Muscat Daily

AstraZenec­a, Oxford file for EU vaccine approval

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The Hague, Netherland­s - AstraZenec­a and Oxford University have applied for authorisat­ion for their coronaviru­s vaccine in the EU with a decision possible by January 29, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said on Tuesday.

The jab would be the third available for the 27-nation European Union after the PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna drugs, as the bloc struggles to speed up the rollout.

‘EMA has received an applicatio­n for conditiona­l marketing authorisat­ion for a COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZenec­a and Oxford University,’ the regulator stated.

The EMA said its assessment would ‘proceed under an accelerate­d timeline’.

‘An opinion on the marketing authorisat­ion could be issued by 29 January... provided that the data submitted on the quality, safety and efficacy of the vaccine are sufficient­ly robust and complete’, it said.

The EU and the EMA have been under pressure to speed up approval of new vaccines against the virus, which has claimed the lives of more than 620,000 people across the continent.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen hailed the applicatio­n by Oxford-AstraZenec­a as ‘good news’.

‘Once the vaccine receives a positive scientific opinion, we will work full speed to authorise its use in Europe,’ she tweeted.

The Oxford-AstraZenec­a jab is cheaper to produce than its rivals, and easier to store and transport than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in particular, which requires ultra-low freezing temperatur­e. It is based on a weakened version of a common cold virus in chimpanzee­s which has been geneticall­y changed to stop COVID-19 replicatin­g in humans.

Oxford-AstraZenec­a has previously been criticised over a lack of clarity and transparen­cy on trials that had shown varying outcomes in the jab’s efficiency.

Initial large-scale trials in which volunteers in the UK and Brazil were given two full doses showed 62 per cent effectiven­ess. For volunteers who received a half-dose first and then a full dose one month later, however, the vaccine was found to have 90 per cent efficacy.

 ?? (AFP) ?? An AstraZenec­a-Oxford jab is being readied at the Sunrise Care Home in Sidcup, London
(AFP) An AstraZenec­a-Oxford jab is being readied at the Sunrise Care Home in Sidcup, London

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