Wales On Sunday

VACCINE TRIALS TO RESUME

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TRIALS of a Covid-19 vaccine being developed by AstraZenec­a and Oxford University will resume after a pause due to a reported side effect in a patient in the UK.

AstraZenec­a issued a statement on Tuesday night saying the latestage studies of the vaccine had been paused while the company investigat­ed whether the patient’s reported side effect is connected with the vaccine.

Yesterday, Oxford University confirmed that trials would resume across all UK clinical trial sites.

It comes after the UK Government’s chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance told a Downing Street press conference what has happened in the Oxford trial is not unusual.

He added that similar events should also be expected in some of the other vaccine candidate trials.

News site Stat first reported the pause in testing and said the possible side effect occurred in a testing volunteer in Britain, who was expected to recover.

The vaccine is being tested in thousands of people in Britain and the US, and in smaller study groups in Brazil and South America.

The University of Oxford said: “The ongoing randomised controlled clinical trials of the Oxford coronaviru­s vaccine ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 will resume across all UK clinical trial sites. Globally some 18,000 individual­s have received study vaccines as part of the trial.

“In large trials such as this, it is expected that some participan­ts will become unwell and every case must be carefully evaluated to ensure careful assessment of safety.

“On Sunday our standard review process triggered a study pause to vaccinatio­n across all of our global trials to allow the review of safety data by an independen­t safety review committee, and the national regulators. All routine follow-up appointmen­ts continued as normal during this period.

“The independen­t review process has concluded and following the recommenda­tions of both the independen­t safety review committee and the UK regulator, the MHRA, the trials will recommence in the UK.”

No details about the patient or the nature of the side effect were given. But the New York Times has previously reported the patient had been diagnosed with transverse myelitis, an inflammato­ry syndrome which affects the spinal cord and is often sparked by viral infections.

Temporary holds on large medical studies are not uncommon, and looking into any unexpected reactions is a mandatory part of safety testing. Two other vaccines are in final-stage tests in the United States, one made by Moderna and the other by Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech.

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