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Clinical human trials begin for COVID-19 vaccine in China

Unfortunately there are doubts as to whether the US will utilize these vaccines.

Instead there is commitment to unproven, uncertain technologies.
 
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China hopes to vaccinate its entire population in 1-2 years
China Biotech official said two doses of its vaccine produce antibodies that stimulate an immune response and resist Covid-19 within 28 days; and it could last for several years; it was also allegedly effective against different subtypes
by Chris Gill
China hopes to vaccinate its entire population in 1-2 years
A coronavirus vaccine from China National Biotech Group (CNBG) is seen at the 2020 China International Fair for Trade in Services, in Beijing on September 5, 2020. Photo: Reuters / Tingshu Wang.
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(ATF) Around the world there are more than 100 coronavirus (Covid-19) vaccine projects and among them are six Chinese vaccines that have entered clinical trials. Two, developed by China Biological, have entered the phase III trial stage and appear the most likely to be mass produced.
On Thursday, September 24, the 13th China Bioindustry Conference was held in Wuhan. Zhong Nanshan, winner of the "Medal of the Republic" and an academic from the Chinese Academy of Engineering, spoke at the gathering and said it would take one to two years to complete large-scale vaccination of the Chinese population.

See video link: https://3w.huanqiu.com/a/42639d/400oLDQo571?agt=8

In regard to China Biotech’s two Covid-19 vaccines, Zhou Song, the general counsel of Sinopharm Group, told China’s main state media outlets, such as CCTV and Voice of China, there is a one-to-two-year timeline in place under which the whole Chinese population will be vaccinated.

Zhou said that 28 days after people are vaccinated, all "test subjects" produced high-tier antibodies that are sufficient to resist the coronavirus.

Zhou said in developing the vaccine one has to to isolate the virus strain, and it is just like choosing a "seed" – you have to choose a good "seed" to do this, he said. They then activate the virus function from ten to hundreds of times, so that it ‘kills’ the live virus and loses its 'infectivity' and ability to replicate. At the same time, scientists retain part of the function that stimulates the body's immune response, and finally it undergoes "purification". So that, after taking the vaccine, people are immune to the Covid-19 virus 28 days later, he said.

Zhou Song said a total of two doses of the new vaccine were required, with an interval of two to four weeks. After the first dose, studies showed that antibodies were generally produced within seven days. And 28 days after the second dose, the positive conversion rate of neutralising antibodies was 100%, possibly for one to three years.

With the first version of the vaccine the antibodies disappeared in people's bodies within three to six months. By adding the booster shot, immunity lasted longer. Zhou Song explained that time the vaccine protects people could not be accurately ascertained – they said one to three years, because they were still observing patients and how long the vaccine protects them.

Zhou Song said the new vaccine may not need to be given once a year like the flu vaccine.

“It doesn't look like flu at the moment; because influenza is a different strain of virus – to produce an influenza vaccine, it must change every year. Although Covid-19 is currently undergoing several subtypes of mutation, it is still the Covid-19 virus.

But he predicted that vaccines would also manage mutated varieties in coming years.

Zhou said: “As for the virus mutation that everyone is worried about, which would cause the vaccine to be useless, the new vaccine will have no problem in dealing with these mutated viruses in the next few years."

Covid-19 virus strains from Beijing, Russia, Britain, Austria and the United States were used in neutralisation crossover tests conducted with the new vaccine, and the results showed that all were 100% successful.

“That is to say, there are indeed several subtypes of the virus that are mutating, but its main gene sequence and protein level have not fundamentally changed,” Zhou said.

China National Biotech official said recently it was hoped that the group's two vaccines will get conditional regulatory approval for general public use this year.

CNBG is a subsidiary of state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm).


 
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今天 15:33 来自 微博云剪 已编辑​
#新冠疫苗工作进展##我国疫苗可能有比较长期的保护作用# 加油!】中国疾控中心流行病学首席科学家曾光:人类发现新型冠状病毒的时间仅仅9个月,每款疫苗确切接种后的保护时间有多长,还要做长期的、大量的研究工作。目前比较积极的结果是,#我国最早疫苗受试者抗体仍维持较高水平#,这提示了疫苗可能会有比较长期的保护作用。 L央视新闻的微博视频

CCTV News
Today at 15:33 from Weibo

[China's vaccine may have a relatively long-term protective effect]


Zeng Guang, chief epidemiologist of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention: It is only 9 months since humans discovered this new type of coronavirus. How long is the protection period of each vaccine after vaccination? To answer that long-term observation and a lot of research work would needs to be done.

