China has launched a new funding programme that will have a special focus on
the safety of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) injections, the Ministry of
Science and Technology announced yesterday.
"TCM injections have serious safety problems," said Ye Zuguang, a professor
at the Chinese Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences.
A 10-year study by the professor found that more than 70 per cent of negative
responses in TCM are from injections. And about 80 per cent of these responses
are due to allergies, Ye said.
"The problem is that we've consistently failed to find a good methodology to
help with a better transfer of animal test results to human trials," the
professor said.
Qian Zhongzhi of China Pharmacopoeia Committee said the root cause of the
problem was the complicated make-up of TCMs. "There are a slew of components,
each of which may cause allergic reactions for different people," he explained.
These injections are mostly used for cardiovascular diseases and
inflammation. "Their efficacy in anti-virus treatment has proven to surpass
western medicine," Qian said.
Wang Hongguang, director of China National Centre for Biotechnology
Development, said the programme would enable domestic scientists to investigate
causes of two or three negative responses related to TCM injections in the next
five years.
But TCM is just one target of the funding programme in the next five to 10
years. "We will try to solve about 10 pressing technical problems during the
period," Wang said.
These include establishment of several world-level drug quality control
standards and laboratories.
"We will complete a set of medicine safety technology standards within five
years, covering 10 to 20 TCMs," Wang said.
The ministry said substantial research would begin by the end of this year.
The problem of drug safety has been in the spotlight in recent years. In
July, an antibiotic injection called Xinfu caused six deaths in the country. And
in the same month, China revoked the licence of another drug company, Qiqihar No
2 Pharmaceutical Co Ltd, for a bogus drug for gastric disorders that killed 11
people.