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Chinese vaccine developer CanSino targets ‘high disease burden’ nations for Covid-19 trials on health care concerns

  • The company’s phase three trial of its Ad5-nCoV vaccine candidate is being tested on some 40,000 participants in Russia, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Mexico
  • The last participant in the trial is expected to get the jab at the end of November, before the tests are wrapped up July 31 next year

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A technician works at a manufacturing facility of Chinese vaccine maker CanSino Biologics in Tianjin, China. Photo: Reuters
CanSino Biologics chose middle and lower-income countries over Western nations to test the effectiveness and safety of its novel coronavirus vaccine candidate as it expected the rich countries to easily cope with the disease that has infected more than 44 million people globally, its chairman said.
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“For us to evaluate the effectiveness of a vaccine, we need to find high disease burden areas,” Yu Xuefeng, who is also the co-founder and chief executive officer of the Tianjin-based firm, told the Fortune Global Forum on Tuesday. Such burden was not expected in developed countries, given “their good health care systems,” he said.

The Covid-19 disease has killed 1.17 million since it was first detected in January in Wuhan in central Chinese province of Hubei, the original epicentre of the outbreak. China recorded 42 new cases on Tuesday, of which 20 were imported and 22 were domestic sources in Xinjiang, an autonomous region in northwest China.

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CanSino said in early September that it would conduct a phase-three clinical trial of its Ad5-nCoV vaccine candidate on some 40,000 participants in Russia, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Mexico.

Mexico has the second highest number of cases 901,200 and a death rate of 10 per cent among the four countries, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Analysts say countries like Mexico have shown a willingness to host phase three trials to secure adequate supplies of a vaccine once it is approved and available. According to Oxfam, rich nations which account for only 13 per cent of the population, have bought more than half of the leading vaccine candidates.

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Yu Xuefeng, co-founder, chairman and chairman of CanSino Biologics. Photo: Handout
Yu Xuefeng, co-founder, chairman and chairman of CanSino Biologics. Photo: Handout
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