No application received from India's Serum Institute for Covishield authorisation, says EU medicine agency

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has not received any application from the Serum Institute of India for authorization of Covishield, almost a fortnight after the EU introduced the EU Digital Covid Certificate that makes intra-EU travel possible

Jul 17, 2021
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India's Serum Institute for Covishield authorisation

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has not received any application from the Serum Institute of India for authorization of Covishield, almost a fortnight after the EU introduced the EU Digital Covid Certificate that makes intra-EU travel possible. "For the COVID19-vaccine Covishield to be evaluated for use in the EU, the developer needs to submit a formal marketing authorization application to EMA, which to date has not been received," the EMA said at a press meeting Friday. 

According to NDTV,  the EMA had earlier said minor differences in manufacturing processes could result in differences in the final product, and the EU law required assessments as part of the authorisation process, 

So far, the EMA has approved only those vaccinated by either of the four vaccines - Comirnaty of Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna's Spikevax, Vaxzervria by AstraZeneca-Oxford and Johnson & Johnson's Janssen - for restriction-free travel within the EU during the pandemic.

India's Covishield vaccine, developed on AstraZeneca's formula, and exported to dozens of countries, including to India's neighbours in South Asia, is not among the authorized vaccines under the EMA. The lack of authorization for Covishield is creating hurdles for Indian travellers to the EU. Covishield has also been excluded despite holding a EUL, or emergency use listing, from the World Health Organization; the EUL was granted in February and it is one of only seven vaccines on that list.

This means people vaccinated with Covishield will be subject to quarantine protocols as enforced by individual member countries, and may even be blocked from entering some others.

Serum Institute CEO Adar Poonawalla had said last month that he was "taking this up at the highest levels... with regulators and diplomats" and that he "hoped to resolve this matter soon". (SAM)

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