EMA says omicron causes mild disease as WHO warns of vaccine hoarding
File photo shows the exterior view of the European Medicines Agency, EMA, in Amsterdam's business district, Netherlands, on April 20, 2021. (AP Photo)


The newly discovered variant of the coronavirus, omicron, may cause mild disease, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said Thursday as the World Health Organization (WHO) warned against a repeat of vaccine hoarding by rich nations.

The tentative judgment from the EMA comes after the WHO said this week there was some evidence that omicron causes less severe disease than delta, the currently dominant variant.

The EMA echoed the finding but said more investigation was being done.

"Cases appear to be mostly mild, however we need to gather more evidence to determine whether the spectrum of disease severity caused by Omicron is different (to) that of all the variants that have been circulating so far," said Marco Cavaleri, EMA's head of biological health threats and vaccines strategy.

The highly mutated variant first detected in South Africa sparked global panic when it emerged last month, prompting fears it could be more contagious, cause more severe illness or evade vaccines.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Wednesday said that "emerging data from South Africa suggests increased risk of reinfection with Omicron."

Cavaleri said that early data suggested omicron is more infectious than delta, but it was not year clear whether it would replace the older dominant strain.

He also stressed that there were better means of prevention and treatment available than last winter.

The comments come after Pfizer and BioNTech said Wednesday that a third dose of their vaccine was effective against the variant and that it was developing an omicron-specific jab that should be available by March.

Hoarding fears

Some wealthy countries like Germany and Britain are already hard-hit by a winter wave of infections, imposing new measures to control its spread, and fears of the economic impact have been dogging financial markets.

That prompted the WHO on Thursday to advise caution against the restrictions on vaccine supply seen earlier this year.

"As we head into whatever the Omicron situation is going to be, there is a risk that the global supply is again going to revert to high-income countries hoarding vaccine to protect (their populations)... in a sense in excess," said WHO vaccines chief Kate O'Brien.

O'Brien said the WHO was examining data from Pfizer and BioNTech about the booster shot, and that it may turn out that "additional doses have benefit to provide added protection against Omicron," but stressed it was still "very early days."

The EMA's Cavaleri also said that "at this stage we do not have enough data.

The agency said later Thursday that COVID-19 boosters "safe and effective" three months after last jab.

The United Nations health body's Africa branch said meanwhile that detections of new coronavirus cases had almost doubled over the past week, to 107,000, as the new variant "is reaching more countries in Africa."

The biggest surge in numbers – 140% on average – was in the south of the continent.

However, in South Africa, which discovered the new variant last month, "severe cases remain low," the WHO said.

It nevertheless called on countries to step up vaccinations – only 7.8% of the continent's roughly 1.2 billion people have been jabbed.

That compares with over 600 million doses administered in Europe alone, according to EMA figures.