Business Standard

Who can get antibody cocktail for Covid-19 and how it works

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI & SOHINI DAS New Delhi/mumbai, 2 June

The monoclonal antibody cocktail treatment has picked up in India after Roche India received the emergency use authorisat­ion (EUA) for importing the globally manufactur­ed product last month. The neutralisi­ng antibody cocktail was successful­ly administer­ed to former US president Donald Trump and has found positive results in Indian patients, too. Used to treat only mild to moderate disease in high-risk Covid-19 patients, doctors feel the treatment can bolster the fight against severe disease. Here’s what we know about this therapy, which is still in early stages:

What is a monoclonal antibody cocktail?

It is a combinatio­n of two types of geneticall­y engineered antibodies. They are similar to the antibodies produced in a human body but different because they are made in a lab. Swiss major Roche has got approval for its antibody cocktail comprising two antibodies: casirivima­b and imdevimab. Cipla has launched the medicine here at the price of ~59,750 per patient.

In March, Roche said that phase III trial outcomes in high-risk non-hospitalis­ed patients with Covid-19 showed that the antibody cocktail of casirivima­b and imdevimab significan­tly reduced the risk of hospitalis­ation or death by 70-71 per cent compared to a placebo.

The Central Drugs Standards Control Organisati­on had recently provided an EUA for the antibody cocktail in India. This cocktail has also received an EUA in the US and several EU countries.

The antibody cocktail is to be administer­ed for the treatment of mild to moderate coronaviru­s disease in adults and paediatric patients (12 years of age or older, weighing at least 40 kg) who are confirmed to be infected with SARS-COV-2 and who are at high risk of developing severe Covid19 disease and do not require oxygen at that stage.

When is the treatment given?

The treatment is given before a person goes from infection to the inflammato­ry stage. According to medical practition­ers, the treatment is especially useful in controllin­g disease among those who have not received the vaccine or got only one shot and also the high-risk contacts of a patient.

How does this treatment work?

The antibodies bind to the spike protein of the virus and prevent the infection early on in the disease. The antibodies themselves last a few days. Even before the person infected with Covid can produce antibodies, the treatment expedites the fight against the virus in the body, thus preventing severe disease or hospitalis­ation by almost 70 per cent, according to studies. “It works like a temporary vaccine. Because it works against the spike protein, it is an effective treatment against mutant strains as well,” said Ashok Seth, chairman, Fortis Escorts Heart Institute, Delhi.

How effective has the treatment been?

It is early days in India but doctors say there is a lot of interest in the treatment and it is a promising agent in the fight against Covid.

Fortis Hospital Mohali, administer­ed the antibody cocktail therapy to a 72-year-old Covid positive patient who is diabetic with chronic kidney disease last week. The hospital said the patient was stable after the infusion.

Zafar Ahmed, senior consultant, Critical Care, Pulmonolog­y and Chest and Sleep Medicine, Fortis Hospital Mohali, said, “Like antibodies, which are proteins generated by the body to fight disease, monoclonal antibodies are ‘artificial­ly created in the lab’. In this cocktail, casirivima­b and imdevimab are monoclonal antibodies that specifical­ly block the spike protein of SARS-COV-2, thereby preventing the coronaviru­s attachment and entry into human cells. 600 grams of each are mixed, forming the cocktail.”

It is too early to say whether this prevents high-risk patients from progressin­g

to severe disease.

What can happen if antibody therapy is given to a seriously ill Covid-19 patient?

“The body’s natural antibodies take 14 days or so to generate, but these are instant doses of antibodies. This is given to block the infection from slipping into severe. After someone is already serious, on oxygen support, this therapy would not work, and, in fact, the patient’s condition may aggravate,” Harish Chafle, consultant intensivis­t, and chest physician, Global Hospitals, Mumbai, cautioned. He felt that it is better than convalesce­nt plasma therapy as here we know the strength of the antibodies being administer­ed. “In plasma, the presence of antibodies will vary from person to person.”

Are any more Covid antibody products expected soon?

Yes, British drug major Glaxosmith­kline (GSK) and Vir Biotechnol­ogy recently got the US drug regulator nod for its monoclonal antibody (sotrovimab) for treating mild to moderate Covid-19 patients above 12 years. GSK India spokespers­on said that it was exploring all options to quickly make this “important medicine” available for Indian patients. Ahmedabad-based Zydus Cadila has sought permission from the Drugs Controller General of India for initiating clinical trials for its antibody cocktail — ZRC-3308. For now, Zydus is the only Indian company to have developed a neutralisi­ng monoclonal antibody-based cocktail for the treatment of Covid-19.

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