New Era

Brazil halts trials of Chinese Covid-19 vaccine

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RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil’s health regulator said it had suspended clinical trials of a Chinese-developed Covid-19 vaccine after an “adverse incident” involving a volunteer recipient, a blow for one of the most advanced vaccine candidates.

The setback for CoronaVac, developed by China’s Sinovac Biotech, came on Monday as US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer said its own vaccine candidate had shown 90 percent effectiven­ess - sending global markets soaring and raising hopes of an end to the pandemic.

Sinovac Biotech yesterday stood by its creation, saying: “We are confident in the safety of the vaccine”.

The Brazilian regulator Anvisa said it had “ruled to interrupt the clinical study of the CoronaVac vaccine after a serious adverse incident” involving a volunteer recipient on October 29.

It said it could not give details on what happened because of privacy regulation­s, but that such incidents included death, potentiall­y fatal side effects, serious disability, hospitaliz­ation, birth defects and other “clinically significan­t events.”

Sinovac, however, said the incident was “not related to the vaccine”, adding it will “continue to communicat­e with Brazil on this matter.”

The public health center coordinati­ng the trials of the vaccine in Brazil, the Butantan Institute, said it was “surprised” by Anvisa’s decision.

The institute “is investigat­ing in detail what happened,” and “is at the Brazilian regulatory agency’s disposal to provide any clarificat­ion necessary on any adverse incident the clinical trials may have presented,” it said.

CoronaVac has been caught up in a messy political battle in Brazil, where its most visible backer has been Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria, a top opponent of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.

The Sao Paulo state government said in a statement it “regrets that it learned of the decision from the press, instead of directly from Anvisa,” and was waiting along with the Butantan Institute for more informatio­n on “the real reasons for the suspension.”

Bol sonaro has label ed CoronaVac the vaccine from “that other country,” and pushed instead

for a rival vaccine developed by Oxford University and pharmaceut­ical firm AstraZenec­a.

Last month, he shot down a plan by his own health minister to buy 46 million doses of CoronaVac, saying, “The Brazilian people will not be anyone’s guinea pig,” and referring to it as “Joao Doria’s Chinese vaccine.”

Doria announced earlier Monday that the first 120 000 doses of CoronaVac would arrive in Sao Paulo on November 20.

His state has a deal with Sinovac to buy a total of 46 million doses - six million produced in China and the rest produced in Sao Paulo, which broke ground last week on a factory to make the vaccine domestical­ly.

“Officials in the state government fear Bolsonaro will use technical decisions to delay the timeline of the vaccine for political reasons,” newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo reported, citing unnamed Doria allies.

Anvisa told AFP it had no comment beyond its statement announcing the suspension, which said that halting trials was standard procedure in such cases.

Bolsonaro faces criticism for his handling of the pandemic, which has included playing down the virus, opposing lockdown measures and relentless­ly promoting the drug hydroxy chloroquin­e despite studies showing it is ineffectiv­e against Covid-19.

The Sinovac, Pfizer and Oxford vaccines are all in Phase 3 trials, the final stage of testing before regulatory approval.

All are being tested in Brazil, the country with the second-highest death toll in the pandemic after the United States, with more than 162 000 people killed by the new coronaviru­s.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Flashback… In this file photo taken on 8 August 2020, a nurse shows a Covid-19 coronaviru­s vaccine produced by Chinese company Sinovac Biotech at Sao Lucas Hospital in Porto Alegre, southern Brazil.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Flashback… In this file photo taken on 8 August 2020, a nurse shows a Covid-19 coronaviru­s vaccine produced by Chinese company Sinovac Biotech at Sao Lucas Hospital in Porto Alegre, southern Brazil.

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