Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

EU agency says people should get 2nd dose of AstraZeneca too

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2021 05:19 PM
  • EU agency says people should get 2nd dose of AstraZeneca too

The European Medicines Agency said Friday that people who have received a first dose of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine should also get the second one despite the rare risk of blood clots that have been linked to the shot.

In new guidance, the European Union's drug regulator said people should still get a second AstraZeneca dose four to 12 weeks after their first shot and that the benefits of immunization far outweighed the risks of the unusual clotting disorder.

“At this stage, the available data supports continuing to give a second dose of the vaccine," said Noël Wathion, the agency's deputy executive director.

The regulator said it wasn't known whether the risk of a rare blood clot after a second dose might be different than that engendered by the first shot.

In its analysis of Europe-wide AstraZeneca data, the EMA also said there wasn't enough information to know whether age or gender might make some people more susceptible to the unusual clots.

Earlier this month, the Amsterdam-based drug regulator for the 27-nation EU said there was a “possible link” between the AstraZeneca vaccine and rare blood clotting disorders, but that the vaccine dramatically reduced the risk of being hospitalized or killed by COVID-19.

The EMA previously described the clots as “very rare” side effects and said the vaccine labels should be modified to make doctors and patients aware.

It’s still uncertain exactly how frequently the rare blood clots occur. According to data from the U.K., which has administered more AZ vaccines than any other country, there were 30 such cases among 18 million inoculations, as of late March.

Last month, more than a dozen countries, mostly in Europe, suspended their use of the AstraZeneca jab over the blood clot issue. Most restarted — some with age restrictions — after the EMA said countries should continue using the vaccine.

The agency this week identified a similar connection between blood clots and the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson. As with the AstraZeneca product, the EMA recommended labeling changes but said the benefits of getting vaccinated outweighed the risks. To date, most of the rare clotting disorders have been reported in women aged under 60.

Both the AstraZeneca and J&J vaccines are made using similar technology, and it’s unclear whether that might be partly responsible for the rare clotting disorders.

EU health commissioner Stella Kyriakides said she hoped the EMA advice would reassure countries about the AstraZeneca vaccine. She said she had written to all of the EU’s health ministers to try to obtain “the maximum possible co-ordination of our (vaccination) approaches, based on science.”

In recent months, countries across Europe have taken wildly different approaches to the AstraZeneca vaccine, despite guidance from the EMA and other health authorities. Some experts say that has seriously undermined trust in the vaccine, with some countries like Norway refusing to use it and others facing sparse demand for the often-maligned shot.

In early April, France said people under 55 who received a first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine should get other vaccines for their second shot because of the rare clotting risk. Sweden also said people under 65 who had gotten a first AstraZeneca shot would get a different vaccine for their booster shot.

Although studies have begun in Britain and Spain to test whether it’s safe and effective to mix and match different vaccines, including those made by AstraZeneca and Pfizer-BioNTech, no results are yet available.

“We are at the limits of where science can give us reliable answers on that,” said Stephen Evans, a vaccines expert at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Simon Clarke of Britain’s University of Reading said widespread immunization, including with the AstraZeneca vaccine, was needed to curb COVID-19.

“It would be very bad if people started questioning whether or not they should have their second dose of this safe and effective vaccine,” he said in a statement.

AstraZeneca was supposed to be the workhorse of the EU’s vaccine drive this year — a cheap and easy-to-transport shot to break the pandemic’s back. Yet, the EU said that out of 120 million doses promised for the 1st quarter, only 30 million were delivered.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. restricts travel in the province

B.C. restricts travel in the province
Solicitor General Mike Farnworth, who is also the minister of public safety, says the new orders are being brought in using the extraordinary powers of the Emergency Program Act. The order goes into effect today and expires on May 25. Breaking rules come with $575 fine.

B.C. restricts travel in the province

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the deal with Pfizer includes options to add 30 million doses in both 2022 and 2023, and an option for 60 million doses in 2024.

Canada secures millions of vaccine booster shots from Pfizer for future: Trudeau

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary
Trudeau says it's necessary because there has been a concerning surge of COVID-19 cases and the emergence of more variants of concern in certain parts of the world.

Trudeau says travel restrictions necessary

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam
Dr. Theresa Tam says average case counts have more than doubled over the past month, with upwards of 8,400 infections reported daily over the last week.    

COVID-19 spread seems to be easing: Tam

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP
34 year old Tyson Cole of Surrey, has been charged with Break and Enter and Unlawfully in Dwelling House. He was remanded in to custody.

Neighbours help to foil break and enter in progress: Surrey RCMP

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget
The amendment called for the budget to be revised because, the Conservatives claimed, it will add "over half a trillion dollars in new debt that can only be paid through higher job-killing taxes," including more than $100 billion in new spending that the Conservatives dubbed "a re-election fund."

Liberals survive second confidence vote on budget

PrevNext