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Cuba approves emergency use of home-grown Covid jab, Latin America’s first

The makers of the Abdala vaccine say it is more than 92% effective at preventing Covid-19 disease after three doses.

AFP
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People sign up for a dose of the Cuban Abdala Covid-19 vaccine in Havana, Cuba, June 23. Photo: AP
People sign up for a dose of the Cuban Abdala Covid-19 vaccine in Havana, Cuba, June 23. Photo: AP

Cuba on Friday approved its home-grown Abdala vaccine for emergency use, the first Latin American coronavirus jab to reach this stage and a possible lifeline for a region trying to battle a killer pandemic with modest means.

The country’s Cecmed health regulator gave the go-ahead after Abdala’s makers last month announced the vaccine candidate was more than 92% effective at preventing Covid-19 disease after three doses.

Cuba is working on five coronavirus vaccines, and in May started immunising its population using two of them – Abdala and Soberana 2 – even before they received approval.

By this week, 6.8 million of Cuba’s 11.2 million people have received at least one dose of either vaccine, while 1.6 million have the required three doses.

The country has not bought or sought vaccines from elsewhere, and aims to immunise its population before the end of the year.

In June, the state-run BioCubaFarma laboratory said Abdala “shows efficacy of 92.28% in its three-dose scheme”.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has set a 50% efficacy threshold for coronavirus vaccines to qualify for approved global rollout, though individual countries can green-light jabs without the UN stamp for domestic use.

The Cecmed said approval of Abdala was based on its analysis that it met requirements for “quality, safety and effectiveness”.

And Aica Laboratories, where the vaccine is produced, said there had been “a rigorous process of evaluation of the dossier and… inspections of the plants involved”.

Under American sanctions, communist Cuba has a long tradition of making its own vaccines, dating back to the 1980s.

Nearly 80% of its inoculations are produced locally.

Soberana 2 next?

On Thursday, the Finlay Institute which makes Soberana 2 said it, too, showed efficacy exceeding 91% after three doses.

Eduardo Martinez, president of BioCubaFarma, said Soberana 2 will be submitted to the regulatory authority in the coming days for its own emergency approval.

Cuba has recorded more than 224,000 Covid-19 cases among its population of 11.2 million, and some 1,450 deaths.

It has seen a recent spike in infections, with a new daily infection record reported Friday.

On Wednesday, authorities sent an urgent deployment of doctors and medical equipment to the province of Matanzas – where foreign tourists have continued to visit – after hospitals there reached capacity.

A local company has been commissioned to make more hospital beds for Matanzas and there is a social media campaign to raise donations.

Elsewhere in Latin America, the situation remains worrying.

Brazil has the world’s second-highest death toll – more than 530,000. Colombia recently crossed the grim threshold of 100,000 coronavirus deaths and Peru is now the country with the world’s highest death toll per capita.

Mexico, whose recorded death toll of 234,000 is the fourth-highest in the world, said Tuesday it is battling a fresh pandemic wave.

A locally produced vaccine offers a glimpse of hope for Latin America and the Caribbean, a region which the UN says has fully vaccinated just over 13.6% of its population compared to 34.9% in the European Union and 46.3% in North America.

The region comprises a third of the world’s coronavirus death toll despite representing just 8.4% of the global population.

Venezuela has signed a contract to purchase 12 million doses of Abdala and has already started using the Cuban jab in its vaccination campaign.

Argentina’s health minister visited the island in May to discuss a possible vaccine deal and Mexico has expressed interest.

There is no requirement for WHO to approve such bilateral vaccine deals.

Abdala and Soberana 2 are recombinant protein vaccines that work by recreating the “spikes” on the surface of the coronavirus and introducing it to the body, training the immune system to recognise intruders and fight back in case of a real infection.

Recombinant vaccines, unlike some coronavirus shots already in use, do not need extreme refrigeration.