Saturday, March 21, 2026
ADVT 
International

AstraZeneca resuming US testing of COVID-19 vaccine

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2020 09:31 PM
  • AstraZeneca resuming US testing of COVID-19 vaccine

AstraZeneca Inc. announced Friday that regulators are letting it resume testing of its COVID-19 vaccine candidate in the U.S.

Testing of the vaccine was halted worldwide early last month because of a British study volunteer’s illness. Studies have already resumed in other countries, and the British drugmaker said the Food and Drug Administration gave the company the go-ahead Friday to resume U.S. testing.

The AstraZenca vaccine, developed with Oxford University, is one of several coronavirus vaccine candidates in final-stage testing around the world.

The drugmaker said it was allowed to resume testing after the FDA “reviewed all safety data from trials globally and concluded it was safe to resume the trial.”

The company said that testing has already resumed in the United Kingdom, Brazil, South Africa and Japan.

Such temporary halts of drug and vaccine testing are relatively common, because in research involving thousands of participants, some are likely to fall ill. Putting a study on hold allows researchers to investigate whether an illness is a side effect or a coincidence.

AstraZeneca's study in the U.S. involves 30,000 people, with some getting the vaccine and others a dummy shot.

Testing was stopped after one participant in the United Kingdom developed severe neurological symptoms consistent with a rare inflammation of the spinal cord called transverse myelitis. It was the second hold in AstraZeneca testing.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pramila Jayapal is 1st South Asian American woman to chair US House

Jayapal, who was first elected to the Congress in 2016, tweeted she was "beyond proud" to preside over the House and serve in the most diverse Congress in the nation's history.

Pramila Jayapal is 1st South Asian American woman to chair US House

US House passes bill to protect 'Dreamers'

US House passes bill to protect 'Dreamers'
The US House of Representatives has voted to protect so-called "Dreamers" and establish a path to citizenship for more than 2 million immigrants who entered the country without authorization or with only temporary status.

US House passes bill to protect 'Dreamers'

Trump joins Queen, world leaders to mark 75th D-Day

The 93-year-old UK monarch was the last to arrive at the event, attended by some 300 veterans and other world leaders

Trump joins Queen, world leaders to mark 75th D-Day

In #MeToo era, Japanese woman slams #KuToo heels dress codes

"This is about gender discrimination," Yumi Ishikawa, 32, an actress and writer, who started the movement

In #MeToo era, Japanese woman slams #KuToo heels dress codes

Oakland becomes 2nd US city to legalize magic mushrooms

Speakers overwhelmingly supported the move, describing substances such as ayahuasca and peyote as traditional plant-based medicines.

Oakland becomes 2nd US city to legalize magic mushrooms

Indian expat wins big in Abu Dhabi raffle

While Sanjai Nath R won the first prize, five other Indian expats were in the top 10 winning list of the Big Ticket Abu Dhabi raffle, the Khaleej Times report.

Indian expat wins big in Abu Dhabi raffle