Medicine Hat News

Health Canada not ready yet to greenlight AstraZenec­a vaccine

- MIA RABSON

Health Canada is not yet ready to make a decision about approving the COVID-19 vaccine from AstraZenec­a, more than two weeks after it signalled the ruling could be imminent.

The World Health Organizati­on gave its seal of approval to AstraZenec­a Monday, and if Health Canada follows suit, almost 500,000 doses could be shipped to Canada in March through the global vaccine-sharing program known as COVAX.

But Health Canada is still having a back and forth with the British-based company on the clinical data behind the vaccine.

“Health Canada continues to work with AstraZenec­a to receive the informatio­n needed to complete its review,” said Kathleen Marriner, a spokeswoma­n for the department.

While it was expected AstraZenec­a would be the third vaccine approved in Canada, it is now on the verge of being surpassed by Johnson and Johnson.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion in the United States is meeting to decide on approving that vaccine Feb. 26, and the European Medicines Agency expects to make a decision in early March. Health Canada has been collaborat­ing with both on vaccine reviews for COVID-19.

“While each country makes independen­t decisions in keeping with its own processes, Health Canada is on similar timelines with the decisions of our key regulatory partners, once all of the data needed to make a decision has been received and reviewed,” Marriner said.

In addition to getting AstraZenec­a doses from COVAX, Canada bought 20 million directly from the company, and 10 million doses from Johnson and Johnson. Deliveries of both would begin this spring if they get approved.

Nobody has yet approved Johnson and Johnson’s vaccine, but AstraZenec­a has been authorized by more than two dozen jurisdicti­ons. Only PfizerBioN­Tech’s COVID-19 vaccine has been approved in more places.

The FDA is waiting for a clinical trial of AstraZenec­a’s vaccine in the U.S. to be finished, but Europe authorized it Jan.

29. That decision prompted Health Canada to change its language from saying the AstraZenec­a review was “ongoing”, to saying a decision would be announced “in the coming days.”

On Feb. 9, Health Canada’s chief medical adviser Dr. Supriya Sharma said the review was in “the final stages,” just awaiting some final “back and forth” to finalize the rules for how the vaccine is to be used and on whom.

A week later, and there is still no sign that decision is imminent.

Sharma said the vaccine has been complicate­d to review because of a number of factors, including a mix-up in how big the doses were during the clinical trial and questions about how effective it is against new variants of the virus that causes COVID-19.

South Africa last week stopped using AstraZenec­a’s vaccine completely, fearing it wasn’t doing enough to prevent people from getting sick from the B.1.351 variant that now dominates infections there.

The company was also challenged about what data it had on the effect the vaccine had in older adults, with fears not enough people over 65 were exposed to the virus after getting the vaccine to be certain of how well it protected them. Antibody tests, however, showed similar immune responses in people over 65 as was seen in younger people.

Many European countries, including France and Germany, authorized it only for use on people younger than 65. Several other countries have approved it for all age groups, including the United Kingdom, which has leaned heavily on the AstraZenec­a vaccine to get at least one dose to nearly 16 million people in just two months.

The World Health Organizati­on’s approval this week is also for everyone over the age of 18.

The age decision is one factor that has been of concern to Health Canada, Sharma noted last week.

Canada has been falling down the list of countries in terms of how many people have been vaccinated, largely as deliveries of both vaccines approved here slowed in mid-January.

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