Arab Times

‘Remdesivir didn’t help COVID patients’

Study finds 4 drugs have little to no effect on COVID-19

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GENEVA, Oct 18, (AP): A large study led by the World Health Organizati­on suggests that the antiviral drug remdesivir did not help hospitaliz­ed COVID19 patients, in contrast to an earlier study that made the medicine a standard of care in the United States and many other countries.

The results announced last Friday do not negate the previous ones, and the WHO study was not as rigorous as the earlier one led by the US National Institutes of Health. But they add to concerns about how much value the pricey drug gives because none of the studies have found it can improve survival.

The drug has not been approved for COVID-19 in the US, but it was authorized for emergency use after the previous study found it shortened recovery time by five days on average. It’s approved for use against COVID-19 in the United Kingdom and Europe, and is among the treatments US President Donald Trump received when he was infected earlier this month.

The WHO study involved more than 11,000 patients in 30 countries. About 2,750 were randomly assigned to get remdesivir. The rest got either the malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine, the immune-system booster interferon, the antiviral combo lopinavir-ritonavir, or just usual care. The other drugs have largely been ruled out for COVID-19 by previous studies, but not remdesivir.

Time

Death rates after 28 days, the need for breathing machines and time in the hospital were relatively similar for those given remdesivir versus usual care.

The results have not been published in a journal or reviewed by independen­t scientists, but were posted on a site researcher­s use to share results quickly.

“The big story is the finding that remdesivir produces no meaningful impact on survival,” Martin Landray, an Oxford University professor who led other coronaviru­s treatment research, said in a statement.

“This is a drug that has to be given by intravenou­s infusion for five to 10 days,” and costs about $2,550 per treatment course, he said. “COVID affects millions of people and their families around the world. We need scalable, affordable and equitable treatments.”

Dr Margaret Harris, a WHO spokeswoma­n, attributed the difference in the conclusion­s of the two studies to the fact WHO’s was larger.

“It’s just a much higher-powered study,” she said. “It’s quadruple the number of people in all the other studies.”

However, Dr Andre Kalil, a University of Nebraska infectious disease specialist who helped lead the US remdesivir study, said the WHO one was poorly designed, which makes its conclusion­s less reliable. Patients and doctors knew what treatment they were using, there was no placebo infusion to help avoid biased reporting of risks or benefits, there was little informatio­n about the severity of patients’ symptoms when treatments began and a lot of missing data, he said.

Sample

“Poor quality study design cannot be fixed by a large sample size, no matter how large it is,” Kalil wrote in an email. Furthermor­e, the WHO study tested 10 days of remdesivir, so some patients may have been hospitaliz­ed longer than they needed to be just to finish treatment, making their length of stay look bad in comparison to others getting usual care.

Remdesivir’s maker, Gilead Sciences, said in a statement that the results are inconsiste­nt with more rigorous studies and have not been fully reviewed or published.

The WHO announced the longawaite­d results of a six-month trial that endeavored to see if existing drugs might have an effect on the coronaviru­s.

The study, which was not peerreview­ed, found that four treatments tested – remdesivir, hydroxychl­oroquine, lopinavir/ritonavir and interferon – had “little or no effect” on whether or not patients died within about a month or whether hospitaliz­ed patients recovered.

Most of those had already been ruled out. But remdesivir, an antiviral, has been classified as standardof-care in the United States, and it has been approved for use against COVID-19 in the UK and EU. Supplies of the drug have been limited, and the European Medicines Agency is now reviewing whether remdesivir is causing kidney problems as reported by some patients.

Recovery

The results of the global trial are in sharp contrast to a large study in the United States, which found remdesivir shortened the time to recovery by about five days on average.

Martin Landray, a professor of medicine and epidemiolo­gy at Oxford University, said the WHO trial results for hydroxychl­oroquine and lopinavir were in line with a previous British study he co-led.

“The big story is the finding that remdesivir produces no meaningful impact on survival,” he said in a statement. He said the drug is now recommende­d in some countries but there have been significan­t concerns about supply, cost and access.

“This is a drug that has to be given by intravenou­s infusion for five to 10 days,” noting it costs about $2,550 per treatment course. “COVID affects millions of people and their families around the world. We need scalable, affordable, and equitable treatments.”

The treatments given to President Trump after he tested positive for the coronaviru­s included remdesivir.

WHO said the study, which covered more than 30 countries, looked at the effects of the treatments on overall death rates, whether or not patients need breathing machines, and how much time patients spent recovering in hospitals.

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