The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine medical team set to weigh Sinovac use in kids

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PHILIPPINE government medical experts will review the clinical trial data of Sinovac Biotech after China approved the emergency use authorisat­ion (EUA) for its Covid-19 vaccine in younger children and adolescent­s.

Dr Rontgene Solante, a member of the Vaccine Expert Panel (VEP) and an infectious diseases specialist, on June 6 said the group would look into the trial data of the CoronaVac vaccine given to recipients age 3 to 17, “just like how we evaluated and approved the extended indication [of] Pfizer [for age] 12 to 15”.

But Dr Edsel Salvana, a member of the government’s Technical Advisory Group, said amending the EUA to cover a wider age range was “not automatic” and the Chinese drug manufactur­er would still have to apply for it in the Philippine­s.

Still, Salvana welcomed China’s approval as “good news”, saying this could lead to more vaccines becoming available in the Philippine­s for the younger population to help speed up school reopening.

He said in a text message: “The FDA [Food and Drug Administra­tion] actually just amended the EUA for Pfizer for 12 to 15 years [old].”

The agency has yet to formally announce its decision, though. Last week, its director general, Eric Domingo, said the drug regulator had received a

“favourable” result of an evaluation by the VEP on the USmanufact­ured vaccine.

The original EUA issued to Pfizer indicated it was only for people 16 years old and above.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on May 27 recommende­d that everyone 12 years and older should get a Covid-19 vaccine.

The VEP’s Solante said in a Viber message: “Children are as vulnerable [to Covid] as adults. There are already reports in other countries with increasing cases [among]

children, that’s why the approval of Pfizer was also fasttracke­d for this age group, especially in the United States and Europe.”

On June 6, the Philippine­s took one million doses of Sinovac’s CoronaVac, increasing the country’s vaccine stockpile to 9.3 million that includes other brands like AstraZenec­a, Pfizer and Sputnik V.

Sinovac’s EUA in the Philippine­s, as well as the World Health Organisati­on’s emergency use listing, currently recommends its use in people

18 years old and above.

The government was due to start vaccinatin­g front-line workers on June 7, estimated at 35.5 million in the identified “essential” sectors.

“There will be a ceremonial rollout of vaccinatio­n for the A4 group,” health secretary Francisco Duque III said on June 6, using the designatio­n for vaccine priority workers.

“It is crucial that we already start vaccinatin­g them as they are our economic front-liners,” he added.

 ?? PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER ?? A truck that picked up one million more doses of Sinovac Biotech’s Covid-19 vaccine at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport arrives at the PharmaServ Express cold storage facility in Marikina city on Sunday morning.
PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER A truck that picked up one million more doses of Sinovac Biotech’s Covid-19 vaccine at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport arrives at the PharmaServ Express cold storage facility in Marikina city on Sunday morning.

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