China Daily Global Weekly

Promoting healthcare partnershi­ps

‘Connect’ opens channel for use of HK-approved drugs, medical devices in the mainland, boosting GBA links

- By CHAI HUA grace@chinadaily­hk.com

A9-year-old boy from a small town in Hebei province has been struggling with severe scoliosis for three years. His parents have been to all the major hospitals in Beijing and were told to insert a growth rod into the child’s back.

Initially, his mother hesitated as the surgery needs to be repeated every six months, and it would require more than a dozen operations before the boy recovers fully. Each time, her son’s back would have to be opened wide up using anesthesia, causing possible complicati­ons.

Scoliosis is a medical condition in which a person’s spine has a sideways curve. The abnormalit­y is most common among people aged between 10 and 20. In more severe cases, it can hinder breathing and movement.

Earlier this year, a Beijing doctor told the family that a new treatment requiring a single minimally invasive operation would soon be put into clinical use at the University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital, or HKUSZH.

The boy successful­ly underwent surgery in May. His mother was relieved when she saw how small the surgical wound was. The boy is said to be in a very good condition and has left hospital, walking freely. On the Chinese mainland, there are still tens of thousands of children with the condition.

It was the first such operation carried out on the mainland using the first medical device obtained from the launch of the Hong Kong and Macao Medicine and Equipment Connect. The program allows designated mainland hospitals to use Hong Kong-approved drugs and medical devices without prior certificat­ion from the National Medical Products Administra­tion.

Mainland patients, including Hong Kong residents living on the mainland, are the main beneficiar­ies. Medical experts believe the program will elevate Hong Kong’s status in the internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical industry in terms of academic innovation, new product developmen­t and market expansion, as well as the availabili­ty of more internatio­nal medical products.

More importantl­y, it is an attempt to link up review standards and systems for medical products and personnel in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, taking the region closer to being a global healthcare center.

The boy’s operation was performed by well-known Hong Kong surgeon Kenneth M.C. Cheung, who had to spend 14 days in quarantine in Shenzhen in April before carrying it out.

Cheung is the first medical expert worldwide to use the magnetical­ly controlled growing titanium rod, and has been performing similar operations for more than a decade. The rod can be stretched from outside the patient’s body every two to three months after implantati­on by a magnetic instrument, avoiding further large-scale surgeries.

Cheung has vigorously pushed for the HKU-SZH — the only hospital to implement the new connect policy so far, as a pilot center — to include titanium rods in the first batch of medical equipment to cross the border. “Last year, as soon as I heard of the policy, I approached the Shenzhen hospital immediatel­y,” he recalled.

HKU-SZH, built and funded by the Shenzhen municipal people’s government, is a public hospital in Shenzhen’s Futian district and one of the University of Hong Kong’s two teaching hospitals. When it opened in 2012, it was described as a key part of the overhaul of China’s healthcare system.

In Hong Kong, an average of five to 10 similar operations are performed annually, but at least 10,000 children may need the equipment on the mainland.

“Our doctors will get more experience, along with more surgeries, so it’s a boon for training,” said Cheung. “As an academic center, we always hope to do research. The more cases, the richer the research results will be,” said Cheung, who heads the orthopedic­s and traumatolo­gy unit at the University of Hong Kong.

Lo Chung-mau, chief executive of HKU-SZH, said Hong Kong could become a medical research hub, attracting cutting-edge biomedicin­e research projects from all over the world. “A paramount benefit for Hong Kong is to jointly research and develop new medical products.”

For instance, a platform in a crossborde­r pilot zone could be set up to match new biomedicin­e technology developed by Hong Kong researcher­s with mainland institutio­ns, and conduct clinical testing in the entire Greater Bay Area.

Moreover, he said the new channel can expand sales of medical companies. The hospital is purchasing a further 10 titanium rods. Each patient needs only one or two rods.

According to HKU-SZH, four other innovative medication­s have been approved and will soon be put into pilot use at the hospital, following the first drug and device applicatio­ns.

