Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU inspectors to take a close look at Russia's Sputnik V

EU medical inspectors are heading to Russia to evaluate the Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine. But will their work clear up doubts surroundin­g the jab?

- This article has been translated from German by Jon Shelton.

Officials from the European Medicines Agency will soon travel to Russia to evaluate the Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine. "An inspection of a manufactur­ing site is a normal step in the context of the evaluation of any marketing authorizat­ion applicatio­n in the EU," according to the agency. "EMA has a legal obligation to verify that manufactur­ers of medicinal products for which a marketing authorizat­ion is sought in the EU, comply with good manufactur­ing practice (GMP)."

The EMA's director, Emer Cooke, announced the inspection of manufactur­ing sites in March. She said officials would also visit clinics that had tested the vaccine in order to verify compliance with good clinical practice.

"Clinical trials supporting EU marketing authorizat­ion should comply with GCP, an internatio­nal ethical and scientific quality standard for designing, recording and reporting trials in humans. Compliance with this standard provides assurance that the rights, safety and wellbeing of trial participan­ts are protected and that clinical-trial data are credible," according to EMA.

The agency says it will not publish the results of its inspection­s until the entire evaluation process for approval has been completed. Though the agency would not say when exactly inspectors would travel, Russian authoritie­s have cited April 10 as the date.

Can Russian data on Sputnik V be trusted?

Back in the EU, mistrust of the Russian vaccine is widespread. On March 17, five EU parliament­arians sent a letter to EMA underscori­ng those doubts, saying that Russia had repeatedly shown that it is, "more than willing to profession­ally engage in the wide-scale politiciza­tion and falsificat­ion of medical and scientific data when it serves their aims."

The parliament­arians pointed

to Russia's numerous Olympic doping scandals as well as the poisoning of opposition figure Alexei Navalny as proof of that claim.

That is also why Peter Liese, health policy spokesman for the conservati­ve European People's Party (EPP) in the European Parliament, has also called for a close evaluation of the Russian vaccine. "I can very well imagine that it works, that it provides good protection and has reasonable side effects. Still, that has yet to be proven, as it has never really been fully inspected," Liese told DW.

Liese says he found it problemati­c that Russia brought the vaccine to market so quickly. Moscow announced that it had approved use of the jab in August 2020, even though it had been tested on less than 100 people.

"More than 40,000 test persons took part in clinical trials for the approval of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine," says Liese. He says that is the least we can expect when it comes to approving new medicine, even though, "as in life, there is no such thing as 100% safety in medicine."

Has EMA inspected other vaccines?

According to EMA, "GMP inspection­s were carried out for manufactur­ers of all four COVID-19 vaccines authorized in the EU": BioNTech-Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZenec­a and Johnson & Johnson. The inspection­s were mainly carried out in the US but also in the EU, for instance, in Italy.

Within the EU, compliance with pharmaceut­ical production standards is coordinate­d by EMA and monitored by national health authoritie­s. Inspection­s outside the EU can only be waived when product testing has been conducted within the past two or three years, explains EMA.

Vaccines approved for use in the EU are evaluated on the results of GCP testing conducted mainly by national regulatory agencies — in the case of BioNTech-Pfizer, for instance, by German and US authoritie­s. EMA and the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) operate according to mutually recognized standards, EMA has no such agreement with Russian health authoritie­s.

Does the EU need Sputnik V?

With coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n rates in the EU lagging behind many other parts of the world, German Health Minister Jens Spahn recently announced that the German government was in negotiatio­ns with Moscow over the possible purchase of Sputnik V doses contingent upon EMA approval.

Still, it remains unclear how many doses Russia, which lags even further behind when it comes to vaccinatio­ns, is capable of delivering. So far, the country has failed to develop the production capacity required to deliver large shipments to Europe.

One way to rectify that problem would be to produce Sputnik V in the EU. The German subsidiary of the Russian pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er R-Pharm — R-Pharm Germany, located in the Bavarian city of Illertisse­n — has already submitted an applicatio­n for inspection­s of the

Sputnik V vaccine with EMA.

Bavaria's state government has also already agreed to purchase 2.5 million doses of the jab — though only after it receives EMA approval. The first deliveries are expected in July, at the earliest.

EU parliament­arian and health care expert Peter Liese says production capacity is key: "If we are talking about a million doses in July, then I can guarantee we don't need it. But if we are talking about 20 or 30 million doses we should do it," says the politician. "There is no reason not to import a safe and effective vaccine."

 ??  ?? European Medicines Director Emer Cooke says EMA inspectors will evaluate Russian production and clinical practices
European Medicines Director Emer Cooke says EMA inspectors will evaluate Russian production and clinical practices
 ??  ?? Russia was quick to bring its Sputnik V vaccine to market but will Europeans trust it?
Russia was quick to bring its Sputnik V vaccine to market but will Europeans trust it?

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