Hindustan Times (East UP)

Oxford reports vaccine manufactur­ing error

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: AstraZenec­a Plc and the University of Oxford, among the front-runners in the quest to deliver a Covid-19 vaccine, face mounting questions about their trial results after acknowledg­ing a manufactur­ing error.

While an announceme­nt earlier this week by AstraZenec­a and Oxford University showed their shot was 70% effective on average in a late-stage study, the scant details released by the UK partners have sparked worries about whether regulators would clear it. In a later statement, Oxford said a difference in manufactur­ing processes led to some participan­ts being given a half dose instead of a full one.

AstraZenec­a and Oxford had said their vaccine was 90% effective when a half-dose was given before a full-dose booster, and that two full doses showed an efficacy of 62%. But the head of the US vaccine program known as Operation Warp Speed said the next day that the dose showing the higher level of effectiven­ess was tested in a younger population, and that

the half-dose was given to some people because of an error in the quantity of vaccine put into some vials. None of this was disclosed in AstraZenec­a’s original announceme­nt.

The findings unveiled on Monday had fuelled optimism that an end to the pandemic is in sight and that multiple vaccines to combat Covid-19 could be ready soon following positive results earlier this month from Pfizer Inc. and Moderna Inc. AstraZenec­a and Oxford remain near the front of the pack, although the way they have handled the large trial has rattled scientists and investors.

In its statement, Oxford said that when it was apparent that a lower dose was used, it was discussed with regulators, and an agreement was reached to push ahead with the two regimens. “The methods for measuring the concentrat­ion are now establishe­d and we can ensure that all batches of vaccine are now equivalent,” according to the university.

A spokesman for AstraZenec­a said the trials were conducted “to the highest standards” and more analysis is being done to refine the efficacy reading.

“The most likely explanatio­n for the divergent efficacy in its interim analysis is either chance or patient demographi­cs,” Sam Fazeli, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst, wrote in a note. “Either way, approval based on current data means people will be inoculated with a vaccine the true efficacy of which is unknown.”

The battle against Covid-19 is at a turning point with encouragin­g vaccine trial findings coming this month. One vaccine from Pfizer and BioNTech SE and another from Moderna Inc were both about 95% effective in preliminar­y analyses of trials of tens of thousands of volunteers.

Fazeli added: “We remain most convinced by the Moderna and Pfizer data for now.”

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