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Thursday, April 24, 2025

EU drug regulator starts reviewing new coronavirus vaccine

by

1238 days ago
20211202
FILE - Exterior view of the European Medicines Agency, EMA, in Amsterdam's business district, Netherlands, on April 20, 2021. The European Union drug regulator said Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021 it has started a rolling review of a new coronavirus vaccine made by French startup Valneva, the first step toward giving the vaccine the green light to be used in the 27-nation bloc. Approval by the European Medicines Agency would add another vaccine to the EU’s armory against the global pandemic as the bloc is ramping up booster shots and some countries begin preparing to deliver shots of Pfizer’s vaccine to children aged 5 to 11 years. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

FILE - Exterior view of the European Medicines Agency, EMA, in Amsterdam's business district, Netherlands, on April 20, 2021. The European Union drug regulator said Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021 it has started a rolling review of a new coronavirus vaccine made by French startup Valneva, the first step toward giving the vaccine the green light to be used in the 27-nation bloc. Approval by the European Medicines Agency would add another vaccine to the EU’s armory against the global pandemic as the bloc is ramping up booster shots and some countries begin preparing to deliver shots of Pfizer’s vaccine to children aged 5 to 11 years. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

SOURCE: As­so­ci­at­ed Press

 

THE HAGUE, Nether­lands (AP) — The Eu­ro­pean Union drug reg­u­la­tor said Thurs­day it has start­ed a rolling re­view of a new coro­n­avirus vac­cine made by French start­up Val­ne­va, the first step to­ward giv­ing the vac­cine the green light to be used in the 27-na­tion EU.

Ap­proval by the Eu­ro­pean Med­i­cines Agency would add an­oth­er vac­cine to the EU’s ar­mory against COVID-19 as the bloc ramps up ad­min­is­ter­ing boost­er shots and some coun­tries are prepar­ing to de­liv­er shots of Pfiz­er’s vac­cine to chil­dren ages 5 to 11.

Last month, the EU’s ex­ec­u­tive com­mis­sion ap­proved a con­tract with Val­ne­va for mem­ber na­tions to buy al­most 27 mil­lion dos­es in 2022. The con­tract al­so in­clud­ed the pos­si­bil­i­ty to adapt the vac­cine to new vari­ants of the coro­n­avirus and to pur­chase up to 33 mil­lion more dos­es in 2023.

A rolling re­view is an ac­cel­er­at­ed way of as­sess­ing new drugs that al­lows Eu­ro­pean Med­i­cine Agency ex­perts to look at da­ta from on­go­ing stud­ies as they be­come avail­able. Once suf­fi­cient da­ta is avail­able, the com­pa­ny can sub­mit a for­mal ap­pli­ca­tion for EMA mar­ket­ing au­tho­riza­tion.

The Am­s­ter­dam-based agency did not give a time frame for pos­si­ble ap­proval of the Val­ne­va vac­cine.

In Sep­tem­ber, the U.K. gov­ern­ment can­celled an agree­ment with Val­ne­va, part­ly be­cause it was clear the com­pa­ny’s COVID-19 vac­cine wouldn’t be ap­proved by British reg­u­la­tors, the U.K. health sec­re­tary said.

The EMA is now car­ry­ing out rolling re­views of four COVID-19 vac­cines, in­clud­ing Rus­sia’s Sput­nik shot and Chi­na’s Sino­vac.

European UnionCOVID-19


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