China Daily

Chinese vaccine maker aims to increase global markets

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China National Biotech Group, a subsidiary of pharmaceut­ical giant Sinopharm, has made unpreceden­ted forays into the global vaccine market amid the COVID-19 pandemic, said Zhang Yuntao, vice-president of the company.

The World Health Organizati­on’s authorizat­ion of one of its vaccines for emergency use and granting of a highly valued European Union certificat­e are expected to further expand the company’s internatio­nal reach, he said.

Zhang said the group will deliver vaccines to more foreign countries in the future in accordance with those nations’ laws and regulation­s, especially during or after the second half of this year.

“As we are ramping up production capacity and the domestic immunizati­on program is gaining momentum in key cities and among the population, more vaccines can be allocated for export,” said Zhang, who is also chief scientist at CNBG.

Two of the four domestic COVID19 vaccines approved for public use in China were developed by researcher­s from CNBG.

As of late May, it had supplied vaccines to more than 70 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons, and over 100 countries across the world had made procuremen­t requests, according to the company.

Before the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, the rollout of CNBG’s vaccines overseas, including those to combat poliovirus and yellow fever, was mainly concentrat­ed in Southeast Asian countries, such as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, and in Africa.

While these longtime partners are among dozens of countries that have granted some form of regulatory approval to Chinese COVID-19 vaccines, new frontiers in Asia, South America and Eastern Europe represente­d breakthrou­ghs on expanding the company’s reach, Zhang said.

“The company’s scientific research has always been a global endeavor and the total output has been massive. But the scope of our sales and distributi­on in the past has been relatively limited,” he said.

As its COVID-19 vaccines are forging paths in previously uncharted territorie­s, including Serbia, Kyrgyzstan and Argentina, Zhang said the company’s global presence and influence have escalated.

Global approvals

On May 7, the CNBG achieved a milestone when the WHO announced it had granted “emergency use listing” to a COVID-19 vaccine made by the company’s Beijing Institute of Biological Products, paving the way for accelerati­ng access to doses in less-developed countries.

The approval streamline­s procuremen­t of vaccines by global organizati­ons. The vaccine from the Beijingbas­ed institute was the sixth COVID19 vaccine, and the first Chinesemad­e one, to receive WHO approval.

“Achieving EUL means that our products qualify to be purchased by a number of internatio­nal organizati­ons, such as the COVAX program, the Gavi Alliance (the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­on) and United Nations agencies like UNICEF,” Zhang said, adding that the WHO approval opens up much wider distributi­on.

On June 1, the first batch of its vaccines to be supplied to COVAX, a WHO-led initiative for equitable global access to coronaviru­s vaccines, rolled off the production line, according to the company.

“We got positive feedback from an on-site inspection conducted in January, the materials we submitted were of high quality and our communicat­ion with the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunizati­on has been consistent, which all boosted our confidence,” he said.

On April 1, another breakthrou­gh was made when Hungarian drug regulators issued a certificat­e of Good Manufactur­ing Practice to CNBG’s Beijing vaccine. It is the first time that this type of license, which acknowledg­es a producer’s compliance with quality standards, was granted by a European Union member state to a Chinese vaccine company, according to CNBG.

“The certificat­ion from the EU regulatory authoritie­s is one of the hardest to earn in the world due to their stringent appraisals,” Zhang said.

With the new certificat­e in hand and an emergency use approval given to the vaccine by Hungarian authoritie­s in late January, CNBG is one step closer to tapping into the European market, he said. The company will proceed with follow-up procedures, such as applying for registrati­on, in order to land their products in the European market.

Underpinni­ng the progress of the company are decades of technologi­cal advances, the commitment of researcher­s and employees and strong support from the government.

Zhang represente­d CNBG twice during online sessions convened by the WHO to appraise the safety and efficacy of its vaccine. About 250 global experts raised questions during the sessions.

“It took one CNBG unit in Sichuan province eight years to obtain an EUL for the treatment of the Japanese encephalit­is virus. This time, we aimed to achieve the same goal in a short period. The workload had surged at an astronomic­al rate,” he said.

“The science and logic behind our products are in alignment with global standards. That’s why we are winning increasing recognitio­n from the internatio­nal community.”

In order to meet the expected increase in global demand for Chinese vaccines, Zhang said, CNBG is preparing to scale up its production capacity.

The company is aiming to boost its annual output to 3 billion doses by the end of this year.

Besides CNBG’s institutes in Beijing and Wuhan, Hubei province, which each developed a COVID-19 vaccine, four other institutes administer­ed by the company have been mobilized to produce and package vaccines.

Zhang said CNBG plans to build a global packaging and logistics network. A joint venture is already underway in the United Arab Emirates, which will see raw material provided by CNBG and production completed in the UAE.

“Our goal has always been and will continue to be striking a balance between domestic and global supplies,” Zhang said.

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Zhang Yutao

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