The Borneo Post

South Korea begins using remdesivir for Covid-19 treatment

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SEOUL: South Korea yesterday began providing remdesivir, an experiment­al drug convention­ally used for Ebola, as a treatment drug for the novel coronaviru­s, Yonhap news agency reported.

The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said the medication developed by US pharmaceut­ical giant

Gilead Sciences Inc. will be used for Covid-19 patients with severe symptoms.

Coronaviru­s patients with symptoms of pneumonia who need oxygen treatment, such as extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n (ECMO), will be administer­ed the drug.

A total of 33 coronaviru­s patients in critical condition will first be administer­ed with the antiviral drug, the KCDC said.

The KCDC said the first batch of antiviral drugs has been donated by Gilead Science and plans to begin talks to purchase more next month, with details of the imported amount and price not to be disclosed.

On Monday, Gilead Sciences announced it will provide remdesivir at US$390 per vial for direct government purchases by the US and other developed countries.

The Covid-19 patients are usually given six vials of remdesivir over five days, which amounts to US$2,340 per patient for a typical regimen.

“Health authoritie­s will make utmost efforts to secure the treatment by cooperatin­g with Gilead Science Korea, a local importer, to secure additional amounts of remdesivir,” KCDC chief Jeong Eun-kyeong said in a press release.

Last month, the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, South Korea’s drug safety watchdog, approved the use of remdesivir as a treatment drug for Covid-19, allowing special imports by using its special measures procedure.

Remdesivir is the first medication shown to have a therapeuti­c effect on Covid19 patients since there is no scientific­ally proven treatment and no vaccine for the deadly illness.

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