Arab Times

Oxford, AZ resume COVID-19 shot trial

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LONDON, Sept 13, (AP): Oxford University announced Saturday it was resuming a trial for a coronaviru­s vaccine it is developing with pharmaceut­ical company AstraZenec­a, a move that comes days after the study was suspended following a reported sideeffect in a UK patient.

In a statement, the university confirmed the restart across all of its UK clinical trial sites after regulators gave the go-ahead following the pause on Sunday.

“The independen­t review process has concluded and following the recommenda­tions of both the independen­t safety review committee and the UK regulator, the MHRA, the trials will recommence in the UK,” it said.

The vaccine being developed by Oxford and AstraZenec­a is widely perceived to be one of the strongest contenders among the dozens of coronaviru­s vaccines in various stages of testing around the world.

British Health Secretary Matt Hancock welcomed the restart, saying in a tweet that it was “good news for everyone” that the trial is “back up and running.”

Safety

The university said in large trials such as this “it is expected that some participan­ts will become unwell and every case must be carefully evaluated to ensure careful assessment of safety.”

It said globally some 18,000 people have received its vaccine so far. Volunteers from some of the worst affected countries – Britain, Brazil, South Africa and the US – are taking part in the trial. Brazil’s health regulator Anvisa on Saturday said it had approved the resumption of tests of the “Oxford vaccine” in the South American country after receiving official informatio­n from AstraZenec­a.

Although Oxford would not disclose informatio­n about the patient’s illness due to participan­t confidenti­ality, an AstraZenec­a spokesman said earlier this week that a woman had developed severe neurologic­al symptoms that prompted the pause. Specifical­ly, the woman is said to have developed symptoms consistent with transverse

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