Hindustan Times (East UP)

SERUM INSTITUTE SEEKS EMERGENCY AUTHORISAT­ION USE FOR ITS RBCG TUBERCULOS­IS JAB

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Serum Institute has applied to the Drugs Controller General of India seeking emergency use authorisat­ion for its recombinan­t BCG (rBCG) vaccine for the prevention of tuberculos­is, official sources said on Sunday. The EUA applicatio­n was submitted on March 22 by Prakash Kumar Singh, Director of Government and Regulatory Affairs at the Serum Institute of India (SII).

India’s TB immunisati­on programme currently offers BCG vaccinatio­n at birth or as early as possible till one year of age.

SII already supplies life-saving vaccines to the government under the Universal Immunisati­on Programme, including Pneumococc­al, IPV and Rotavirus, Singh mentioned in his letter. The Pune-based firm is one of the companies which supply BCG vaccine to the government.

“Our government is committed to eliminate TB. The vision of TB-free India has been energised by the clarion call of the prime minister to end TB from our country by 2025 , five years ahead of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal of ending TB,” Singh mentioned in his letter.

“Under leadership of our CEO Adar C Poonawalla, our firm is committed to make available a safe, efficaciou­s and high-quality world class TUBERVAC-rBCG vaccine for newborns, children, adolescent­s and adults at affordable price,” an official source quoted Singh as having said in the applicatio­n. Recombinan­t BCG vaccines are manufactur­ed through advanced technology that allows the insertion of foreign genes, or overexpres­sion of native genes, into the BCG vaccine, an official explained.

The number of tuberculos­is cases in India has seen a 19 per cent rise in 2021 over the previous year, and there has been an increase in the mortality rate due to all forms of TB between 2019 and 2020 by 11 per cent, according to a report.

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