The current relatively positive report is that China earliest vaccine subjects still exhibit a high level of antibodies, which suggests that the vaccine may have a longer-term protective effect.
 
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Clinical human trials begin for COVID-19 vaccine in China - Global Times
Source:Global Times Published: 2020/3/21 16:09:05

4213964d-db82-479d-bd70-348d21742de7.jpeg
A multi-center clinical trial for China's self-developed AIDS vaccine started this year and is currently in progress. Photo: VCG

Chinese volunteers in a clinical trial for the first COVID-19 vaccine, developed by the country's military scientists, received their injections on Friday, media reported on Saturday.

The product is a recombined vaccine developed by a team headed by Chen Wei, an expert at expert at biological hazard prevention and control from the PLA Academy of Military Medical Sciences and major general of the Chinese military. The team undertook pharmaceutical and toxicological research for a COVID-19 vaccine in cooperation with local companies, based on their previous successful experience in developing an Ebola vaccine.

Unlike other clinical trials, in the trial conducted by Chen's team, volunteers do not need to be infected with the novel coronavirus after receiving the vaccination. Rather, the researchers will test if anti-bodies have been created and if the volunteers have become immune to the virus.

The first batch of volunteers, all Wuhan permanent residents aged between 18 and 60, has been divided into three groups, each consisting of 36 members.

They will be quarantined for 14 days and researchers will follow them for six months to monitor any adverse reactions.

The vaccine developed by Chen's team passed a clinical research registration review and was approved for clinical trial on Monday night, about 19 hours after the US announced it would start human trials for the first coronavirus vaccine, revealing the two largest economies are level in the race to resolve the public health crisis.

US researchers administered the first injections in the country's first trial of an experimental coronavirus vaccine on Monday.
China Economy @CE_ChinaEconomy
China state-affiliated media

6-month follow-up medical observation for China's 1st batch of COVID-19 vaccine volunteers ends on weekend, as they complete final blood sample collection to see antibody levels. Research team is planning to give volunteers a 2nd dose on a voluntary basis to boost immunity.

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7:00 AM · Sep 27, 2020
 
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Reservations being taken for COVID-19 vaccine in Beijing, Wuhan: media reports
Source: Global Times Published: 2020/10/12 23:51:41

c0d69527-a368-4a2a-bc70-afcd712d0c2f.jpeg
A staff member tests samples of the COVID-19 inactivated vaccine at a vaccine production plant of China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) in Beijing, capital of China, April 11, 2020. Photo:Xinhua

State-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) has launched an online reservation system for people seeking the company’s COVID-19 vaccine in Beijing and Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province, media reported on Monday.

Students who will travel abroad are among the priority groups being offered the Sinopharm coronavirus shot, according to the reports.

Posts on Chinese social media on Monday indicate Chinese students who are planning to travel abroad from November to January 2021 will be eligible to receive the shot.

More than 70,000 people have made reservations for the COVID-19 vaccine, according to media report on Monday.

"We attach great importance to the students who study aboard, and hope to provide effective, safe and comprehensive insurance in line with the law,” a source close to Sinopharm who asked not to be identified told the Global Times on Monday.

Students who study abroad, overseas staff and frontline workers are entitled to “urgent use” of the vaccine.

Sinopharm has not responded to a request for confirmation as of press time on Monday.

"I was informed by the visa agency in mid-September that we can make an appointment for Sinopharm vaccine shots in Beijing," an employee at an internet company in Beijing told the Global Times on condition of anonymity.

"There are two shots, costing 2,600 yuan," he said, noting that shortly before the National Day holidays he was offered the Sinopharm vaccine.

His job requires him to travel overseas countries, including to India, which currently has the world's second-highest recorded COVID-19 infections.

"In our trade, you never know when the company needs you out there. You can also go overseas without the vaccine, but that's another story. And taking COVID-19 vaccines needs some time, so I am following the development closely," the person said.

Though the source close to Sinopharm claimed that there is still no exact timetable for groups taking emergency use vaccines, at the China International Fair for Trade in Services in September, the company has taken “reservations for vaccines.”

The Chinese vaccine developer has two vaccine products that have already entered Phase III trial tests covering sample groups in 125 countries, according to Sinopharm. In line with the laws and regulations, the company received approval for emergency use of the vaccine on July 22.
 
