Johnson and Johnson pauses vaccine trial after unexplained illness
Washington
Johnson and Johnson on Monday said it had temporarily stopped dosing in its Covid-19 vaccine trial after one of the participants developed an "unexplained illness."
The US-based pharmaceuticals giant is one of many companies that are racing to produce the world's first Covid-19 vaccine.
It is currently in phase three of a three-phase process of clinical development, during which the vaccine is given to thousands of people and tested for efficacy and safety. Other participants are given a placebo, Deutsche press agency (dpa) reported.
Johnson and Johnson said last month it was enrolling 60,000 people on three continents to take part in the phase-three study.
In a statement on Monday, Johnson and Johnson said illnesses, "even those that are serious," were an "expected part of any clinical study" and that the number "can reasonably be expected to increase in trials involving large numbers of participants."
It also noted that there was a difference between a "study pause," instigated by the company, and a "regulatory hold" put in place by a regulatory health authority.
Johnson and Johnson had a "strong commitment to safety," it said, and the participant's illness was being reviewed by its own medics as well as those on an independent safety monitoring board.
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