China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Chinese vaccine developers target delta variant

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

A handful of Chinese COVID-19 vaccine developers said recently that they have obtained the highly contagious delta variant and geared up to develop vaccines targeting the new strain, which has spread to more than 130 countries and regions.

Shenzhen Kangtai Biological Products, based in Guangdong province, said on Wednesday that it has isolated several delta strains as part of its research program aimed at creating a new version of its inactivate­d vaccine that will specifical­ly target the variant.

The company said it will soon evaluate them against requiremen­ts set for human-use vaccines in order to screen for suitable ones in preparatio­n for manufactur­ing.

The company’s first-generation inactivate­d vaccine was approved for emergency use in China in May. Laboratory tests show it can generate good neutralizi­ng effects and provide protection against emerging variants.

An unnamed employee from the company told Shenzhen Special Zone Daily that it will continue to push for research into variant-specific vaccines and mass production, and will strive to diversify its technologi­es.

Zhu Tao, chief scientist at CanSino

Biologics, said during an online event on Thursday that it is keeping a close eye on virus mutations. He said the company’s adenovirus vector vaccine technology can be quickly mobilized to develop and produce vaccines against emerging variants, adding that CanSino has already launched such work.

Last week, Yang Xiaoming, president of Sinopharm’s China National Biotech Group, said the company had accelerate­d research into new vaccines designed to tackle variants, assessing their efficacy and safety in preclinica­l studies.

Yang Guang, chief business officer of Sinovac Biotech, said earlier that it has acquired samples of the beta, gamma and delta strains — three of the four new strains listed by the World Health Organizati­on as variants of concern.

“We are exploring new vaccines targeting the delta strain based on our establishe­d and mature technologi­es, procedures and standards that have been applied to the firstgener­ation dose,” she said. “We are looking forward to publishing relevant data in the future.”

Zhong Nanshan, a prominent respirator­y disease expert, said in June that different types of vaccine technologi­es should be used to explore the creation of anti-variant vaccines.

By early last month, the National Medical Products Administra­tion had approved 22 COVID-19 vaccines using five different technologi­es for clinical trials. Four vaccines have been given conditiona­l approval and three have been approved for emergency use.

Despite the progress reported by manufactur­ers, a health expert said a number of uncertaint­ies remain in the use of new jabs against variants.

Feng Zijian, a researcher at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told China Newsweek, a weekly magazine, that the length of developmen­t will depend on the requiremen­ts of drug regulators, especially whether it is possible to grant authorizat­ion after completing the first two stages of clinical trials, which takes one to three months.

“It will take longer if the top drug regulator requires completion of all three phases of human trials,” he said, adding that drug regulators will take into considerat­ion the fact that some new vaccines only replace the old strain with a new one without altering their core production technologi­es.

Feng said that issues such as when to begin manufactur­ing new vaccines targeting variants and how to incorporat­e them into the current immunizati­on plan are still being discussed.

He said new vaccines can either be used as a booster shot to increase immunity in the vaccinated population or be delivered as normal doses to the unvaccinat­ed.

Flu warning

As China battles the COVID-19 epidemic, health experts have warned about emerging flu threats that might sweep the nation as the weather gets colder later this year.

At a recent national conference, leading experts pointed out the potential threats posed by flu this year and called for inoculatio­n preparatio­ns.

Wang Dayan, director of Chinese National Influenza Center, said data shows that for two consecutiv­e months, flu-like cases in China’s outpatient clinics have exceeded the number in the same period in the past three years.

The flu epidemic was at a low level last year because people took nonpharmac­ological interventi­on measures, including hand washing, masking and social distancing to prevent and control COVID-19, but their preexistin­g immunity against flu may decline and getting vaccinated against influenza is becoming important, health authoritie­s said.

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