Macron: AstraZeneca vaccine seems
‘quasi-ineffective’ on older people
French president’s remarks came shortly before EU
regulator approved jab for all adults.
BY RYM
MOMTAZ
January 29,
2021 4:52 pm
PARIS —
French President Emmanual Macron said Friday the AstraZeneca coronavirus
vaccine appeared to be "quasi-ineffective" on people older than 65 —
just hours before the EU's drugs regulator approved it for use on all adults.
"The
real problem on AstraZeneca is that it doesn’t work the way we were expecting
it to," Macron told a group of reporters, including POLITICO, in Paris.
"We’re waiting for the EMA [European Medicines Agency] results, but today
everything points to thinking it is quasi-ineffective on people older than 65,
some say those 60 years or older."
Later in
the day, the EMA gave the vaccine the green light. It said: "There are not
yet enough results in older participants (over 55 years old) to provide a
figure for how well the vaccine will work in this group. However, protection is
expected, given that an immune response is seen in this age group and based on
experience with other vaccines; as there is reliable information on safety in
this population, EMA’s scientific experts considered that the vaccine can be
used in older adults."
German
experts said Thursday that people aged 65 or older should not be given the
AstraZeneca coronavirus jab, dealing another blow to European vaccination
efforts. The draft recommendation from a committee that advises the country’s
public health institute stated that more data is needed to determine the
effectiveness of the vaccine in this age group.
AstraZeneca
rejected the German experts’ view, stating that the latest analysis of the
clinical trial data in fact supports efficacy in those over 65 and that this
information is expected to be published by the EMA in the coming days. A
spokesperson added that reports of efficacy being low in adults over 65 is “not
an accurate reflection of the totality of the data.”
Macron said
problems with the AstraZeneca jab will complicate the vaccination strategy in
the EU, given that it is largely based on prioritizing vaccinating the senior
population and healthcare workers. He said another unforeseen twist was that
the vaccines that are more complicated to produce and store — those based on
the mRNA technology that had never been used before to produce a vaccine — are
the ones that appear to perform best.
"What
no one foresaw, which is both wonderful and one of the aspects of this crisis,
is that the vaccines that worked best were the most complicated… meaning in
this crisis we’re saying the Twingo is taking longer to produce than the Tesla
that we had never produced before," he said, comparing the basic Renault
model with Tesla's electric car.
Although
France is home to the Pasteur Institute which cracked the HIV virus and is
named after the inventor of the rabies vaccine, and to other Big Pharma
companies like Sanofi, no French lab has produced an approved COVID-19 vaccine
yet.
Macron
questioned the strategy by some countries, including the U.K., to prioritize a
first dose of a vaccine whose effectiveness is based on two doses taken within
28 days.
“If we look
at the strategy of the U.K. — I’m not the commentator on others’ strategy, but
we have to be very careful right now in how we compare vaccine strategies. The
goal is not to have the biggest number of first injections," he said.
"When
you have all the medical agencies and the industrialists who say you need two
injections for it to work, a maximum of 28 days apart, which is the case with
Pfizer/BioNTech. And you have countries whose vaccine strategy is to only
administer one jab, I'm not sure that it’s very serious," Macron added.
"When
I listen to the scientists who say we accelerate the mutations with only one
injection because the virus adapts… we are lying to people when we tell them
they’ve been vaccinated by getting one injection of a vaccine that consists of
two injections."
The
vaccination campaign in France got off to a slow start in comparison with most
EU countries and the U.K., placing it near the bottom of the rankings, though
it has ramped up its speed in recent weeks.
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