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U.S. pauses use of J&J vaccine over rare blood clots, rollout delayed in Europe

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- U.S. federal health agencies yesterday recommende­d pausing use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID19 vaccine for at least a few days after six women under age 50 developed rare blood clots after receiving the shot, dealing a fresh setback to efforts to tackle the pandemic.

Johnson & Johnson said it would delay rollout of the vaccine to Europe, a week after regulators there said they were reviewing rare blood clots in four recipients of the shot in the United States. South Africa also suspended use of J&J’s vaccine.

Acting U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Janet Woodcock said the agency expected the pause to be a matter of days, and was aimed at providing informatio­n to healthcare providers on how to diagnose and treat the clots.

The moves come after European regulators said earlier this month they had found a possible link between AstraZenec­a’s COVID-19 vaccine and a similar rare blood clotting problem that led to a small number of deaths.

FDA official Peter Marks said it was “plainly obvious” the J&J cases were “very similar” to the AstraZenec­a ones. He said there had been no similar blood clot cases reported among recipients of the Moderna or Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines, which use a different technology and accounted for the vast majority of U.S. vaccinatio­ns so far.

But J&J’s single-dose shot and AstraZenec­a’s low-cost vaccine are seen as vital weapons in the fight against a pandemic that has claimed more than three million lives.

Immunology experts echoed U.S. officials in underscori­ng that the risk posed by the J&J vaccine appeared extremely low.

“Even if causally linked to the vaccine: 6 cases with about 7 million doses ... is not something to panic about,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore, said in an email, noting that the risk appears lower than that of clots from oral contracept­ives.

He expressed concern that the

pause could increase hesitancy to get vaccinated.

The FDA said there had been one reported death from the rare blood clotting condition among recipients of the J&J vaccine, while another person was in a critical condition.

The White House said appointmen­ts to receive the J&J shot were being reschedule­d across the country to the other two authorized vaccines, and that there was enough supply of Pfizer and Moderna shots to hit President Joe Biden’s goal of administer­ing 200 million shots during his first 100 days in office.

“There’s enough vaccine - that is basically 100% unquestion­able - for every single, solitary American,” Biden told reporters.

BALANCE OF RISKS

J&J’s vaccine rollout has been limited by production issues. As of April 13, 7.2 million doses of the J&J vaccine had been administer­ed in the United States compared with 185 million of the other two.

An advisory committee to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will meet on Wednesday to review the clotting cases and vote on recommenda­tions for future use of the shot. The FDA will then review the analysis.

All six cases involved women between the ages of 18 and 48, with symptoms occurring six to 13 days after vaccinatio­n. The FDA said patients should watch for up to three weeks for symptoms including severe headache, abdominal pain, leg pain or shortness of breath.

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