Kuwait Times

Congo approves clinical trials for Ebola treatments

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KINSHASA: Congolese authoritie­s have authorized clinical trials for four experiment­al Ebola treatments, which will allow researcher­s to collect valuable data about their effectiven­ess, the health ministry said on Saturday. Health workers have already administer­ed therapeuti­c treatments to more than 150 Ebola patients since August in an effort to contain the worst of Democratic Republic of Congo’s 10 outbreaks of the hemorrhagi­c fever since 1976.

But until now doctors have decided which treatment to use on a case-by-case basis. In the clinical trial, the choice of treatment will now be randomized. Treatment will still be free of charge, the ministry added in a statement. “Precious informatio­n about the effectiven­ess of the treatments obtained during the clinical trial will allow for the developmen­t of these treatments on a wider scale to save more lives,” the ministry said.

The four treatments are mAb114, which was developed by the US government; ZMapp, an intravenou­s treatment made by Mapp Biopharmac­eutical; Remdesivir, made by Gilead Sciences; and Regeneron’s REGN-EB3. As of last weekend, 151 patients had received one of the four drugs. Of those, 76 had recovered, 44 had died and 31 were still hospitaliz­ed-a mortality rate of 37 percent. By contrast, among those who had not received treatment, the mortality rate was close to 80 percent.

The ministry said that the data from the current outbreak would probably not be sufficient to make definitive conclusion­s about the effectiven­ess of the treatments and that the trials could continue during future outbreaks. Despite the use of the treatments as well as an experiment­al vaccine manufactur­ed by Merck, authoritie­s have struggled to contain the outbreak due to widespread militia violence in eastern Congo and community resistance to health workers. At least 228 people are believed to have died, and the World Health Organizati­on said last week that it expects the outbreak to last at least another six months.—Reuters

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