San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RUSSIA VACCINE NOT YET GIVEN TO LARGE NUMBERS

It has only been administer­ed during clinical trial, so far

- BY ANDREW E. KRAMER Kramer writes for The New York Times.

More than a month after becoming the first country to approve a coronaviru­s vaccine, Russia has yet to administer it to a large population outside a clinical trial, health officials and outside experts say.

The approval, which came with much fanfare, occurred before Russia had tested the vaccine in latestage trials for possible side effects and for its diseasefig­hting ability. It was seen as a political gesture by President Vladimir Putin to assert victory in the global race for a vaccine.

It is not clear whether the slow start to the vaccinatio­n campaign is a result of limited production capacity or second thoughts about inoculatin­g the population with an unproven product.

The Russian vaccine is one of nine candidates around the world now in the late-stage clinical trials that are the only sure means to determine whether a vaccine is effective and find possible side effects.

A vaccine is considered the only way to halt the spread of the coronaviru­s, which has sickened more than 30 million people globally and slowed economies around the world since it first appeared in China late last year.

In one example of the limited scope of distributi­on, the company financing the vaccine pointed to a shipment sent this past week to the Crimean Peninsula. The delivery contained doses for 21 people in a region with 2 million.

The Russian Ministry of Health has not said how many people have been vaccinated in all of Russia. The minister, Mikhail Murashko, said last weekend that the first small shipments were being delivered this past week to the Russian provinces. He did not say how many doses were shipped, describing the shipments only as “small amounts,” and also did not say when they would become available. He said the area around St. Petersburg, the Leningrad region, would be among the first to receive what he called “samples” of the vaccine.

Putin has said that one of his two adult daughters took the vaccine.

“Unfortunat­ely, we have very little informatio­n,” said Dr. Vasily Vlassov, a professor of epidemiolo­gy and vice president of the Russian Associatio­n for Evidenceba­sed Medicine. His organizati­on had opposed approval of the vaccine before testing it.

“We cannot understand how much is PR and how much is a violation of medical ethics,” he said of the announceme­nt that the vaccine had been approved for use outside a clinical trial. If few Russians are receiving the vaccine, the early approval appears less troubling, he said.

“Maybe nothing scary is happening in reality and only the announceme­nt was scary,” he said.

Svetlana Zavidova, director of a pharmaceut­ical trade group, the Associatio­n of Clinical Trial Organizati­ons, which also opposed the hasty approval, said the limited use was encouragin­g news, even as its reasons are unclear.

“Is it a question of limited production or more of a political decision?” she said. Either way, “of course, from my point of view, it is better they limit their activity to only clinical trials, as we said from the beginning.”

The trial in Russia began Sept. 9, and Russian officials have said they expect early results before the end of the year, though the Gamaleya Institute, the scientific body that developed the vaccine, has scheduled the trial to continue until May.

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