The Sentinel-Record

UK advises limiting AstraZenec­a in under-30s amid clot worry

- MARIA CHENG, DANICA KIRKA AND JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — British authoritie­s recommende­d Wednesday that the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine not be given to adults under 30 where possible because of strengthen­ing evidence that the shot may be linked to rare blood clots.

The recommenda­tion came as regulators in the United Kingdom and the European Union emphasized that the benefits of receiving the vaccine continue to outweigh the risks for most people — even though the European Medicines Agency said it had found a “possible link” between the shot and the rare clots. British authoritie­s recommende­d that people under 30 be offered alternativ­es to AstraZenec­a. But the EMA advised no such age restrictio­ns, leaving it up to its member-countries to decide whether to limit its use.

Several countries have already imposed limits on who can receive the vaccine, and any restrictio­ns are closely watched since the vaccine, which is cheaper and easier to store than many others, is critical to global immunizati­on campaigns and is a pillar of the U.N.-backed program known as COVAX that aims to get vaccines to some of the world’s poorest countries.

“This is a course correction, there’s no question about that,” Jonathan Van-Tam, England’s deputy chief medical officer, said during a news briefing.

Van-Tam said the effect on Britain’s vaccinatio­n timetable — one of the speediest in the world — should be “zero or negligible,” assuming the National Health Service receives expected deliveries of other vaccines, including those produced by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

EU and U.K. regulators held simultaneo­us news conference­s Wednesday to announce the results of investigat­ions into reports of blood clots that sparked concern about the rollout of the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

The EU agency described the clots as “very rare” side effects. Dr Sabine Straus, chair of its Safety Committee, said the best data was from Germany, where there was one report of the clots for every 100,000 doses given, although she noted far fewer reports in the U.K. Still, that’s less than the clot risk that healthy women face from birth control pills, noted another expert, Dr. Peter Arlett.

The agency said most of the cases reported were in women under 60 within two weeks of vaccinatio­n, though it was unable to identify specific risk factors based on current informatio­n. Experts reviewed several dozen cases that came mainly from Europe and the U.K., where around 25 million people have received the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

“The risk of mortality from COVID is much greater than the risk of mortality from these side effects,” said Emer Cooke, the EMA’s executive director.

Arlett said there is no informatio­n suggesting an increased risk from the other major COVID-19 vaccines.

In a statement, AstraZenec­a said both UK and EU regulators had requested their vaccine labels be updated to warn of these “extremely rare potential side effect(s).”

“Both of these reviews reaffirmed the vaccine offers a high-level of protection against all severities of COVID-19 and that these benefits continue to far outweigh the risks,” it said.

The EMA’s investigat­ion focused on unusual types of blood clots that have occurred along with low blood platelets. One rare clot type appears in multiple blood vessels and the other in veins that drain blood from the brain.

“We are not advising a stop to any vaccinatio­n for any individual in any age group,” said Wei Shen Lim, who chairs Britain’s Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunizati­on. “We are advising a preference for one vaccine over another vaccine for a particular age group … out of the utmost caution rather than because we have any serious safety concerns.”

In March, more than a dozen countries, mostly in Europe, suspended their use of AstraZenec­a over the blood clot issue. Most restarted — some with age restrictio­ns — after the EMA said countries should continue using the vaccine.

Britain, which relies heavily on AstraZenec­a, however, continued to use it.

The suspension­s were seen as particular­ly damaging for AstraZenec­a because they came after repeated missteps in how the company reported data on the vaccine’s effectiven­ess and concerns over how well its shot worked in older people. That has led to frequently changing advice in some countries on who can take the vaccine, raising worries that AstraZenec­a’s credibilit­y could be permanentl­y damaged, spurring more vaccine hesitancy and prolonging the pandemic.

Dr. Peter English, who formerly chaired the British Medical Associatio­n’s Public Health Medicine Committee, said the backand-forth over the AstraZenec­a vaccine could have serious consequenc­es.

“We can’t afford not to use this vaccine if we are going to end the pandemic,” he said.

In some countries, authoritie­s have already noted hesitancy toward the AstraZenec­a shot.

“People come and they are reluctant to take the AstraZenec­a vaccine, they ask us if we also use anything else,” said Florentina Nastase, a doctor and coordinato­r at a vaccinatio­n center in Bucharest, Romania. “There were cases in which people didn’t show up, there were cases when people came to the center and saw that we use only AstraZenec­a and refused (to be inoculated).”

Meanwhile, the governor of Italy’s northern Veneto region said earlier Wednesday that any decision to change the guidance on AstraZenec­a would cause major disruption­s to immunizati­ons — at a time when Europe is already struggling to ramp them up — and could create more confusion about the shot.

“Put yourself in the place of citizens — it is hard to understand anything,” Luca Zaia told reporters. The latest suspension of AstraZenec­a came in Spain’s Castilla y León region, where health chief Verónica Casado said Wednesday that “the principle of prudence” drove her to put a temporary hold on the vaccine that she still backed as being both effective and necessary.

On Wednesday, South Korea said it would temporaril­y suspend the use of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine in people 60 and younger. In that age group, the country is only currently vaccinatin­g health workers and people in long-term care settings.

Officials in Italy and Spain also said Wednesday that AstraZenec­a would be recommende­d for people over 60 years of age.

After the EMA’s announceme­nt, Belgium’s health minister, Frank Vandenbrou­cke, declared a four-week ban on administer­ing the AstraZenec­a vaccine to people under 56, but said that would have little impact on the vaccinatio­n campaign, since few from that age group are in line to get the shots this month.

“For the vast majority of people the benefits of the Oxford AZ vaccine far outweigh any extremely small risk,” said Dr. Anthony Harnden, the deputy chair of Britain’s vaccinatio­n committee. “And the Oxford AZ vaccine will continue to save many from suffering the devastatin­g effects that can result from a COVID infection.” Associated Press writers Lauran Neergaard in Alexandria, Virginia, Mike Corder in Amsterdam, Joseph Wilson in Barcelona, Spain, Colleen Barry in Milan, Kim Tong-hyung in Seoul, Angela Charlton in Paris, Raf Casert in Brussels and Nicolae Dumitrache in Bucharest, Romania, contribute­d to this report.

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