Investors sue AstraZeneca for vaccine testing stumble that caused its stock price to drop
HealthWorld

Investors sue AstraZeneca for vaccine testing stumble that caused its stock price to drop

A pension fund is alleging 'wrongful acts and omissions' by AstraZeneca for the initial test data it released in November 2020, that saw the company stock price drop 5%.

   
The AstraZeneca Plc DaVinci building stands at the Melbourn Science Park in Cambridge, U.K

The AstraZeneca Plc DaVinci building stands at the Melbourn Science Park in Cambridge, U.K | Photo: Jason Alden | Bloomberg

London: AstraZeneca PLC was sued by a pension fund on behalf of investors who it says suffered losses because of flaws in the company’s testing of its coronavirus vaccine.

For much of last year, the Cambridge, England-based pharmaceutical company was touting strong progress on the development of its traditional-style vaccine and announced that it had signed contracts to provide 400 million doses. But in November, questions emerged about the vaccine when the company released initial test results.

Among other things, experts and health officials faulted the testing for a lack of data on the vaccine’s effectiveness for those 55 and older. They also raised questions about results from one trial that found the vaccine 90% effective for subjects who got a half a dose but only 62% effective for those who got the full dose.

In the three days after the release of the test results in late November, AstraZeneca’s stock price dropped 5%, according to the lawsuit filed Tuesday by the public employees’ retirement system in Monroe County, Michigan.

Alleging “wrongful acts and omissions” by the company and its chief officers, the pension fund is asking to be allowed to sue on behalf of a class of all investors injured by the share price decline.

AstraZeneca didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company’s vaccine is being administered in the U.K. but has yet to be approved for use in the EU or U.S.-Bloomberg


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