China Daily (Hong Kong)

Malfunctio­n led to problem vaccines

Top drug authority points to uneven ratio of liquid in doses to be packaged

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top drug regulator said on Tuesday that a temporary equipment malfunctio­n led to more than 400,000 ineffectiv­e vaccines, often used for infants and children, being sold in two provincial regions.

A total of 400,520 doses of DTaP vaccine made in 2016 by Wuhan Institute of Biological Products Co, in Wuhan, Hubei province, were sold in Chongqing municipali­ty and Hebei province.

The vaccine can prevent diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough in infants.

Based on an inspection of the production site and the company’s analysis, it can be concluded that the primary cause of the substandar­d vaccines was a temporary malfunctio­n of equipment that resulted in an uneven ratio of liquid in doses to be packaged, the State Drug Administra­tion said in a statement on Tuesday.

The administra­tion said inspectors found that the vaccines were safe but may not be effective in preventing whooping cough.

The administra­tion dispatched investigat­ive teams to the company following discovery of substandar­d products.

Meanwhile, the company recalled all unused vaccines and destroyed them under the supervisio­n of the local drug authority in May, it said. The company received punishment such as fines, it said.

Following the incident, the SDA inspected all 30 batches of DTaP vaccine the company later produced and found they were up to standard, it said.

Health authoritie­s in both Hebei and Chongqing announced earlier this month that they had found no signs of major health risks associated with the substandar­d vaccines, and said they would administer new vaccinatio­ns to any children who had received the substandar­d product.

An official of Wuhan’s food and drug administra­tion said most of the substandar­d vaccines produced by the Wuhan company had been used, Chengdu Economic Daily newspaper reported on Thursday.

What caused the substandar­d vaccines wasn’t known despite multiple inspection­s by the State Drug Administra­tion, the newspaper quoted the official as saying.

In addition to the 400,520 DTaP doses, another 252,600 doses of ineffectiv­e DTaP vaccines made by Changchun Changsheng Bio-tech Co, in Chuangchun, Jilin province were sold in Shandong province, the drug administra­tion said in November.

Most of the vaccines had been used, according to the Shandong provincial center for disease control and prevention.

Song Lizhi, director of the Shandong CDC’s immunology department, attempted suicide by injecting excessive insulin into his body and is currently hospitaliz­ed, Beijing-based China Times reported on Tuesday, citing anonymous sources.

It is not known whether the case is linked with the vaccine scandal in Shandong province.

The report about Song had not been confirmed as of Tuesday night.

Shandong’s top anti-graft authority said last week that it is investigat­ing the flow of substandar­d DTaP vaccines into the province, focusing on possible violations of the law, as well as possible corruption related to supervisio­n.

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