Dayton Daily News

Canadian regulator OKs AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine

- By Rob Gillies

TORONTO— Canadian regulators on Friday authorized AstraZenec­a’s coronaviru­s vaccine for all adults.

It is the third COVID-19 vaccine given the green light by Canada, following those from Pfizer and Moderna.

“This is very encourag- ing news. It means more pe o ple vaccinated, and sooner,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said, adding that the nation of 38 million peo- ple will now get 6.5 million vaccines in total before the end of March, 500,000 more now with the new approval.

Health Canada approved the AstraZenec­a vaccine for use in people 18 and over, expressing confidence it would work for the elderly even though some coun- tries, including France, have authorized it only for use in people under 65, saying there is not enough evidence it works in older adults.

With trials showing about 62% efficacy, the vaccine appears to offer less protection than those already authorized, but experts have said any vaccine with an effi- cacy rate of over 50% could help stop the outbreak

“It’s a good o ptio n ,” said Dr. Supriya Sharma, Health Canada’s chief med- ical adviser.

Sharma said no one has died or become severely ill in trials of the vaccines now approved by Canada or in those of Johnson & Johnson and Novavax shots, which could be approved soon.

Health authoritie­s in Germany and other countries have raised concerns that AstraZenec­a didn’t test the vaccine in enough older people to prove it works for them, and indicated they would not recommend it for people over 65. Belgium has authorized it only for people 55 and under

Health Canada said its decision was based on pooled analyses from four ongoing clinical studies trials as well as data in countries where it has been approved.

“Based on the totality of the informatio­n, the benefit-risk profile of AstraZenec­a COVID-19 Vaccine is positive for the proposed indication in adults 18 years and over,” Health Canada said in informatio­n posted online.

“We’re starting to get real world evidence. There is evidence that in older age group it would be effective,” Sharma said.

Canada has now ordered 22 million doses of the AstraZenec­a shot, which was co-developed by researcher­s at the University of Oxford. It will also receive up to 1.9 million doses through the global vaccine-sharing initiative known as COVAX by the end of June.

Trudeau said 2 million of those doses will come from the Serum Institute of India, which Sharma said uses the same recipe but a slightly different method and was also approved.

The AstraZenec­a vaccine has already been authorized in more than 50 countries. It is cheaper and easier to

handle than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which needs deep-cold storage that is not widespread in many developing nations. Both vaccines require two shots per person, given weeks apart.

Canada and many European countries have been struggling to vaccinate people as quickly as Brit

ain, Israel, the U.S. and elsewhere.

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