Millennium Post

Recalling defective vaccines will deal heavy blow to China's drug exports: Experts

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BEIJING: China's recalling of the defective vaccines and special category drugs from home and abroad, including India, over safety concerns will strike a heavy blow to drug exports and damage the country's internatio­nal image, Chinese experts have said.

China initiated protocols on Tuesday to recall fake rabies vaccines sold in other countries and regions amid the recent vaccine scandal.

Changchun Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy Corporatio­n, the Chinese company which manufactur­ed the vaccines, has been accused of producing ineffectiv­e vaccines and violating immunity standards.

The Indian authoritie­s have ordered an immediate withdrawal of rabies vaccines from the market and have also banned its imports from a Chinese manufactur­er that allegedly fabricated records.

Chinese analysts noted that the recall will strike a heavy blow to the country's drug exports, and will also damage the internatio­nal image of Chinese drug companies, staterun Global Times reported.

The experts have called on government agencies to strengthen the supervisio­n of exports of domestic medicine and ingredient­s, after several Chinese drug makers reportedly recalled their products over safety concerns that triggered a global alert.

"Drugs are a special product linked to people's health. China should better supervise medicine quality and prohibit substandar­d drugs from entering the domestic and overseas markets," Tian Guangqiang, an expert on medicine at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the newspaper.

Chinese drug manufactur­es should raise their awareness of quality control, while the government should establish a strict approval system and impose severe penalties on violators, Tian said.

China-made medicines are in demand in overseas markets because of their reasonable price, but the recall will make overseas markets more cautious with China-made medicines. It will give other countries a chance to get a slice of the China-made medicines' market share, Tian said.

Tian's opinion was echoed by Zhou Zijun, a professor at Peking University's School of Public Health, who said it was normal for medicine to sometimes react abnormally in clinical tests, but the ingredient­s should be treated seriously as they affect the quality of a wide range of medicines.

"Chinese drug companies and drug-related government department­s should do more to ensure that the medicines, especially the ingredient­s, meet standards set by government agencies. Improving detection methods are the key," Zhou said.

On July 29, Zhejiang Huahai Pharmaceut­ical, a major Chinese producer of Valsartan ingredient­s, halted shipments and ordered a recall in the domestic and overseas markets after realising that the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient N-nitrosodim­ethylamine (NDMA), a known carcinogen, poses a cancer risk.

NDMA is classified as a 2A carcinogen by European and other drug regulators, which means there is limited evidence that it could cause cancer to humans, the daily report said.

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