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Global Times @globaltimesnews
China state-affiliated media

#Chinese company CanSino Biologics has reached a deal with Mexico's health department to provide 35 million doses of Ad5-nCoV anti-#COVID19 vaccines, starting from the end of 2020 to 2021, to help Mexico fight the coronavirus.

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11:10 AM · Oct 15, 2020
 
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NEWS RELEASE 15-OCT-2020
The Lancet Infectious Diseases: Preliminary results find vaccine candidate based on inactivated SARS-CoV-2 virus is safe and induces an immune response in healthy volunteers | EurekAlert! Science News
Phase 1/2 randomised controlled trial of an inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate was carried out in China between 29 April and 30 July 2020 and involved more than 600 healthy volunteers.

THE LANCET

Peer reviewed / Randomised clinical trial / People

The Lancet Infectious Diseases: Preliminary results find vaccine candidate based on inactivated SARS-CoV-2 virus is safe and induces an immune response in healthy volunteers
  • Phase 1/2 randomised controlled trial of an inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate was carried out in China between 29 April and 30 July 2020 and involved more than 600 healthy volunteers.
  • Study detected antibody responses in all recipients by day 42 after vaccination, and provides some data for participants aged over 60 years.
  • The vaccine was safe and well tolerated at all tested doses, with no severe adverse reactions reported. The most common reported side effect was pain at the injection site.
  • The primary objective was to evaluate the immune response and safety of the vaccine, and the study was not designed to assess how effective it is at preventing infection with SARS-CoV-2.
A Chinese COVID-19 vaccine candidate based on the inactivated whole SARS-CoV-2 virus (BBIBP-CorV) is safe and elicits an antibody response, findings from a small early-phase randomised clinical trial published today in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal have found.

A previous clinical trial reported similar results for a different vaccine that is also based on inactivated whole SARS-CoV-2 virus, but in that study the vaccine was only tested in people aged under 60 years.

The latest study included participants aged between 18 and 80 years, and found that antibody responses were induced in all recipients. Participants aged 60 and over were slower to respond, taking 42 days before antibodies were detected in all recipients compared with 28 days for participants aged 18-59. Antibody levels were also lower in those aged 60-80 years compared with those aged 18-59 (Mean neutralising antibody titre 42 days after receiving a 8μg vaccine dose was 228.7 for people aged 18-59, and 170.9 for those aged 60-80) [1].

The trial was not designed to assess efficacy of the vaccine, so it is not possible to say whether the antibody responses induced by the vaccine, called BBIBP-CorV, are sufficient to protect from SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Professor Xiaoming Yang, one of the authors of the study, from the Beijing Institute of Biological Products Company Limited, Beijing, China, said: "Protecting older people is a key aim of a successful COVID-19 vaccine as this age group is at greater risk of severe illness from the disease. However, vaccines are sometimes less effective in this group because the immune system weakens with age. It is therefore encouraging to see that BBIBP-CorV induces antibody responses in people aged 60 and older, and we believe this justifies further investigation." [2]

There are currently 42 vaccines for COVID-19 in clinical trials [3]. These vary in type and include DNA plasmid vaccines, inactivated virus vaccines, adenovirus-vectored vaccines, RNA vaccines, protein subunit vaccines and virus-like particle vaccines. Some of these have already been shown to be safe and to elicit immune responses in early phase clinical trials.

The BBIBP-CorV vaccine used in the study reported here is based on a sample of the virus that was isolated from a patient in China. Stocks of the virus were grown in the lab using cell lines and then inactivated using a chemical called beta-proprionolactone. BBIBP-CorV includes the killed virus mixed with another component, aluminium hydroxide, which is called an adjuvant because it is known to boost immune responses.

The first phase of the study was designed to find the optimal safe dose for BBIBP-CorV. It involved 96 healthy volunteers aged between 18 and 59 years and a second group of 96 participants aged between 60 years and 80 years. Within each group, the vaccine was tested at three different dose levels (2?g, 4?g and 8?g, 24 participants per group), with two vaccinations administered on day 0 and 28. A fourth group within each age group (24 participants in each age group) were given two doses of a placebo vaccine. In total, in phase 1 of the study, 144 participants received the vaccine and 48 received the placebo.

