China
in talks with WHO over assessing its COVID-19 vaccines
for global use
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[October 06, 2020]
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China is in talks to
have its locally-produced COVID-19 vaccines assessed by the World Health
Organization, as a step toward making them available for international
use, a WHO official said on Tuesday.
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Hundreds of thousands of essential workers and other groups
considered at high risk in China have been given locally-developed
vaccines even as clinical trials had not been fully completed,
raising safety concerns among experts.
Socorro Escalate, WHO's coordinator for essential medicines and
health technologies in the Western Pacific region, told a news
conference conducted online that China had held preliminary
discussions with WHO to have its vaccines included in a list for
emergency use.
The WHO's emergency use listing procedure allows unlicensed vaccines
and treatments to be assessed to expedite their availability in
public health emergencies. This helps WHO member states and UN
procurement agencies to determine the acceptability of the vaccines.
"Potentially through this emergency use listing the quality and
safety of these vaccines and efficacy could be assessed. ..and then
this could be made available for our licensees," Escalante said.
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China has at least four experimental vaccines in the final stage of
clinical trials - two are developed by state-backed China National
Biotec Group (CNBG), and the remaining two are from Sinovac Biotech
<SVA.O> and CanSino Biologics <6185.HK> <688185.SS> respectively.
They are tested in such countries as Pakistan, Indonesia, Brazil,
Russia and the United Arab Emirates.
Last month, the UAE authorized the emergency use of a CNBG vaccine,
the first international emergency clearance for one of China's
vaccines, just six weeks after human trials began in the Gulf Arab
state.
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte said last month it would
prioritise China and Russia in his country's global shopping for a
vaccine.
(Reporting by John Geddie and Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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