Yorkshire Post

UK may fast-track new vaccines to fight Covid variants, says Hancock

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THE UK could become one of the fastest countries in the world to approve new Covid-19 vaccines to tackle variants.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) will oversee a fast-track approach to approving new jabs, after studies suggested variants may make vaccines less effective.

During a visit to the Glasgow lighthouse lab, Mr Hancock said: “We will have a fast-track approach to safely approving future vaccines that work against a variant of Covid-19.

“The vaccine programme has clearly been a huge UK success story, and part of the reason that we have been able to develop the vaccines so far, so quickly, is because of the MHRA’s rigorous yet flexible approach, which has been based entirely on looking as quickly as possible at the safety and efficacy of vaccines.

“I’m delighted that they’re taking that same principled approach to the approval process for vaccines that may work against variants.”

Scientists have become concerned about several variants, including one first identified in the Brazilian city of Manaus. A study suggested that between 25 per cent and 61 per cent of people in the city who had previously had Covid were susceptibl­e to reinfectio­n with the worrying P1 variant found there.

Six cases of P1 have been found in the UK to date. Vaccine manufactur­ers including Pfizer and AstraZenec­a are already working on new jabs to tackle variants in case they are needed.

MHRA chief executive Dr June Raine said the new approval process is “agile”, and the green light for new jabs could be given in just a few weeks after all data has been submitted on their effectiven­ess.

She insisted no corners would be cut on safety, and the framework already exists for when annual flu jabs are tweaked. She said: “Has this approach been done before? This approach that we’re putting out today for the Covid-19 vaccines is based on the tried and tested regulatory process which is used every year for seasonal flu jabs.”

 ??  ?? MATT HANCOCK: The Health Secretary said there was a ‘rigorous yet flexible approach’.
MATT HANCOCK: The Health Secretary said there was a ‘rigorous yet flexible approach’.

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