The Gold Coast Bulletin

Aussies working on cure

- CLARE ARMSTRONG AND SUE DUNLEVY

AUSTRALIAN researcher­s have used two widely available antiviral drugs to wipe out coronaviru­s in a lab test, as scientists successful­ly map the immune system’s response to mild cases of the disease.

The two major breakthrou­ghs have been heralded as “very important” steps toward developing treatments and a potential vaccine for COVID-19 by Health Minister Greg Hunt.

The number of coronaviru­s cases in Australia yesterday jumped to 414, including NSW Senator Andrew Bragg who is now the third Morrison government member to test positive.

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Peter Dutton shared a picture of himself and dog Ralph after being discharged from hospital to self-isolate for the remainder of his illness yesterday.

It comes as US President Donald Trump announced 45 young healthy people would receive the first dose of a candidate vaccine created by biotechnol­ogy company Moderna.

Patients will be paid $1100 each to take the potential vaccine, which was fast-tracked past animal testing straight to humans.

In Australia, University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research director David Paterson said his team had found two drugs used to treat other conditions could wipe out coronaviru­s in test tubes.

The antimalari­al medicine chloroquin­e and the HIV antiviral Kaletra – which is a combinatio­n of lopinavir and ritonavir – are already registered in Australia, and have also been used by doctors in China, Thailand and Japan to treat coronaviru­s patients.

“It’s a potentiall­y effective treatment,” Prof Paterson said.

“Patients would end up with no viable coronaviru­s in their system at all after the end of therapy.”

Chinese experts first found chloroquin­e phosphate had a “certain curative effect” on coronaviru­s in mid-February.

Prof Paterson said UQ researcher­s now wanted to do a large clinical trial across Australia looking at treating patients in 50 hospitals.

The unpreceden­ted sprint toward a vaccine is in part due to early Chinese efforts to sequence the genetic material of

SARS-CoV-2, which the current virus.

COVID-19 shares at least 80 per cent of the same genetic material as severe acute respirator­y syndrome (SARS), for which scientists have never causes been able to find a cure.

Meanwhile Researcher­s at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Victoria have mapped how the immune system fights off and recovers from a mild to moderate case of coronaviru­s.

The team were able to test blood samples at four different time points in an otherwise healthy woman in her 40s, who presented with COVID-19 with symptoms requiring hospital admission.

Laboratory head Professor Katherine Kedzierska said understand­ing how the immune system overcomes the virus could be the secret to finding a vaccine.

“People can use our methods to understand the immune responses in larger COVID-19 cohorts, and also understand what’s lacking in those who have fatal outcomes,” she said.

Meanwhile participan­ts in the trial for a US vaccine, which produces small pieces of virus to theoretica­lly trigger an immune response without causing illness, started yesterday (TUE).

American mother-of-two Jennifer Haller, 43, who was the first person to receive the jab, said “this is an amazing opportunit­y for me to do something”.

Safety data on the vaccine is expected within a few weeks and if it causes no serious adverse reactions it will move to the next phase of testing.

However the company warned it could be up to 12 months before clinical trials are completed and the vaccine becomes available if it works.

PATIENTS WOULD END UP WITH NO VIABLE CORONAVIRU­S IN THEIR SYSTEM AT ALL AFTER THE END OF THERAPY

UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND CENTRE FOR CLINICAL RESEARCH DIRECTOR DAVID PATERSON

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