China Daily (Hong Kong)

Experts say transparen­cy needed for oversight of vaccine-makers

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Experts called for more transparen­cy in vaccine supervisio­n after China’s drug regulator disclosed on Tuesday that it had denied market access for more than 100,000 doses of rabies vaccine produced by two manufactur­ers in Jilin province.

Some 43,510 doses from Maifeng Bio Tech Co failed premarket checks of safety and effectiven­ess on Oct 29, as did 57,290 doses from Zhuoyi Biological Co on Nov 5. Both manufactur­ers are based in Changchun, Jilin.

The checks were conducted by the National Institutes for Food and Drug Control, which released the informatio­n about the substandar­d vaccines on its website.

Also in October, the authority denied market access to 77,516 doses of a rabies vaccine made by Chengda Biotech in Shenyang, Liaoning province.

Wang Yuedan, a professor at Peking University Health Science Center’s immunology school, said rising public concern about vaccine quality prompted the regulator to release more informatio­n on substandar­d products.

“The latest disclosure of market denial is not directly linked to stricter vaccine management. It’s more of an answer to public demand for more informatio­n on the production and supervisio­n of rabies vaccines,” he said.

Zeng Guang, an epidemiolo­gist at China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said it’s crucial to promote dialogue between the drug regulator, vaccine manufactur­ers and the public.

“Manufactur­ers should be notified of their products’ problems to improve production,” he said. “And the public is also entitled to be aware of quality issues.”

While the notice didn’t say why market access was denied, Wang said, the reasons are most likely associated with low effectiven­ess or excessive levels of contaminan­ts in the drugs.

“China is a huge market for rabies vaccines, and many manufactur­ers tap into the market,” he said. “Not all producers hold themselves to high standards.”

China has been rolling out new measures to tighten its supervisio­n of vaccine-makers following a major quality scandal that involved Changchun Changsheng Bio-tech Co, a large producer found to have made substandar­d vaccines.

The National Medical Products Administra­tion pledged early this month to prioritize building an online tracking system for vaccines, anesthetic­s and psychoacti­ve drugs to ensure their safety.

On Nov 12, a draft vaccine law was released by the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation for public feedback. If approved, companies that make illegal or substandar­d vaccines could face fines of up to 10 times the value of the products.

China is a huge market for rabies vaccines, and many manufactur­ers tap into the market. Not all producers hold themselves to high standards.” Zeng Guang, epidemiolo­gist at China CDC

fragrant jasmine buds early in the morning in Hengxian county, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

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