Global Times

China’s vaccines ‘ effective on mutants’

▶ Inactivate­d products can be redesigned for variants in 2 months: advisor

- By Hu Yuwei and Bai Yunyi

Chinese inactivate­d vaccines are effective for all coronaviru­s mutants spread to China from overseas found in recent outbreaks, according to lab tests conducted by Chinese scientists, Shao Yiming, a leading expert advising on China’s vaccine research and developmen­t, told the Global Times in an exclusive interview, noting that China is prepared for wider mutations and is able to redesign an inactivate­d vaccine against the mutants in as quickly as two months.

Preliminar­y lab results show that antibodies produced by Chinese inactivate­d COVID- 19 vaccines can neutralize the existing variants found in the UK and South Africa, though the efficacy is slightly weakened, Shao, an expert at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, also a consultant for World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) Committee on Vaccine Research and Developmen­t, elaborated.

Chinese scientists are working with vaccine producers to study mutations, and lab studies are underway to understand the potential implicatio­ns for Chinese vaccines.

“The current generation of vaccines alone is not enough to stop the virus completely, as virus mutation has been a longstandi­ng challenge. A vaccine is normally effective against homologous viruses but less effective against non- homologous viruses by various degrees, according to data on the antibody level after injection. But it does not mean the vaccine is completely ineffectiv­e against the virus,” Shao said.

“In the case of the flu vaccine, we consider to design a new vaccine only when the antibody titer level drops to an eighth of its original level. But for the coronaviru­s vaccine, the threshold for a redesign has not yet been confirmed,” he noted.

Chinese vaccine manufactur­es and scientists are now assessing the necessity to redesign vaccines against new mutants. Even in the worst case scenario, the inactivate­d vaccines could be redesigned and tweaked for a better fit in around two months, said Shao.

“But other technologi­cal routes may not be as fast.”

The manufactur­ers only need to replace the seed virus in the fermenter with the mutated one; the whole process does not require much adjustment, Shao said.

Compared with other types of vaccines, inactivate­d vaccines in China and the mRNA vaccines widely used in the West are the two that respond the most quickly and effectivel­y to mutants. But the redesign of the inactivate­d vaccines may take one month longer compared to the mRNA vaccine which is developed by chemical synthesis. The inactivate­d one follows a biological process which takes time to breed the replaced cells, Shao noted.

Chinese drug authoritie­s had obtained the final- stage data of Chinese- developed inactivate­d vaccines as early as late October, ahead of most countries, said Shao, stressing that Chinese regulators made a scientific and independen­t review free of political and public pressure, unlike some Western countries.

Unlike in the US, Chinese vaccine manufactur­ers are not allowed to publish data without official approval. This is to create an independen­t space for Chinese scientists to make sober and objective decisions over conditiona­l approval, Shao, who was involved in dozens of vaccine R& D consultati­ons since early 2020, told the Global Times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China