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Sinovac gets production license for A/H1N1 vaccine
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-09-03 17:37 China approved Thursday the A/H1N1 flu vaccine produced by domestic pharmaceutical company Sinovac, making it the first to get a production license in the global race. The State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) issued the license for Sinovac's vaccine called Panflu.1 on Thursday, after it passed SFDA's experts evaluation on August 31. Panflu.1 could safely be given to people aged from three to 60 years old in a single shot, 15 microgram dose, according to the evaluation report. Sinovac had the capacity to produce five million doses of vaccine before October1, and 20 to 30 million doses per year, according to its president Yin Weidong. "Currently Sinovac will focus on meeting the need of the Chinese government. And if we still have extra capacity, Sinovac is quite open to discuss the possible opportunity on A/H1N1 vaccine export," said Yin. On Wednesday, Sinovac and Boryung Pharmaceutical Company Ltd, a Republic of Korea pharmaceutical manufacturer, reached an agreement to collaborate on possible vaccine supply to the country. The vaccine would be reserved by the State instead of going on general sale across the country, earlier reports quoted experts as saying. Yin declined to comment on this because "it's inappropriate for us to talk about it as Sinovac is only responsible for production." Many countries are racing to develop the vaccine against the A/H1N1 flu as experts and officials worldwide fear there will be a flu pandemic in the northern hemisphere during the coming autumn and winter. Another A/H1N1 flu vaccine, produced by Chinese pharmaceutical company Hualan Biological Engineering Inc, is also seeking approval this week.
Four other Chinese pharmaceutical companies have also submitted applications for registration of A/H1N1 flu vaccines, SFDA said Monday. A World Health Organization (WHO) official was earlier reported to have said the WHO hoped China would donate flu vaccines to help poorer countries. Health Minister Chen Zhu said in August that China would be able to produce enough A/H1N1 flu vaccine for 65 million people by the end of the year. Nearly 4,000 infected As of 3 pm Wednesday, China had reported 3,981 cases of A/H1N1 flu on the mainland, of whom nearly 3,400 had recovered, with no confirmed deaths, according to the Health Ministry. Recent cases of group infection have also highlighted the rising risk of an A/H1N1 flu pandemic in the country. On Sunday, a senior high school in central China's Henan province reported 80 confirmed flu cases, and reported 29 new confirmed cases Tuesday, while a junior high school in northwestern Gansu province reported 26 cases. Globally, the disease had killed nearly 2,000 people and infected more than 180,000. It is circulating in more than 170 countries.
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