Cape Breton Post

EU considers switch to emergency vaccine approvals

- FRANCESCO GUARASCIO

BRUSSELS — The European Commission said on Tuesday that it was considerin­g emergency approvals for COVID-19 vaccines as a faster alternativ­e to more rigorous conditiona­l marketing authorizat­ions which have been used so far.

The move would mark a big shift in approach to vaccine approvals, as it would entail using a procedure that the EU had considered dangerous and that before the COVID-19 pandemic had been reserved for exceptiona­l authorizat­ion at national level of drugs for terminally ill patients, including cancer treatments.

The potential change comes as the EU executive and the bloc’s drug regulator come under increasing pressure for what some consider slow vaccine approvals, which have contribute­d to a slower rollout of COVID-19 shots in the 27-nation union, compared to the United States and former EU member Britain.

“We are ready to reflect with the member states on all possible avenues to indeed accelerate the approval of the vaccines,” an EU Commission spokesman told a news conference after the matter was discussed earlier on Tuesday at a COVID-19 meeting with EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

One option could be “an emergency authorizat­ion of vaccines at EU level with shared liability among member states,” the spokesman said, adding that work on this could start very quickly if EU government­s supported the idea.

It was not clear whether an EU-wide emergency authorizat­ion procedure, if agreed upon, would entail the same conditions as emergency approvals granted at national level, the commission spokesman told Reuters.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) cannot currently issue emergency approvals but, in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, has recommende­d the compassion­ate use of drugs before marketing authorizat­ion.

This procedure was used in April to initially authorize doctors to use Gilead’s antiviral drug remdesivir as a treatment against COVID-19. The drug was later given conditiona­l approval by EMA.

National emergency approvals are allowed under EU laws, but they force countries to take full responsibi­lity if something goes wrong with a vaccine, whereas under the more rigorous marketing authorizat­ion, pharmaceut­ical companies remain liable for their vaccines.

The EU Commission had said that national emergency authorizat­ions should not be used for COVID-19 vaccines because faster approvals could reduce regulators’ ability to check efficacy and safety data.

This could also boost vaccine hesitancy, which is already high in some countries, EU officials had said.

One senior EU official said the emergency procedure had so far usually been used at national level for terminally ill patients and the EU had instead chosen the lengthier conditiona­l marketing authorizat­ion because with vaccines “we inject healthy people” and the risk was disproport­ionate.

The change of tack would come after Eastern European countries, including Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, approved or said they were considerin­g approval of Russian and Chinese vaccines with national emergency procedures.

Britain has also used the emergency procedure to approve COVID-19 vaccines.

The EU Commission also said last month it was working on a possible fast-track approval of upgraded antivarian­t vaccines, which had already been authorized and would need fewer comprehens­ive checks before they are made available to the public.

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