The use of Russia's Covid-19 vaccine in India remains less than 1 percent due to reasons ranging from yield issues to supply constraints. Will Sputnik Light make any difference?
In the past 15 months, DRL or RDIF has not been particularly successful in finding takers for the vaccine in India
In September 2020, when India’s third largest pharmaceutical company Dr Reddy’s Laboratories (DRL), decided to partner with Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, RDIF, to bring the Sputnik V vaccine to India, it seemed like a potential gamechanger.
In Russia, the vaccine had entered its phase 3 trials, after its phase 1 and 2 studies had shown that it was safe to use. Russia had already authorised a limited rollout of the vaccine in August 2020, and Sputnik V became the first Covid-19 vaccine to be registered in the world. . The vaccine was registered with the Russian Ministry of Health, allowing the government to vaccinate its population with it. Back then, the world was still scrambling to find a Covid-19 vaccine, and most of the candidates were still under development, with uncertainty over their efficacy.
Sputnik V is based on the human adenovirus, a common cold virus that is fused with the spike protein of Sars-CoV-2 to stimulate an immune response, and was developed by Moscow’s Gamaleya National Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, with support from RDIF.
“We understand we are late in the game, so we need to accelerate whatever we’re doing through partnerships,” GV Prasad, managing director of DRL, had told Forbes India earlier. “Our business initially will depend on partnerships before we build our own capabilities. That is the idea… for us right now, the priority is short term—to see how we can help the Russian vaccine succeed in India, manufacture it in India and make it available to patients.”
In the past 15 months, DRL or RDIF has not been particularly successful in finding takers for the vaccine in India. So far, only a little over a million doses (about 11 lakh) of Sputnik V have been administered, accounting for about 0.9 percent of all vaccinations in India so far. In sharp contrast, Covishield, which received approvals the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) in January 2021, has so far been used in over 88 percent of vaccinations in the country, followed by Covaxin at 11 percent. In all, India has administered over 117 crore vaccine doses, as of November 22.