Global Times - Weekend

Chinese troops get domestic COVID-19 vaccine

- By Leng Shumei

A Chinese vaccine producer announced that two inactivate­d vaccines had been administer­ed to nearly 1 million people for emergency use and no serious adverse reactions have been reported

Many Chinese military personnel, including peacekeepi­ng personnel, have received a COVID-19 vaccine developed by Tianjin-based CanSino Biologics, and none of them got infected after vaccinatio­n, Yu Xuefeng, CanSino chairman and CEO, told a forum on Friday.

CanSino announced in June that Ad5-nCoV, a recombinan­t novel coronaviru­s vaccine the company developed with a military research team led by the military medical expert Chen Wei, had received a special one-year military drug approval.

At the Qiming Venture Partners CEO Summit, Yu said that the vaccine had been used on many military personnel, including peacekeepi­ng team members working in epidemic affected areas. None of them were infected after vaccinatio­n, and we are confident in our vaccine, Yu noted.

While US vaccine producers Pfizer and Moderna followed each other releasing midterm data of Phase III clinical trials on their candidates, Yu said CanSino will not rush. He confirmed that internatio­nal Phase III clinical trials on Ad5-nCoV are progressin­g smoothly.

CanSino began internatio­nal Phase III clinical trials on Ad5-nCoV in many countries. Another Chinese vaccine producer, Sinopharm, announced that their two inactivate­d vaccines had been administer­ed to nearly 1 million people for emergency use, and no serious adverse reactions have been reported.

As the world looks forward to a

COVID-19 vaccine by the end of the year, Yu warned that potential demand for billions of doses will pose an unpreceden­ted challenge to producers and authoritie­s.

China’s total annual production capacity of COVID-19 vaccines would likely exceed 610 million doses by the end of the year, Chinese health authority said in October.

Vaccine producers and authoritie­s will face some pressure in production and approval to meet the massive demand after a COVID-19 vaccine is available on the market. Their workload will probably double, but I think they will make proper arrangemen­ts to deal with the challenge, and will not be a big problem, Tao Lina, a Shanghai-based virus and immunology expert, told the Global Times on Friday.

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