Edwin Chng Aik Chen
General Practitioner
Source: Shutterstock
General Practitioner
The Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine, BBIBP-CorV was approved for use by the China’s National Medical Products Administration in December 2020 and gained WHO’s approval for emergency use in May 2021.
The vaccine was developed by the Beijing Bio-Institute of Biological Products (BBIBP) and is the first China-made COVID-19 vaccine approved by the WHO for emergency use. It is also the first approved COVID-19 vaccine developed by a non-Western country. Sinovac’s vaccine, the CoronaVac, is the second.
To date, more than a billion doses of the Sinopharm BBIBP-CorV have been administered. The vaccine has also been approved for use in over 50 countries around the world. It is currently undergoing Phase 3 trials in Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and South American countries like Argentina and Peru.
The BBIBP-CorV is a two-dose vaccine, with a recommended gap of 3 weeks between the doses. Similar to the Sinovac vaccine, it is recommended for individuals aged 18 years and older who have no history of anaphylaxis to any component of the vaccine. Further research is needed to demonstrate its efficacy against severe COVID-19 disease in persons with other diseases, pregnant women and individuals aged above 60 years old. However, no upper age limit has been set for the vaccine as it is likely to have a protective effect in older adults and is unlikely to differ in safety for both older and younger adults.
Unlike the Pfizer-BioNTech/Cominarty and Moderna vaccines which use mRNA technology, the Chinese-made vaccines are inactivated vaccines which use killed COVID-19 viral particles. In these vaccines, the surface spike protein of the virus particle is kept intact to trigger the body’s immune system to develop antibodies to protect against the live COVID-19 virus in the event that the person is infected.
Inactivated vaccines are a tried-and-tested form of vaccine technology which is used in other well-established vaccines, such as the flu and hepatitis B vaccines.
Sinopharm’s COVID-19 vaccine proved 79% effective in preventing symptomatic infection in the multi-country Phase 3 trial. This is compared to 51% for Sinovac’s and 95% for the Pfizer-BioNTech/Cominarty COVID-19 vaccine.
More studies are required to prove the BBIBP-CorV’s efficacy against COVID-19 variants.
The most common side-effects of the Sinopharm vaccine are pain at the injection site, headache, and fatigue. However, 2 serious side effects may possibly be linked to the vaccine – serious nausea, and acute disseminated encephalomyelities, a neurological disorder involving inflammation of the brain and spinal cord.
Due to the fragility of the mRNA molecule, mRNA vaccines need to be stored in sub-zero temperatures in the long-term. In comparison, both the Sinopharm and Sinopharm vaccines can be stored at a refrigerator temperature of 2 – 8 degree Celsius. This makes shipment and storage of these vaccines less costly and highly suitable for countries with low resources. The Sinopharm vaccine is also the first vaccine that will carry a vaccine vial monitor, which is a sticker that changes colour when the vaccine is exposed to heat. This allows for closer monitoring of whether the vaccine is safe to use.
If you have yet to be vaccinated against COVID-19, it is important for you to receive a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as you can to protect yourself against developing severe COVID-19 infection. The benefits of receiving approved COVID-19 vaccines outweigh the risks.
The Sinopharm vaccine is available at Parkway Shenton clinics. To check your eligibility for the vaccine and make an appointment, visit our Parkway Shenton website.