Deutsche Welle (English edition)

US FDA grants authorizat­ion for BioNTech-Pfizer COVID vaccine

US drug regulators have given approval for the country's first coronaviru­s vaccine, developed by Germany's BioNTech and US drugmaker Pfizer. The first shots could be administer­ed early next week.

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The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) on Friday authorized the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine for use in the United

States.

The approval will kick off a mass-inoculatio­n campaign as the country reels under surging coronaviru­s case numbers and fatalities.

"I am authorizin­g the emergency use of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for the prevention of COVID-19," FDA chief scientist Denise Hinton wrote in a letter to a Pfizer executive.

When will vaccinatio­n

begin?

The first shots are expected to go to health care workers and elderly people living in nursing homes. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( CDC) advisory committee is expected to recommend who will be first in line.

Shortly after the authorizat­ion was announced, US President Donald Trump hailed it as a "medical miracle," adding that the vaccine is "very safe."

"We have made sure that this vaccine will be free for all Americans," Trump said in a video published on social media. "We have already begun shipping the vaccine to every state and zip code in the country. The first vaccine will be administer­ed in less than 24 hours," Trump said.

US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told broadcaste­r ABC News on Friday, ahead of the authorizat­ion, that the Trump administra­tion was working with Pfizer on distributi­on and "we could be seeing people getting vaccinated Monday, Tuesday of next week."

US has pre-ordered 100 million doses

Azar said earlier this week the US hopes to have 20 million people inoculated by the end of

the month. The US has already ordered 100 million doses of the vaccine from Pfizer, which are to be supplied in total by next March. This would inoculate 50 million people, as the vaccine is given in two doses.

The US is the worst-hit country in the world by coronaviru­s, with over 15,780,000 total cases and over 294,000 total deaths. On Friday alone, over 171,000 new infections have been reported and over 2,000 people have died, according to the Johns Hopkins University.

In an ongoing BioNTech-Pfizer-study with nearly 44,000 test subjects, the vaccine was found to be safe and more than 90% effective across different ages and physical conditions. The FDA authorizat­ion for emergency use means the vaccine is still experiment­al, and it is still unclear how long the protection will last.

The US joins several countries including the United Kingdom, Canada and Mexico in approving the vaccine for emergency use.

The next vaccine candidate up for review by the FDA is being developed by US pharmaceut­ical company Moderna.

Its late-stage trial results released on November 30 showed a 94% efficacy rate. An FDA expert panel is set to review Moderna's vaccine on December 17. European Medicines Agency (EMA) regulators are due to review the vaccine by January 12.

wmr/aw (AP, dpa, AFP, Reuters)

 ??  ?? Elderly people in nursing homes sand health care workers will be first in line for the vaccine
Elderly people in nursing homes sand health care workers will be first in line for the vaccine

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