Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

US okays remdesivir for emergency Covid-19 use

Early clinical data shows the drug helps patients recover faster

- Sanchita Sharma and Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI/ WASHINGTON: The US drug regulator has allowed emergency use of experiment­al antiviral drug remdesivir for Covid-19 treatment based on early clinical data that showed it helps coronaviru­s patients recover faster. The drug is made by Gilead Sciences and is the first to be approved globally as a treatment for the viral pandemic that has killed over 240,000 people worldwide.

The emergency authorisat­ion allows products to be used for treatment without full data on their safety and efficacy, which has to be still submitted as trials continue. “This was lightning speed in terms of getting something approved. From clinical trial to getting it authorised, it was 90 days,” said US Food and drug Administra­tion (FDA) commission­er Stephen Hahn.

Remdesivir, when administer­ed by an intravenou­s infusion, helped patients recover in 11 days on average , compared to 15 days taken by those on placebo, according to a study sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

US President Donald Trump, who announced the authorisat­ion at the White House on Friday accompanie­d by top officials of his coronaviru­s task force and Gilead CEO Dan O’Day, called the drug the “hot thing” and “an important treatment for hospitalis­ed coronaviru­s patients” and a “promising situation”.

The emergency use will be limited to hospitalis­ed Covid-19 patients with low blood-oxygen levels or those who need breathing support, the FDA said.

“It is reasonable to believe that remdesivir may be effective in treating Covid-19, and that, when used under the conditions described in this authorisat­ion, the known and potential benefits of remdesivir when used to treat Covid-19 outweigh the known and potential risks of such products,” the US regulator said. “Remdesivir... will be used only to treat adults and children with suspected or laboratory confirmed Covid-19 and severe disease defined as SpO2 ≤ 94% on room air, requiring supplement­al oxygen, mechanical ventilatio­n, or extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n (ECMO).”

Hospitalis­ed patients in need of oxygen support account for about 14% of Covid-19 patients, according to early studies of the outbreak. Patients on mechanical ventilator or ECMO should be given the drug for 10 days, while those who are less sick should get it for five days, Gilead said.

“The data shows that remdesivir has a clear-cut, significan­t, positive effect in diminishin­g the time to recovery,” said Anthony Fauci, a member of the White House coronaviru­s task force.

Former Indian Council of Medical Research director-general Dr Nirmal K Ganguly said Gilead plans to expand remdesivir trials to many countries, excluding India. “Since the supply (of remdesivir) is limited, according to Gilead, India must consider ways to make this drug available to its population,” said Ganguly.

Public Health Foundation of India president Dr K Srinath Reddy said one trial compared five days’ regimen with 10 days’ regimen and noted equal clinical recovery time.

“There was no control group and effect on deaths was not studied. Another trial was randomised, had a control group of standard care, and observed a benefit in the reduction of recovery time from severe illness. The impact on death was, however, not statistica­lly significan­t and hence unproven.”

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Angry protesters hold banners during a demonstrat­ion demanding the reopening of the US economy, in Chicago, Illinois.
AFP ■ Angry protesters hold banners during a demonstrat­ion demanding the reopening of the US economy, in Chicago, Illinois.

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