AstraZeneca
should know by year-end whether vaccine works if trials
restart
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[September 10, 2020]
By John Miller and Ludwig Burger
ZURICH/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - AstraZeneca
should still know before the end of the year whether its experimental
vaccine protects people against COVID-19, the drugmaker's chief
executive Pascal Soriot said on Thursday, as long as it can resume
trials soon.
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The British company suspended late-stage trials this week after an
illness in a participant in Britain. The patient was reportedly
suffering from symptoms associated with a rare spinal inflammatory
disorder called transverse myelitis.
Soriot said during an online event that AstraZeneca did not yet know
the diagnosis, adding that it was not clear if the volunteer had
transverse myelitis and more tests were needed.
He said the diagnosis would be submitted to an independent safety
committee and this would usually then tell the company whether
trials can be resumed.
Soriot said that the potential vaccine, which the World Health
Organization (WHO) has flagged as the most promising for coronavirus,
that it was usual for a trial to be suspended.
"It's very common, actually, and many experts will tell you this,"
Soriot said, adding: "The difference with other vaccine trials is,
the whole world is not watching them, of course. They stop, they
study, and they restart."
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AstraZeneca would supply vaccines to countries at the same time to ensure a fair
and equitable distribution, Soriot said, adding that the company was close to
having capacity to produce 3 billion doses at sites set up around the world to
prevent governments from restricting distribution.
Shares in AstraZeneca fell on Wednesday after news of the trial's suspension as
some observers raised doubts about the timeline for the rollout of a vaccine to
help curb the coronavirus pandemic.
(Additional reporting by Patricia Weiss and Josephine Mason; Editing by
Alexander Smith)
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