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Low Cost China-made AIDS Drug Produced (09/02/02)
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| 2003/10/23 |
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Kedu, the first China-made drug for treating AIDS
went on market in tablet and capsule forms across China on
September 1.
Kedu, produced by Northeast China
Pharmaceuticals Group Company, is a legal imitation of AZT,
the most effective anti-AIDS drug licensed by the United
States Food and Drug Administration. The patent protection
period of AZT in China expired at the end of last year.
Kedu obtained a permit for domestic marketing
from the State Drug Administration in early August. It put
an end to the country’s total reliance on imported
AIDS medicines.
According to Zeng Yi, a member
of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the number of AIDS
patients and HIV carriers in China is 850,000.
Due to a reliance on imported AIDS drugs,
patients and HIV carriers in China had to spend much more
money in treating the disease each year than those in
countries such as Thailand and Brazil.
Wu Hao,
an AIDS consultant at You’an Hospital, Beijing,
disclosed AIDS and HIV patients mostly received a cocktail
treatment at his hospital for a monthly cost of 2,500 yuan
(US$301) to 3,000 yuan (US$361).
Chen Gang,
chairman of the Northeast China Pharmaceuticals Group
Company, said he hoped Kedu could help bring down the annual
pharmaceutical spending of AIDS patients and HIV carriers to
below10,000 yuan (US$1,204).
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