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The file photo shows the image of
bird flu virus. (Xinhua File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 2 (Xinhua) -- China's food and drug
regulators on Wednesday authorized a domestic pharmaceutical firm to begin
commercial production of a human bird flu vaccine, following more than two years
of clinical trials.
The firm, Beijing-based Sinovac Biotech Co., Ltd.
will produce vaccines to defend humans against the H5N1 virus and its epidemic
variety, making China the world's second country with the technology and
industrial capacity to produce human bird flu vaccine.
According to Yin Weidong, general manager of the
firm, Sinovac has the ability to produce new vaccines even if the virus mutates
in humans.
China started clinical research and experiments as
part of the process of making a vaccine in November 2005, after a domestic
epidemic that caused huge losses for poultry breeders.
Trials by Sinovac proved that the vaccine is safe for
humans and effective against the virus. According to Yin, more than 500
volunteers have received injections of the vaccine, which shows that it is
reliable.
Yan Jiangying, spokeswoman for the State Food and
Drug Administration (SFDA), said on Wednesday that the agency had authorized the
production of the vaccine to prevent human-to-human transmission of the virus.
According to the SFDA, the vaccine will also be on
hand as part of the preparations for dealing with any possible epidemic during
the Beijing Olympics this summer.
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The file photo shows the image of bird
flu virus. (Xinhua File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The SFDA used a special procedure for the human bird
flu vaccine, which allows it to approve commercial production simultaneously
with the approval of the drug license.
"This is the first time the administration is using
the special procedure since it was created in 2005," said Yin Hongzhang, an
official with the SFDA.
Since 2005, China has reported 29 human bird flu
cases, according to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and
Prevention(CCDCP).
According to Wang Yu, director with the CCDCP, the
authorization embodies that China holds complete technological chain from
epidemic monitoring, patient identification to virus decomposing and industrial
production of the vaccine.
"China has completed the technological and
substantial reserves of the human bird flu vaccine," Wang said, adding that
researches to improve the effectiveness and reduce possible side effects of the
vaccine will be carried out soon.
For the moment, the vaccine will not be sold in
retailing drug stores but be reserved for emergency distribution in case of
major outbreak.