The second phase of the study was designed to identify the optimal timing schedule for vaccination. 448 participants aged between 18 and 59 years were randomly assigned to receive either one 8?g shot of vaccine or placebo, or two shots of 4?g vaccine or placebo (at 0 and 14 days, 0 and 21 days or 0 and 28 days). In this second phase, there were 112 participants per group, with 336 receiving the vaccine, and 112 receiving the placebo.

Participants were asked to report any adverse events for the first seven days after each vaccination and these were verified by the research team. Thereafter, participants recorded any adverse events using paper cards for the following 4 weeks. During phase 1, laboratory tests were carried out after the first and second vaccinations to assess kidney function, liver function and other organ functions. Blood samples were taken to test antibody levels for SARS-CoV-2 before and after vaccination.

No serious adverse events were reported within 28 days of the final vaccination. The most common side effect was pain at the injection site (phase 1 results: 24% [34/144] of vaccine recipients, vs 6% [3/48] of placebo recipients). A small number of participants reported experiencing a fever (phase 1 results: 4% [5/144] of vaccine recipients, vs 6% [3/48] of placebo recipients). There were no instances of clinically significant changes in organ functions detected in laboratory tests in any of the groups.

The greatest antibody responses were elicited by two 4?g doses of the vaccine at either days 0 and 21 or 0 and 28 (Mean neutralising antibody titres 28 days after second vaccination were 282.7 for two 4?g injections at day 0 and 21, and 218.0 for two 4?g injections at day 0 and 28).

Professor Xiaoming Yang said: "Our findings indicate that a booster shot is necessary to achieve the greatest antibody responses against SARS-CoV-2 and could be important for protection. This provides useful information for a phase 3 trial." [2]

The authors noted some limitations with the study, including the short duration of follow up at just 42 days. They also highlighted that the study did not include children and adolescents aged under 18. Trials with these groups will be carried out when the full analysis of data from adult groups is completed, the researchers say.

Writing in a linked Comment article, Professor Larisa Rudenko, who was not involved in the study, from the Institute of Experimental Medicine, Saint Petersburg, Russia, said: "[...] more studies are needed to establish whether the inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccines are capable of inducing and maintaining virus-specific T-cell responses, because CD4-positive T-cell help is important for optimal antibody responses, as well as for cytotoxic CD8-positive T-cell activation, which, in turn, are crucial for viral clearance if neutralising antibody-mediated protection is incomplete."


 
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09:35, 25-Oct-2020
Brazil institute to import 6 million does of Chinese COVID-19 vaccine
CGTN

Brazilian health regulator Anvisa on Friday authorized a biomedical center to import six million doses of the Sinovac coronavirus vaccine, one day after President Jair Bolsonaro said Brazil would not buy the Chinese vaccine.

Sao Paulo's Butantan Institute plans to initially import Sinovac's vaccine, which is in the third phase of trials conducted with the help of a local university and not yet approved for wider use in Brazil. Butantan would ultimately manufacture the vaccine if proven effective.

Brazil's Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria said earlier on Friday that Anvisa told him it will not bow to political pressure over the approval of potential coronavirus vaccines.

According to the Brazilian state governors, the country will include China's Sinovac vaccine against COVID-19 in its national immunization program.
Joao said after the health ministry meeting that the federal government has agreed to buy 46 million doses of the Sinovac vaccine.

The program could begin in January 2021, he said, which could make it one of the first immunization efforts against the novel coronavirus in the world.

Sao Paulo State Health Secretary Jean Gorinchteyn said the vaccine appeared to produce protective antibodies. The state hopes to obtain regulatory approval for CoronaVac by the end of the year to start inoculating its population early in 2021, in what could be the first vaccination programs in the Americas.

In addition, another Brazilian pharmaceutical company was reported on Friday to have already signed an agreement with the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) to produce Russia's Sputnik V vaccine against COVID-19 starting in the second half of November.

The company said it was bound by a confidentiality agreement not to give any technical or scientific details. It still must obtain approval from Anvisa.

With more than 5.3 million cases of coronavirus reported in Brazil, the third worst outbreak after the United States and India, the South American country has become a testing ground in the race to find a vaccine.

Late stage trials are underway for vaccines under development by Oxford University/AstraZeneca, China's Sinovac Biotech, Pfizer Inc, in partnership with BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson's pharmaceutical subsidiary Janssen.

Brazil registered 432 additional coronavirus deaths over the last 24 hours and 26,979 new cases, the health ministry said on Saturday.

(With input from Reuters)
 
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