Las Vegas Review-Journal

China OKS homegrown COVID shot

- By Huizhong Wu and Ken Moritsugu

BEIJING — Chinese health regulators said Thursday that they have given conditiona­l approval to a coronaviru­s vaccine developed by state-owned Sinopharm.

The inactivate­d, two-dose vaccine is the first one approved for general use in China. The go-ahead comes as the country carries out a campaign to vaccinate 50 million people before a major holiday for the Lunar New Year in February.

Chen Shifei, the deputy commission­er of the National Medical Products Administra­tion, said at a news conference that the decision had been made the previous night.

The vaccine was developed by the Beijing Institute of Biological Products, a subsidiary of state-owned conglomera­te Sinopharm. The company announced Wednesday that preliminar­y data from laststage trials had shown it to be 79.3 percent effective.

Final proof of its effectiven­ess will depend on publicatio­n of more data.

Sinopharm is one of at least five Chinese developers that are in a global race to create vaccines for the disease, which has killed more than 1.8 million people.

Conditiona­l approval means that research is still ongoing, and the regulators can request more safety and effectiven­ess data about certain population­s with different health profiles, Tao Lina, a former government immunologi­st, said at the news conference.

Usually, it means that the drug or product in question may be restricted for certain age groups, he said.

Officials declined to name a particular price. “It will certainly be in the limit of what people can afford,” said Zheng Zhongwei, a National Health Commission official.

The Beijing Institute vaccine is already under mass production, but officials did not answer questions about current production capacity.

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