Cape Breton Post

WHO planning slew of vaccine approvals

- FRANCESCO GUARASCIO

BRUSSELS — The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) plans to approve several COVID-19 vaccines from Western and Chinese manufactur­ers in the coming weeks and months, an internal document seen by Reuters shows, as it aims for rapid rollouts in poorer countries.

COVAX, a global scheme co-led by the WHO, wants to deliver at least 2 billion COVID-19 doses across the world this year, with at least 1.3 billion going to poorer countries.

But it has so far struggled to secure enough shots due to a shortage of funds, while wealthy nations have booked large volumes of vaccines for themselves.

In the race to deploy shots, regulatory approvals are key to confirming the effectiven­ess and safety of vaccines, and to boosting output. But some poorer countries rely mostly on WHO authorizat­ions as they have limited regulatory capacity.

The WHO is therefore “expediting” emergency approvals, according to a COVAX internal document, which cites data updated to Jan. 7.

The COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZenec­a and manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India (SII) could be authorized by the WHO in January or February, the document says.

The same vaccine produced in South Korea by SK Bioscience could be approved by the U.N. agency at the end of February, at the earliest, the document says.

As well as vaccines, regulators usually authorize their manufactur­ing processes in different plants.

SII chief executive Adar Poonawalla told Reuters last week he expected WHO approval “in the next week or two.”

SK said it was not aware of the WHO’s approval timeline.

The AstraZenec­a vaccine, developed with Oxford University, has already been given emergency approval in Britain, while decisions in the European Union and the United States are close.

COVAX has supply contracts with AstraZenec­a and SII for about 400 million doses and a non-binding deal for many more hundreds of millions, although the timing of possible deliveries is uncertain.

The WHO authorized the vaccine developed by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech at the end of December.

WHO officials have said they are seeking a supply deal with the U.S. pharmaceut­ical giant, which has already committed hundreds of millions of doses this year to several wealthy nations.

COVAX had not initially included the Pfizer/BioNTech shot in its shortlist for advance purchases.

The COVAX document also shows the WHO is expected to approve Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, which is based on the same messenger RNA (mRNA) technology as Pfizer’s, at the end of February.

The vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson (J&J), which has a non-binding agreement to supply COVAX with 500 million doses over an unspecifie­d timeframe, is expected to get WHO approval in May or June at the earliest, the COVAX document says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada