Eastern Eye (UK)

India keeps faith in AstraZenec­a vaccine and ups order despite South Africa setback

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INDIA said on Tuesday (9) it had no concerns over the efficacy of the AstraZenec­a Covid-19 vaccine despite South Africa putting it on hold, and ordered 10 million more doses of the shot for its own huge immunisati­on campaign.

South Africa delayed use of the vaccine after researcher­s found it offered minimal protection against mild-to-moderate Covid-19 disease caused by the country’s dominant coronaviru­s variant.

India, with the highest number of infections after the United

States, has yet to detect the South African variant and will continue to use the vaccine in an inoculatio­n drive that has covered 6.3 million front-line workers since January 16. “Our vaccinatio­n programme is robust and valid, and I assure you that we are going ahead with it, not worried at the moment,” Vinod Kumar Paul, a top Indian vaccine official, told a news conference.

“We will intensify surveillan­ce and we will be watching other developmen­ts in due course.”

The Serum Institute of India (SII) has licenced the vaccine from AstraZenec­a and Oxford University and markets it as Covishield for low-and middle-income countries.

India has ordered 10 million more doses of Covishield on top of 11 million supplied earlier, an SII spokesman said on Tuesday. SII has agreed to sell at least 100 million doses to the government at a discounted price of `200 (£2) each, though the government says firm orders will be staggered based on its needs, and also on vaccine shelf-life.

Covishield is about 72 per cent effective, based on late-stage trials done abroad, India’s drug regulator says. The country is also using the Covaxin shot developed at home by Bharat Biotech with the state-run Indian Council of Medical Research. Bharat Biotech has supplied 5.5 million doses to the government and is selling 4.5 million more, a company spokeswoma­n said.

The government wants to cover 300 million people by August, reaching the elderly and those with existing conditions by March. India has reported 10.85 million infections and more than 155,000 deaths – though cases have fallen since September.

Paul said Johnson & Johnson could manufactur­e its shot in India. He said many more vaccines, including Sputnik V, Cadila Healthcare’s ZyCov-D and a Novavax product, were in the queue.

“India is fortunate to have two great made-in-India vaccines, and as many as six-seven vaccines in the pipeline and perhaps many more,” he said, days after Pfizer Inc pulled an applicatio­n seeking emergency-use authorisat­ion in the country. The US firm had declined to immediatel­y do a small local safety study for its shot and produce it in India, unlike the other vaccine developers.

New Delhi, meanwhile, is aggressive­ly pushing the SII and Bharat Biotech vaccines abroad as part of a diplomatic campaign to recoup ground lost to China.

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