China's new recombinant COVID-19 vaccine starts human tests
BEIJING -- Chinese pharmaceutical giant Sinopharm has commenced phase-1 and phase-2 clinical trials for its new recombinant vaccine against COVID-19 in Central China's Henan province since Saturday.
Developed by the China National Biotec Group (CNBG), a Sinopharm's bioscience subsidiary, the vaccine obtained a clinical research permit from the National Medical Products Administration on April 9.
This is CNBG's third COVID-19 vaccine candidate approved for human trials.
Researchers started the early-staged clinical trials in the city of Shangqiu, Henan Province. The trials were randomized, double-blind and placebo-controlled, according to a company statement.
Zhang Yuntao, vice president of the CNBG, said the recombinant vaccine candidate has been genetically engineered. Unlike the company's inactivated COVID-19 vaccines, the new one does not need a high-grade biosafety laboratory for manufacture, and it can quickly achieve large-scale production.
"It is designed for people aged three and above," Zhang said.
Whether the gene recombinant vaccine should be administered in three doses will be determined by the results of clinical trials, Zhang added.
- What's next in AI development? A tech pro's lens
- Beijing mandates helmets for e-bike users, bans scooters
- Judicial guideline streamlines maritime dispute resolution nationwide
- China rolls out festive campaign to boost sustainable agricultural consumption
- China set to establish early pregnancy clinics across 10k hospitals
- Cold front coats Guizhou mountains in rime
































