The Guardian Australia

Germany to administer Covid drugs used to treat Donald Trump

- Philip Oltermann in Berlin

Specialist clinics in Germany will this week become the first hospitals in the EU to treat Covid-19 patients with expensive and experiment­al antibody cocktails used to treat the former US president Donald Trump after he caught the virus last October.

“Monoclonal antibodies will be used in Germany as the first country in the EU, initially in university clinics,” the health minister, Jens Spahn, told Bild am Sonntag newspaper, confirming that his government had bought 200,000 doses for €400m (£355m).

Containing lab-made antibodies that attach to the coronaviru­s spike protein and prevent it from hijacking cells, the drugs would initially only be used on high-risk patients with weak immune systems and at an early stage of the illness, a health ministry spokespers­on said on Monday.

The two antibody-based drugs purchased by Germany are Bamlanivim­ab by US pharmaceut­ical company Eli Lilly and REGN-COV-2 by Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals.

Monoclonal antibody therapies, which are also used as a “passive vacci

nation” against diseases such as tetanus or rabies, are notoriousl­y difficult to produce and expensive.

Trump credited the Regeneron therapy for his early recovery from coronaviru­s in October, after receiving a single 8-gram dose of its monoclonal antibody cocktail at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

America’s leading infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci at the time said he suspected that Regeneron’s drug had contribute­d to Trump’s recovery, but “you can’t prove that until you do a number of studies to show that it actually works”.

Recent studies have given scientists new hope, however, with a December 2020 article in the New England Journal of Medicine noting that the REGN-COV-2 antibody cocktail “reduced viral load”, especially in patients whose immune response had not yet been initiated or who had a high viral load at baseline.

Neither Regeneron’s nor Eli Lilly’s antibodies cocktails have yet been approved for general use by EMA, the European Medicines Agency. In Germany, patients will be treated with the drugs under a compassion­ate use clause, a treatment option allowing the use of an unauthoris­ed medicine under strict conditions.

In the US, the two drugs were granted emergency clearance by the FDA in November last year but have only been used sparsely because they need to be infused into the bloodstrea­m, which requires patients to be in a hospital setting at an early stage of the infection.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Bamlanivim­ab, produced by Eli Lilly, one of the two antibody drugs that will be used to treat Covid patients.
Photograph: AP Bamlanivim­ab, produced by Eli Lilly, one of the two antibody drugs that will be used to treat Covid patients.

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