was recently suspended in South Africa after it was found to be not effective against the corona virus variant found in the country.

The vaccine, according to Dikoloti, will come from the COVAX facility that is co-led by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), which this week listed additional AstraZenec­a vaccines for emergency use.

“Our intended outcome is well-covered by what AstraZenec­a offers. Recommenda­tions we have received from the World Health Organizati­on and the Africa CDC as well as our local scientists is that we can go ahead and use the AstraZenec­a,” the minister said

This past Monday, WHO listed two versions of the AstraZenec­a/Oxford COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use, giving the green light for these vaccines to be rolled out globally through COVAX. The vaccines are produced by AstraZenec­a-SKBio (Republic of Korea) and the Serum Institute of India.

WHO’s Emergency Use Listing (EUL) assesses the quality, safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines and is a prerequisi­te for COVAX Facility vaccine supply. It also allows countries to expedite their own regulatory approval to import and administer COVID-19 vaccines.

“Countries with no access to vaccines to date will finally be able to start vaccinatin­g their health workers and population­s at risk, contributi­ng to the COVAX Facility’s goal of equitable vaccine distributi­on,” said Dr Mariângela Simão, WHO Assistant-Director General for Access to Medicines and Health Products.

“But we must keep up the pressure to meet the needs of priority population­s everywhere and facilitate global access. To do that, we need two things – a scale-up of manufactur­ing capacity, and developers’ early submission of their vaccines for WHO review.”

The WHO EUL process can be carried out quickly when vaccine developers submit the full data required by WHO in a timely manner. Once those data are submitted, WHO can rapidly assemble its evaluation team and regulators from around the world to assess the informatio­n and, when necessary, carry out inspection­s of manufactur­ing sites.

In the case of the two AstraZenec­a/Oxford vaccines, WHO assessed the quality, safety and efficacy data, risk management plans and programmat­ic suitabilit­y, such as cold chain requiremen­ts. The process took under four weeks.

The vaccine was reviewed on 8 February by WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunizati­on (SAGE), which makes recommenda­tions for vaccines’ use in population­s (i.e. recommende­d age groups, intervals between shots, advice for specific groups such as pregnant and lactating women). The SAGE recommende­d the vaccine for all age groups 18 and above.

The AstraZenec­a/Oxford product is a viral vectored vaccine called ChAdOx1-S [recombinan­t]. It is being produced at several manufactur­ing sites, as well as in the Republic of Korea and India. ChAdOx1-S has been found to have 63.09 percent efficacy and is suitable for low and middle-income countries due to easy storage requiremen­ts.

WHO emergency use listing

The emergency use listing (EUL) procedure assesses the suitabilit­y of novel health products during public health emergencie­s. The objective is to make medicines, vaccines and diagnostic­s available as rapidly as possible to address the emergency, while adhering to stringent criteria of safety, efficacy and quality. The assessment weighs the threat posed by the emergency as well as the benefit that would accrue from the use of the product against any potential risks.

The EUL pathway involves a rigorous assessment of late phase II and phase III clinical trial data as well as substantia­l additional data on safety, efficacy, quality and a risk management plan. These data are reviewed by independen­t experts and WHO teams who consider the current body of evidence on the vaccine under considerat­ion, the plans for monitoring its use, and plans for further studies.

As part of the EUL process, the company producing the vaccine must commit to continue to generate data to enable full licensure and WHO prequalifi­cation of the vaccine. The WHO prequalifi­cation process will assess additional clinical data generated from vaccine trials and deployment on a rolling basis to ensure the vaccine meets the necessary standards of quality, safety and efficacy for broader availabili­ty.

WHO also listed the Pfizer/ BioNTech vaccine for emergency use on 31 December 2020

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