Shares of China’s Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group fell after Hong Kong and Macao announced Wednesday they were suspending BioNTech Covid vaccinations.
Fosun Pharma, BioNTech’s partner in the development and distribution of the Comirnaty Covid-19 vaccine in greater China, notified the cities of a packaging flaw in batch 210102 of the vaccine.
Hong Kong and Macao said they were suspending the German-made vaccinations as a precautionary measure.
Hong Kong-listed shares of Fosun Pharma plunged 4.83% on Wednesday.
The cities said BioNTech and Fosun Pharma are investigating the cause of the vial cap defect, adding that there is currently no reason to doubt the safety of the vaccine.
Hong Kong authorities later sought to reassure citizens in a Wednesday press conference following the initial announcements.
“The entire process of vaccination, it is very stringent,” said Sophia Chan, Hong Kong secretary for food and health. “We saw that certain vial caps had been loose, but these vials had been thrown away, so they have not been injected into citizens.”
Macao said all of its messenger RNA, or mRNA, vaccines belong to the affected batch. Hong Kong said it would also temporarily suspend vaccinations from batch 210104 until the investigation is completed.
Director of Hong Kong’s department of health Dr. Constance Chan said Fosun’s investigation in Hong Kong will mainly focus on the logistics chain, including transportation, handling and delivery of the vaccines. She added that BioNTech will inspect its manufacturing plant in Germany.
Hong Kong approved the BioNTech vaccine for emergency use in January, while Macao granted the vaccine special import authorization in late February. Both territories received their first batch of shots in late February.
BioNTech’s mRNA-based vaccine has a demonstrated effectiveness of 95% in adults, according to data from its global phase 3 clinical trial. And real-world data has shown “very strong” results from Pfizer-BioNTech’s Covid two-dose vaccine even after just one shot.
The news comes as countries around the world race to vaccinate their populations in the face of rising Covid cases in most regions.
So far, Hong Kong has approved vaccines from BioNTech and China’s Sinovac. As of Tuesday, the city said about 403,000 people have received a first dose, of which 252,800 were Sinovac shots and 150,200 were BioNTech.
Globally, more than 124 million infections have been reported and the death toll from Covid has surpassed 2.7 million, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.
— CNBC’s Christine Wang contributed to this report.
Source: Business - cnbc.com