Published 18:36 IST, November 10th 2020
Sinovac 'confident' of vaccine safety, says 'adverse incident' was unrelated to CoronaVac
After the Brazilian health ministry suspended clinical trials of Chinese-developed coronavirus vaccine, Sinovac Biotech stood by the safety of its vaccine.
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After the Brazilian health ministry suspended clinical trials of Chinese-developed coronavirus vaccine, Sinovac Biotech on November 10 stood by the safety of its vaccine and said it is confident that its candidate vaccine was safe. In a statement, Sinovac said that the firm is “confident in the safety of its vaccine”. The Chinese company added that the “adverse incident” was “unrelated” to CoronaVac.
On Monday, the Brazilian regulator, Anvisa, reportedly said that it had ruled to interrupt the clinical trial of the CoronaVac vaccine after a “serious adverse incident” on October 29. According to local media reports, the National Health Surveillance Agency said that it could not give details on what happened, but added that such incidents included death, potentially fatal side effects, serious disability, hospitalisation, birth defects and other “clinically significant events”.
Sinovac, however, dismissed the safety concerns and said that incident was not related to CoronaVac. Meanwhile, Brazil’s decision to suspend the clinical trials of China’s Sinovac coronavirus vaccines comes in the midst of the rising number of COVID cases in the country. According to the Johns Hopkins University tally, Brazil recorded 10,917 new cases and currently, the total case tally in the country stands at 1,590,025, while the total number of deaths is 161,106. The suspension also came after the US pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced that its vaccine candidate has shown over 90 per cent efficacy against the deadly virus.
‘Brazilians would not be used as guinea pigs’
The CoronaVac shot has already stirred controversy in Brazil, where President Jair Bolsonaro has cast doubt on its prospective effectiveness. Bolsonaro had spared confusion last month when he publicly rejected it, saying that the Brazilians would not be used “guinea pigs”. The country’s health minister Eduardo Pazuello had also agreed to purchase CoronaVac doses produced locally by Butantan. The Brazilian President has additionally also expressed mistrust of China, particularly on the campaign trail in 2018, although he has softened rhetoric somewhat in office.
Meanwhile, Anvisa had authorised the import from China of six million doses of CoronaVac. The agency had said that the potential vaccine cannot be administered to Brazilians as it isn’t yet approved locally. On Monday, Sao Paulo’s state health secretary Jean Gorinchteyn, had, however, said that the first 120,000 CoronaVac shots would arrive at Sao Paulo’s international airport on November 20. “We will keep following health protocols to give the shots. They will only be taken to the public after a final authorization from Brazil’s health regulator,” Gorinchteyn said.
18:37 IST, November 10th 2020