Syringes (Yonhap)
South Korean health authorities have stepped up efforts to speed up the approval process for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments amid a third wave of coronavirus outbreaks.
The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said Tuesday it would apply for a special import procedure for Pfizer's vaccines.
The nation seeks to bring in 117,000 doses of Pfizer vaccine, enough to inoculate 60,000 people, this month through the COVAX Facility, the World Health Organization's global vaccine provision program.
The KDCA said it will request the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety later in the day to apply a fast-track import system to the Pfizer shots.
The scheme allows for importation of unauthorized medicines needed to cope with public health crises. Remdesivir, a COVID-19 treatment, was introduced under the system last year.
The KDCA's decision was made during a meeting involving the two agencies and health experts earlier in the day.
The Ministry of Food and Drug Safety also plans hold a meeting on Friday to give final approval for Celltrion Inc.'s COVID-19 treatment.
Celltrion has submitted an application for conditional marketing authorization of CT-P59, an anti-COVID-19 monoclonal antibody treatment candidate, to the ministry.
If approved, it would mark the nation's first homegrown COVID-19 treatment.
Celltrion announced top-line results from its randomized and placebo controlled global phase-two clinical study, saying CT-P59 reduces recovery time and the chance of a severe case.
The result demonstrated that the treatment significantly reduced the risk of COVID-19-related hospitalization and oxygenation.
Also on Thursday, a panel of medical experts will hold a second meeting on a COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZeneca.
The panel has said the AstraZeneca vaccine's efficacy is similar among people aged between 18 and 64 and those aged 65 and older, citing that no serious side effects were found in either group.
South Korea plans to begin a COVID-19 vaccination campaign this month, with front-line medical workers receiving the first shots.
The KDCA has announced that medical professionals treating COVID-19 patients at hospitals and treatment centers in the wider Seoul area will receive their first doses of the vaccines in February.
The authorities estimated around 50,000 medical workers will be vaccinated, followed by another 780,000 people that include patients at sanatoriums and elderly care facilities, as well as high-risk health care workers, during the first quarter. (Yonhap)