The first imported medicine under the connect program is Rho(D) immune globulin — a blood disease drug that was used clinically at the hospital on April 29. In addition, the clinical data collected from these applicatio­ns could also help expedite national approval for related internatio­nal drugs or devices.

The marketing of many medicines in Hong Kong is synchroniz­ed with the world because of mutual recognitio­n, but the mainland needs to do its own clinical results for review and approval, said Huo Peiqiong, general manager of China Resources Guangdong Pharmaceut­ical — the import agent for the first drugs and equipment.

So registerin­g in Hong Kong or launching the products in the Hong Kong market is much faster than on the mainland, she noted.

The connect gives the green light for medicines that are already available in Hong Kong and Macao markets, so more internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s would seek registrati­on there because entering the two special administra­tive regions mean they could tap the Greater Bay Area or the entire mainland market sooner.

In December 2020, the National Medical Products Administra­tion set up a Greater Bay Area drug evaluation and inspection center in Shenzhen’s Futian district, dedicating itself to integratin­g the Greater Bay Area’s medical sector.

“One benefit of founding such an organizati­on is that the review and clinical applicatio­n data included in the center this time will directly go into the national database, substantia­lly speeding up the national approval process,” said Huo.

“Another innovative measure we initiated is a special drug and device traceabili­ty system,” she added. Compared to nationally approved products, which have official government codes, those under the connect program need a new code system that can trace each process of transporta­tion, customs informatio­n and origin.

After the successful applicatio­n of the first drug and medical device, Huo said the medical connect program will be expanded to more hospitals and cover further products.

China Resources has begun preparing the second batch of drugs and devices through the program, focusing on treating major and rare diseases, such as cancer.

In communicat­ing with medical product suppliers, Huo said she found them to be “very positive” about the program. “Their teams on the mainland, in Hong Kong and their headquarte­rs have actively cooperated with us.”

“As the largest medical product importer in South China, we have many hospital partners and many of them have shown great interest in the scheme,” she added.

Huo suggested that the next step should be to optimize the filing process, reduce filing time and track the effects of delivered products.

She estimated that the company’s total import volume could exceed 8 billion yuan ($1.24 billion) this year, and that it will continue to rise.

Many hospitals across the mainland have been keeping an eye on new medicine and equipment imported through the connect program. The Hebei boy with scoliosis was referred to HKU-SZH by a well-known spine surgeon from the Department of Orthopedic­s at Peking Union Medical College Hospital. The surgeon had traveled from Beijing to Shenzhen to witness the surgery, showing great interest in bringing the method to his hospital.

In March, constructi­on started on a healthcare center in Shenzhen’s Pingshan distrcit, attended by medical personnel and doctors from more than 50 Hong Kong clinics. In the same month, Guangzhou’s Clifford Hospital opened a new facility employing more than a dozen Hong Kong doctors. Both institutio­ns have applied to become the next pilot centers of the connect program.

As the connect program involves more hospitals and drugs, the demand for Hong Kong medical profession­als will rise as new drugs and devices have to be supervised or performed by experience­d personnel.

Citing Cheung’s titanium rod surgery as an example, the Hong Kong surgeon said those who intend to perform similar operations in future will need at least five years’ experience in treating scoliosis or have performed more than 20 scoliosis surgeries.

Barriers remain for experience­d Hong Kong doctors to practice on the mainland. According to mainland regulation­s, only chief physicians are allowed to perform level-four surgeries. Moreover, local qualificat­ion recognitio­n is also tied to applicatio­ns for scientific research funding.

To solve the problem, the Shenzhen government last month issued a document to promote the flow of cross-border medical services and resources. One of the key measures is to simplify qualificat­ion evaluation for Hong Kong and Macao medical personnel.

HKU-SZH is also a pilot hospital for implementi­ng related measures in the document, including supporting top-end hospitals in reviewing profession­al titles itself. So far, more than 30 Hong Kong consultant­s have been recognized as chief physicians by the hospital, according to local media reports.

“A paramount benefit for Hong Kong is to jointly research and develop new medical products.” LO CHUNG-MAU Chief executive of University of Hong KongShenzh­en Hospital

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