Sunday, March 29, 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

Protester Says Canada Doing U.S. 'Dirty Work' Outside Huawei Exec's Bail Hearing

The bail hearing for a senior executive at Chinese tech giant Huawei who is wanted by the United States on allegations of fraud heard about plans for her security today if she is released.

Protester Says Canada Doing U.S. 'Dirty Work' Outside Huawei Exec's Bail Hearing

Neglect Of Autistic Boy Highlights Care Gaps: B.C.'s Children's Representative

Neglect Of Autistic Boy Highlights Care Gaps: B.C.'s Children's Representative
The report by Jennifer Charlesworth details years of inadequate services to address the special needs of a boy she calls Charlie.

Neglect Of Autistic Boy Highlights Care Gaps: B.C.'s Children's Representative

South Africans Welcome New State Prosecutor Indian-Origin Shamila Batohi Also Known As 'Firelady'

Prominent Indian-origin lawyer Shamila Batohi has been appointed to head South Africa’s prosecuting authority, the first woman to head the agency facing criticism for its handling of the investigations against former president Jacob Zuma over corruption charges.

South Africans Welcome New State Prosecutor Indian-Origin Shamila Batohi Also Known As 'Firelady'

Ten Indian Men And 24 Thai Women Arrested In Thailand For Fake Marriages, 20 At Large

Ten Indian Men And 24 Thai Women Arrested In Thailand For Fake Marriages, 20 At Large
Twenty Indian suspects are still at large, Thai Police said.

Ten Indian Men And 24 Thai Women Arrested In Thailand For Fake Marriages, 20 At Large

Taliban Being Used As 'Hedge' Against India, Says US Army Officer

Days after US President Donald Trump sought Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan's help in the Afghan peace process, a top American commander has told lawmakers that Islamabad's policy seems to be unchanged and it continues to use the Taliban as a hedge against India.

Taliban Being Used As 'Hedge' Against India, Says US Army Officer

Vijay Mallya Offers To Pay 100% Principal Amount, Makes 'Humble Request' To Banks, Govt On Twitter

Vijay Mallya Offers To Pay 100% Principal Amount, Makes 'Humble Request' To Banks, Govt On Twitter
Fugitive liquor tycoon Vijay Mallya on Wednesday said his extradition from the UK to India will take its own legal course, while offering to pay back 100 per cent of "public money".

Vijay Mallya Offers To Pay 100% Principal Amount, Makes 'Humble Request' To Banks, Govt On Twitter