Los Angeles Times

2 COVID- 19 vaccines get nod in India

Prime minister says authorizat­ion marks a ‘ turning point’ as the nation records more than 10.3 million cases.

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NEW DELHI — India authorized two COVID- 19 vaccines Sunday, paving the way for a huge inoculatio­n program to stem the pandemic in the world’s secondmost- populous country.

The country’s drugs regulator gave emergency authorizat­ion for the vaccine developed by Oxford University and U. K.- based drug maker AstraZenec­a, as well as another developed by Indian company Bharat Biotech.

Drugs Controller General Dr. Venugopal G. Somani said both vaccines would be administer­ed in two doses. He said the decision to authorize the vaccines was made after “careful examinatio­n” by the Central Drugs Standard Control Organizati­on, India’s pharmaceut­ical regulator.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the authorizat­ion a “decisive turning point to strengthen a spirited fight.”

“It would make every Indian proud that the two vaccines that have been given emergency use approval are made in India!” Modi tweeted.

AstraZenec­a has contracted the Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine manufactur­er, to make 1 billion doses of its vaccine for developing nations, including India. On Wednesday, Britain became the f irst country to approve the shot.

India, however, will not allow the export of the Oxford University- Astra Zeneca vaccine for several months, Adar Poonawalla, the Serum Institute’s CEO, said Sunday. The ban on exports means that poorer nations will probably have to wait a few months before receiving their first shots.

The move was made to ensure that vulnerable population­s in India were protected and to prevent hoarding, Poonawalla said.

But questions have been raised by health experts over the vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech. They point out that clinical trials have begun only recently, making it almost impossible for the firm to have analyzed and submitted data showing that its shots are effective in preventing illness from the coronaviru­s.

India has confirmed more than 10.3 million coronaviru­s cases, second in the world behind the U. S., though its rate of infection has come down significan­tly from a mid- September peak. It also has reported more than 149,000 deaths.

The country’s initial immunizati­on plan aims to vaccinate by August 300 million people — healthcare workers, front- line staff including police, and those considered vulnerable due to their age or disease.

For effective distributi­on, more than 20,000 health workers have been trained so far to administer the vaccine, the Health Ministry said.

But the plan poses a major challenge. India has one of the world’s largest immunizati­on programs, but it isn’t geared toward adults, and vaccine coverage remains patchy.

Still, neither of the approved vaccines require the ultra- cold storage that some others do. Instead, they can be stored in refrigerat­ors, making them more feasible for the country.

Although the Serum Institute of India doesn’t have a written agreement with the Indian government, Poonawalla said India would be “given priority” and would receive most of its stockpile of about 50 million doses.

Partial results from studies for the Oxford- AstraZenec­a shot in almost 24,000 people in Britain, Brazil and South Africa suggest that the vaccine is safe and about 70% effective. That isn’t as good as some other vaccine candidates, and there are also concerns about how well the vaccine will protect older people.

The other vaccine authorized by India, known as Covaxin, is developed by Bharat Biotech in collaborat­ion with government agencies and is based on an inactivate­d form of the coronaviru­s. Early clinical studies showed that the vaccine didn’t have any serious side effects and produced antibodies for COVID- 19. But late clinical trials began in mid- November. The second shot was to be given 28 days after the f irst, and an immune response prompted two weeks later.

That time frame means that it isn’t possible that the company has submitted data showing that the shots are effective in preventing infection from the virus, said Dr. Gagandeep Kang, an infectious diseases expert at the Christian Medical College at Vellore.

The All India Drug Action Network, a public health watchdog, issued a statement demanding greater transparen­cy.

Somani, the regulator, says “the vaccine has been found to be safe” but has refused to say whether any efficacy data have been shared.

The Health Ministry said in a statement that permission was granted for Bharat Biotech’s shot for restricted use in the “public interest as an abundant precaution in clinical trial mode, especially in the context of infection by mutant strains.”

But Kang said that the claim that the vaccine could help against a mutant variant of the virus was “hypothetic­al.”

Indian regulators are still considerin­g approvals for other vaccines, including one made by Pfizer.

 ?? Altaf Qadri Associated Press ?? PARTICIPAN­TS I N a COVID- 19 vaccine trial wait for shots Saturday in New Delhi. India’s drugs regulator has given emergency authorizat­ion to the Oxford University- AstraZenec­a vaccine and one by Bharat Biotech.
Altaf Qadri Associated Press PARTICIPAN­TS I N a COVID- 19 vaccine trial wait for shots Saturday in New Delhi. India’s drugs regulator has given emergency authorizat­ion to the Oxford University- AstraZenec­a vaccine and one by Bharat Biotech.

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