
Washington: Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine became the second to receive the US Food and Drug Administration's authorisation for emergency use, as the world's hardest-hit nation grapples with more than 3,000 coronavirus deaths a day.
"With the availability of two vaccines now for the prevention of COVID-19, the FDA has taken another crucial step in the fight against this global pandemic that is causing vast numbers of hospitalisations and deaths in the United States each day," said FDA chief Stephen Hahn.
President Donald Trump also welcomed the news. "Congratulations, the Moderna vaccine is now available," he said in a tweet.
The FDA's announcement comes a day after the US agency's panel of outside experts endorsed the use of the two-dose regimen.
Authorisation of Moderna’s vaccine means we can accelerate the vaccination of frontline health care workers and Americans in long-term-care facilities, and, ultimately, bring a faster end to this pandemic," US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said in a statement.
The US is the first nation to approve Moderna's vaccine, a week after a vaccine jointly developed by BioNTech and Pfizer was given the green light.
The BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine was first authorised by the UK on December 2, followed by several other nations, including Canada.
Both Moderna and BioNTech-Pfizer have developed vaccines based on cutting-edge mRNA technology and have shown to be about 95 per cent effective.
What's next?
The biotech company will now begin distribution of 5.9 million shots as early as this weekend from cold-storage sites outside US cities of Memphis and Louisville. They will be shipped across the country via partnerships with FedEx and UPS.
Moderna's shots are expected to be used in the more remote and rural parts of the US due to the relative ease of storing the doses.
While the vaccine needs to be shipped and stored frozen, unlike the BioNTech-Pfizer shot, it does not have to be kept at ultra-cold temperatures. Once thawed, the Moderna vaccine can be kept at typical refrigerator temperatures.
The US government has paid Moderna for a total of 200 million doses, enough to vaccinate 100 million people.
The company has said it will deliver approximately 20 million doses this year. It is also expected to have 100million to 125 million doses in the first quarter of next year, about 80 million of which will be for the United States.
The remaining 100 million doses will be delivered by end of June 2021.