SAO PAULO — Brazil's health regulator has halted clinical trials of the potential coronavirus vaccine CoronaVac, citing an "adverse, serious event."
Adversaries of President Jair Bolsonaro said they feared the decision — posted Monday night on Anvisa's website — was motivated not by science but by the leader's political hostility to the country and state involved in producing the vaccine candidate.
The potential vaccine is being developed by Chinese biopharmaceutical firm Sinovac and in Brazil would be mostly produced by Sao Paulo's state-run Butantan Institute. About 10,000 volunteers are taking part in the phase three tests in one of the nations hardest hit by COVID-19.
Sao Paulo state health authorities said in a press conference on Tuesday that Anvisa sent a single email at 8:40 p.m. saying the tests should be halted. They also said the incident with one of the trial volunteers was unrelated to the trials.
"Such news coming the way it did causes our surprise, insecurity and, in our case, indignation," said Dimas Covas, the head of the Butantan Institute.
He said it was "impossible" that the volunteer's incident had any relation to the tests.
Anvisa did not describe the Oct. 29 event that prompted the halt. But its president, Antonio Barra Torres, a close ally of Bolsonaro, denied on Tuesday that politics was involved, calling it a "purely technical decision."
"This no joke," Torres said. "Clear, precise and complete documents need to be sent to us, which did not happen."