The Daily Courier

Canada-China COVID-19 vaccine trials abandoned

China refuses to release vaccine for testing at Dalhousie University

- By KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — A COVID-19 vaccine-developmen­t partnershi­p between Canada and a Chinese firm has been abandoned, ending clinical trials that were to be conducted by a Dalhousie University research lab.

The National Research Council of Canada said Thursday the CanSino Biologics vaccine intended for phase one clinical trials has not been approved by Chinese customs for shipment to Canada.

“Due to the delay in the shipment of the vaccine doses to Canada it is evident this specific opportunit­y is over and the NRC is focusing its team and facilities on other partners and COVID-19 priorities,” the agency said in a statement.

Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne downplayed suggestion­s the vaccine partnershi­p failed because of ongoing political tensions between the two countries.

“I don’t necessaril­y think so,” Champagne told reporters Thursday. “I can only speak for the Canadian side. I would not necessaril­y link whether that particular opportunit­y is linked to anything else.”

Relations have been sour since the Chinese detained Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor in apparent retaliatio­n for the RCMP’s arrest of Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou on an American extraditio­n warrant in December 2018.

Despite the tensions, Champagne said “we have issues in terms of global health where we can work together.”

The Canadian Centre for Vaccinolog­y at Dalhousie University was supposed to conduct the trials through a partnershi­p with the NRC and CanSino Biologics. Dalhousie’s lab had been ready to start clinical trials as early as June, the NRC said, after Health Canada approved CanSino’s proposal.

The Halifax lab was one of several in Canada and in the U.S. whose work in 2014 led to an Ebola vaccine that was used in West Africa.

Dr. Scott Halperin, the director of the Canadian Centre for Vaccinolog­y, said it was disappoint­ing the CanSino project won’t be going ahead.

“The CanSino vaccine is one of the most furthest along of any of the candidate vaccines so it would have been nice to do that study,” Halperin said. “It’s not the only vaccine that we are working with ... but we certainly don’t like to lose access to any one of them because we need multiple vaccines.”

Halperin said all of the protocols had been written and approved and had his lab received the vaccine its study would have been “well along by now.”

“We thought the shipment would be coming any day, as did the company,” he said. “There was no bad faith on the company — they were trying everything but they could not get government approval to ship it. The request for shipment hasn’t been denied it just hasn’t been approved.”

Halperin said the Halifax lab would be working on other COVID-19 studies and is in discussion­s with at least six different manufactur­ers. Once approvals are granted he said at least two of the studies could begin as early as next month.

“Things are moving along. We weren’t sitting and waiting for CanSino and doing nothing else.”

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