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Slovakia Unable to Call Russian Vaccine Safe Due to Lack of Data

Slovakia Unable to Declare Russian Vaccine Safe on Lack of Data

Slovakia’s medicines regulator is unable to recommend the use of a Russian coronavirus vaccine because it doesn’t have enough information to evaluate it, a senior state official said, a week after a spat over the shots brought down the prime minister.

“Because of our inability to obtain sufficient data from the producer of Sputnik V, there is no other choice but to again request reliable and verifiable evidence that the vaccine is safe and effective,” Janka Bitto Ciganikova, the head of parliament’s health-care committee, said in a statement.

Slovak newspaper DennikN cited a report from the local drug regulator as saying that Sputnik vaccines delivered to the country had different parameters than those reviewed in a study published in The Lancet, which showed it to be highly effective against Covid-19. The watchdog declined to comment on the peer-reviewed study.

Sputnik’s developer rejected DennikN’s report. “Unfortunately, we also expect additional fake news and provocations from enemies of Sputnik V in Slovakia who try to undermine the vaccine,” it said on the vaccine’s official Twitter account.

The Slovak regulator is still conducting tests, but it said that it hasn’t been able to come to a conclusion about the risks and benefits of Sputnik V because of the “lack of a large amount of data from the producer, the inconsistency of the drug forms and the inability to compare batches used in various studies and countries.”

The nation of 5.5 million agreed to buy 2 million Sputnik V shots and received about 200,000 last month, but the purchase sparked a political crisis when junior coalition parties said the deal had been agreed behind their backs. The turmoil ended when then Premier Igor Matovic swapped jobs with the finance minister.

Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok has called Sputnik “a tool in a hybrid war” as the country’s right-of-center parties expressed concerns its purchase may undermine the European Union and NATO member’s foreign-policy direction.

So far, neighboring Hungary has been the only EU country to approve and use Sputnik, though several other governments have expressed interest, and the vaccine is being reviewed by the bloc’s drug regulator. The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that the European watchdog will launch an investigation next week into the ethical and scientific standards of Sputnik V clinical trials.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.