The Guardian (USA)

EU seeking ‘urgent clarificat­ion’ on Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine delay

- Jon Henley Europe correspond­ent

The European commission has said it is seeking “urgent clarificat­ion” from Johnson & Johnson after the company’s “completely unexpected” announceme­nt that it is delaying the deployment of its coronaviru­s vaccine across Europe following concerns in the US about a small number of blood clots.

After US health agencies recommende­d states temporaril­y halt use of the shot on Tuesday, Johnson & Johnson said in a statement it had been “reviewing these cases with European health authoritie­s” and had “made the decision to proactivel­y delay the rollout of our vaccine in Europe”.

A commission official told Reuters the company had confirmed at a meeting on Friday it aimed to deliver 55m doses to the EU, as contracted, by the end of June. The official said the commission was “in contact with the company” to get clarificat­ion.

The EU’s drug regulator, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which approved the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine last month, confirmed on Tuesday it was reviewing four cases cases of rare blood clots in women who had taken the shot.

The EMA added in a statement to Reuters that it was “currently not clear whether there is a causal associatio­n between vaccinatio­n” and the conditions. “EMA will further communicat­e once the evaluation has concluded,” it said.

Johnson & Johnson has committed to delivering at least 200m doses to the bloc this year. The UK has not so far approved the vaccine for use but has 30m doses on order.

“This is worrying news – sounds like it may end up the same way as AstraZenec­a,” an EU diplomat said. The clotting concerns mirror those of drug agencies in Europe and Australia over the AstraZenec­a vaccine, whose use has been restricted in several countries to people aged over 55, 60 or 65.

AstraZenec­a also cut vaccine supplies to the bloc to 100m doses by the end of June from the 300m foreseen under its original supply contract, triggering a dispute with the EU that remains unresolved.

The European commission­er in charge of the EU’s vaccinatio­n programme, Thierry Breton, said last week the bloc was due to receive 200m doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in the next three months, along with 35m from Moderna, 70m from AstraZenec­a, 55m from Johnson & Johnson and 10m from CureVac.

The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) earlier recommende­d a pause in the use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine while investigat­ions take place into six cases involving women who have experience­d rare blood clotting events combined with low platelets in the days following vaccinatio­n. More than 6.8m doses of the vaccine have been administer­ed in the US.

Several European countries including France, Spain and the Netherland­s were taking delivery of their first batches of the Johnson & Johnson shot this week. The Dutch health minister, Hugo de Jonge, said he was not sure what the country would now do.

“I can not say at this moment, it de

pends on the messaging we get tomorrow, I expect tomorrow, from the EMA,” de Jonge said.

South Africa temporaril­y suspended the rollout of the Johnson & Johnson shot on Tuesday. Health minister Zweli Mkhize said the country

“cannot take the decision by the FDA lightly. Based on their advice, we have determined to voluntaril­y suspend our rollout until the causal relationsh­ip … is sufficient­ly interrogat­ed.”

 ?? Photograph: Damian Dovarganes/AP ?? A vaccinatio­n centre offering the Johnson & Johnson vaccine earlier this month in Los Angeles.
Photograph: Damian Dovarganes/AP A vaccinatio­n centre offering the Johnson & Johnson vaccine earlier this month in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States