The Daily Telegraph

Russian vaccine uncertain and has side effects, warn its creators

- By Theo Merz in Moscow

THE Russian coronaviru­s vaccine hailed by Vladimir Putin, the president, is not certain to work and has side effects including swelling, fever and pain, according to scientists who developed the drug.

Mr Putin announced on Tuesday that Russia had approved the world’s first vaccine against the virus, saying his own daughter had taken part in clinical trials. Officials said the vaccine would be offered to medics as early as this month and rolled out to the general population from October.

But documents on an official Russian health ministry website said the vaccine had been tested on too few volunteers over too short a time to draw conclusion­s about its effectiven­ess, and described a number of side effects.

“Adverse events... were met frequently or very frequently,” according to the report from Moscow’s Gamaleya Institute, which developed the vaccine. It is not possible to define the occurrence of adverse events more accurately because of the limited number of participan­ts in the research.”

Thirty-eight volunteers took part in the trials over 42 days. Side effects included swelling, hypertherm­ia, lethargy, headaches, itching at the vaccinatio­n site, decreased appetite, diarrhoea and cold-like symptoms.

Over the course of the trials, 144 “adverse

events” were recorded, more than 30 of which were ongoing.

The report said the vaccine should not be administer­ed to children, pensioners or to people with a range of underlying health conditions.

No research was conducted into how it might react with other medicines, and nothing in the report backed up officials’ earlier claims that the drug would provide immunity for two years.

Mr Putin said his daughter had experience­d a slight increase in body temperatur­e after receiving the vaccine, but the next day was back to normal and had a “high number of antibodies”.

“I know it works effectivel­y, forms strong immunity, and has passed all the needed checks,” the president said. Other officials announced there had been preliminar­y orders for more than a billion doses from 20 countries.

Moscow hailed its speedy developmen­t as an example of its medical prowess, naming the vaccine “Sputnik V” in a nod to the Cold War space race.

The World Health Organisati­on remained sceptical about the Russian vaccine, saying yesterday it was “not ready to say there is a vaccine that has undergone the experiment­s we request for the assessment that it is ready for use worldwide”.

British researcher­s said the rush to roll out the vaccine was “reckless and foolish”, while the German government also raised doubts.

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