The study, published in the Lancet medical journal, found that the
estimated rate of thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS)
after the first dose was 8.1 per million in those inoculated,
AstraZeneca said
https://www.astrazeneca.com/
content/astraz/media-centre/press-releases/2021/
vaxzevria-showed-no-increased-incidence-of-thrombosis-with-thrombocytopenia-after-second-dose.html.
After the second dose of the vaccine, branded Vaxzevria and invented
by Oxford University, the rate was 2.3 per million, comparable to
that seen in unvaccinated people, the Anglo-Swedish company added.
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AstraZeneca's shot has faced several setbacks, including production
delays, and rare cases of severe side-effects, including TTS, which
led to several countries restricting or stopping use of the vaccine,
probes by regulators and warning labels.
The European Union's (EU) drugs regulator has been looking into
cases of TTS since March and has found a possible link to Vaxzevria,
and to Johnson & Johnson's single-dose COVID-19 shot. It has,
however, maintained that overall benefits of both vaccines outweigh
any risks posed by them.
Wednesday's findings evaluated cases reported as of April 30 that
occurred within 14 days of receiving the first or second dose, using
AstraZeneca's global safety database, it said.
MEDIA ATTENTION
Public focus has been high on the vaccine as it had been hailed as
potentially the world's best weapon against the pandemic because it
is cheap and easily transportable.
[to top of second column] |
.png) The study said limitations of
the analysis included reliance on data provided
by healthcare providers and those who got
vaccinated, which might lead to under-reporting
of cases.
It added that "heightened media attention might
have led to event misclassification."
As of the cut-off date, 13 cases of TTS had been identified globally
after the second dose in people aged 45 years to 85 years, including
eight women. Some 399 cases were reported after the first, the study
showed, while data used for the number of doses administered was
limited to the EU, European Economic Area, and Britain.
"Unless TTS was identified after the first dose, these results
support the administration of the two-dose schedule of Vaxzevria, as
indicated, to help provide protection against COVID-19 including
against rising variants of concern," AstraZeneca senior executive
Mene Pangalos said in a statement.
The EU drug regulator in May advised against a second AstraZeneca
shot for people reporting TTS after the first.
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru Editing by Uttaresh.V
and Mark Potter)
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