China Daily

Talent, teamwork speed vaccine effort

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@ chinadaily. com. cn

China’s speedy COVID- 19 vaccine developmen­t is the result of drawing inspiratio­n from past public health challenges, rapid but meticulous mobilizati­on of talent and resources and rigorously upholding strict scientific and medical standards during every step of research, experts said.

As of Oct 20, there were 44 vaccine candidates in human trials around the world, 15 of which were developed by China or with Chinese partners, according to the World Health Organizati­on. China has four vaccine candidates in phase three clinical trials. These include three inactivate­d vaccines and an adenoviral vectorbase­d, or AdV5, vaccine.

Lu Shan, a member of China’s COVID- 19 vaccine developmen­t task force, said the nation’s scientific community was swift to respond to the new public health threat, as evident from the Ministry of Science and Technology holding its first interdepar­tmental meeting on research on the pathogen on Jan 21.

Many noted scientists, from those studying the origin of the virus to those who develop various types of vaccines, were present at the meeting, Lu told Science and Technology Daily, a newspaper operated by the ministry.

New research projects and talent have been constantly incorporat­ed into the research effort as scientists began to learn more about the virus, and “a new project’s funding often arrives on the same day it was approved”, she added.

“Developing a vaccine has a high chance of failure, and we didn’t know which technical route may yield a safe and effective vaccine,” Lu said. “But over the years, we have accumulate­d the talent and resources to try all five routes. The reason for that decision is to guarantee success.”

The five technical routes for vaccines are: inactivate­d vaccines, attenuated influenza vaccines, the two nucleic acid- based — DNA and mRNA — types of vaccines and adenoviral vector- based vaccines. As of last month, all five routes had vaccines that had started or were ready to begin human trials soon, according to the National Medical Products Administra­tion.

Xu Penghui, a biotech researcher at the ministry’s Department of Science and Technology for Social Developmen­t, said China’s rapid progress in COVID- 19 vaccine developmen­t is rooted in the nation’s vast profession­al and administra­tive knowledge gained from creating new drugs and handling past public health risks.

“For years, we have been keeping a close eye on various research teams across the country. We know exactly who leads the research and what their accomplish­ments and their capabiliti­es are,” he said.

When a new public threat arises, the ministry could act as a “chief of staff for scientists” and quickly mobilize researcher­s based on their specialtie­s to jointly tackle the new challenge, he added.

These research teams are also proactivel­y communicat­ing and collaborat­ing with each other, sharing know- how and ensuring better allocation of resources.

For example, the ministry first tasked China National Biotec Group and Sinovac Biotech with creating the inactivate­d vaccine, but later a research team from the Institute of Medical Biology of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences joined the undertakin­g.

The ministry also devoted dedicated staff to serve scientists’ basic research needs, such as procuring and transferri­ng lab test animals as well as redirectin­g lab resources at the nation’s limited number of biosafety level 3 laboratori­es to support vaccine developmen­t.

Bai He, an expert on biological products at the National Medical Products Administra­tion, said China has a capable expert committee tasked with supervisin­g every key step of vaccine developmen­t to ensure the research is conducted rigorously, which can reduce the time needed for correcting mistakes.

“If vaccine developmen­t is like driving a car, our researcher­s are pushing the accelerato­r, and the committee is at the steering wheel and correcting course if needed,” she said.

During an inspection of a biotech company in late March, experts discovered that the company’s animal model experiment was poorly designed, so they provided advice for revisions on the spot and helped the company save at least two weeks of research time, Bai said.

Yang Xiaoming, president of China National Biotec Group, told reporters in September that despite the global need and urgency for developing an effective vaccine, the company is prohibited from cutting corners on any research steps.

“Our core principle is not skipping a single step in the research and not lowering a single point in safety standards. Only on this basis can we go all out and seize every moment for research,” he said.

When the pandemic began, the company immediatel­y allocated 1 billion yuan ($ 149.5 million) for vaccine developmen­t. Based on its resources and expertise, the company ultimately focused on creating inactivate­d and nucleic acidbased vaccines. Three of its subsidiari­es doing research concurrent­ly allowed the company to quickly overcome key challenges in vaccine developmen­t and production, he added.

Progress in trials

In the past few months, China has pledged to make a Chinese vaccine accessible to countries in Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America. On Oct 9, China announced that it had joined the COVID- 19 Vaccines Global Access Facility, or COVAX, an initiative co- led by the WHO that aims to promote equitable access to vaccines, especially for vulnerable people and healthcare workers in developing countries.

Liu Jingzhen, chairman of China National Pharmaceut­ical Group Co, often called Sinopharm, the parent company of China National Biotec Group, said on Oct 20 that thirdstage clinical trials of its two inactivate­d vaccine candidates were being conducted in 10 foreign countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Argentina, Egypt and Peru.

“The current feedback is very satisfacto­ry and we have received wide recognitio­n from the internatio­nal community,” Liu said.

Eduardo Spitzer, scientific director of Laboratori­o Elea Phoenix in Buenos Aires, told the journal Nature in early October that expectatio­ns of a successful Chinese vaccine are high in Argentina. Sinopharm’s largescale trials in the country began in September and received widespread media coverage, he added.

Sao Paulo’s Butantan Institute, one of Brazil’s leading biomedical research centers, which is carrying out phase three tests of the inactivate­d vaccine made by Sinovac Biotech, said last week that the Chinese vaccine had been shown to be safe in tests involving 9,000 volunteers.

“The first results of the clinical study conducted in Brazil proved that among all the vaccines tested in the country, CoronaVac is the safest ( and) the one with the best and most promising rates,” Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria told reporters regarding the company’s vaccine.

Promising prospects

The Lancet, one of the world’s premier medical journals, published a commentary on Oct 15 calling the inactivate­d vaccine created by China National Biotec Group “promising”, but said more research is needed to check the vaccine’s effects on older and more medically vulnerable people, as well as in understand­ing the duration and strength of its protection.

Existing clinical results show that the inactivate­d vaccine candidates from China are generally safe and are relatively better tolerated by recipients compared with other vaccines in late- stage human trials, the journal Nature said in a study in late September.

However, the Chinese vaccines’ efficacy is still unknown. Moreover, assuming the inactivate­d vaccines will require two doses per person — the same dosage used in the clinical trials — it will be a monumental task to distribute them globally, given that the supply of syringes, glass vials and related equipment might create a bottleneck, it said.

“It is very likely that AdV5- based and inactivate­d vaccines produced in China — as well as other vaccine candidates produced in India and elsewhere — will have a major role in satisfying the global demand for vaccines against SARS- CoV- 2,” the study said.

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