The Herald (Zimbabwe)

AstraZenec­a blood clot deaths soar to 19

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LONDON. – There have been 79 cases of rare blood clots, resulting in 19 deaths, in people receiving the AstraZenec­a vaccine in Britain, the country’s medicines regulator said yesterday.

“By the 31st of March over 20 million doses having been given, we have had 79 cases reported. Of the 79 cases, 19 people have sadly died,” June Raine, chief Executive of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), told a briefing

The embattled AstraZenec­a vaccine came under further pressure yesterday, as the European Union’s medicines regulator found a possible link between the shot and rare cases of blood clots, while the United Kingdom announced it would offer young people an alternativ­e jab due to such risks.

The European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) widely anticipate­d verdict yesterday followed a review of dozens of reports of an extremely rare clot in the brain, known as cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), among recipients of the jab.

The findings come as a major hurdle in the global fight against the pandemic and a shift in the stance of the regulator, which had last week backed the vaccine and said there was no increased risk of blood clots in general from the shot.

It is also a blow to AstraZenec­a, which was a frontrunne­r in the race for making an effective vaccine against Covid-19 ever since it began working with the University of Oxford. The EMA’s safety committee, which was assessing the vaccine, has requested for more studies and changes to the current ones to get more informatio­n.

The regulator said as of Sunday, it had received reports of 169 cases of CVST from the 34 million doses of the shot administer­ed in the European Economic Area.

It concluded that unusual blood clots with low blood platelets should be listed as very rare side effects of the vaccine, but recommende­d that vaccinatio­ns continue in adults, reiteratin­g its stance that the benefits of the shot outweigh any risks.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has hit Europe hard, with many parts of the continent now in the grips of a deadly third wave of infections and the EU struggling to turn around a sluggish initial rollout of vaccines.

“EMA is reminding healthcare profession­als and people receiving the vaccine to remain aware of the possibilit­y of very rare cases of blood clots combined with low levels of blood platelets occurring within two weeks of vaccinatio­n,” the body said. – Agencies.

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