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Chinese drugmaker: Vaccine 79.3% effective in final tests

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A Chinese drugmaker says its coronavirus vaccine was 79.3% effective at preventing infection in the final round of testing

However, the company did not provide additional information, and final proof of the vaccine’s effectiveness will depend on publication of fuller scientific data.

“That’s useful and at least it is showing that it is probably effective,” said Jin Dong-yan, a medical professor at the University of Hong Kong. “However, it would be helpful if they could also release some more information, including the sample size. How many have been vaccinated and how many are in the control group? They should release more information. ”

Also Wednesday, Sinovac Biotech Ltd. signed an agreement to build a production facility in Beijing for a coronavirus vaccine with a planned annual capacity of 1 billion doses, the newspaper Beijing Youth News reported.

Sinopharm, or China National Pharmaceutical Group, has applied for approval of its vaccine following the third and final stage of testing, a unit of the company, Beijing Biological Products Institute Ltd., said on its website.

It would be the second vaccine from a Sinopharm unit, following a separate candidate developed by the company’s Wuhan Institute of Biological Products Ltd.

The Beijing Institute’s vaccine has been approved by regulatory authorities in the United Arab Emirates. Authorities in the UAE previously said the vaccine was 86% effective.

The Sinopharm vaccine relies on two doses, the company said, similar to Western-developed vaccines. The two-sentence announcement gave no information about side effects, conditions required to transport and use the vaccine, or other details.

Western-developed vaccines must be kept frozen at temperatures as low as minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit). Chinese developers have said theirs can be stored at 2 to 8 C (36 to 46 F).

While the vaccines are not yet available to the general population, China is in the middle of a huge push to distribute them to 50 million people in an emergency use program before the Lunar New Year holiday, when hundreds of millions travel to be reunited with their families.

A former Shanghai CDC immunologist and medical professional, Tao Lina, said he received the first dose of Beijing Institute’s vaccine on Saturday under the emergency use program.

He had “absolutely no adverse reactions, not even a localized reaction,” he said.

Chinese producers have at least six possible vaccines in the final stage of clinical trials. They are testing vaccines in more than a dozen countries, including Russia, Egypt and Mexico. Few details have been released, leaving experts abroad wondering about effectiveness and side effects.

Western companies are distributing newly approved coronavirus vaccines, but some health experts express concern that too little will be available to poorer countries. China’s government says it will ensure Chinese-developed vaccines are affordable for developing countries and has been actively pursuing distribution deals abroad.

Health experts say even if they are successful, the certification process in the United States, Europe, Japan and other developed countries might be too complex for Chinese vaccines to be used there.

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Wu reported from Taipei, Taiwan.

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Beijing Biological Products Institute Ltd. (in Chinese): http://www.bjbpi.com/

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