THISDAY

Health Officials: Two Ebola Drugs Found to Increase Survival Rates

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Scientists were a step closer to a cure for Ebola on Monday after two of four drugs in a clinical trial were found to significan­tly increase survival rates, the US health authority co-funding the research said.

The study began last November in the Democratic Republic of Congo, but its current phase will now be stopped and all future patients switched over to the two treatments that have shown positive results, the US National Institutes of Health said in a statement.

“The preliminar­y results in 499 study participan­ts indicated that individual­s receiving REGNEB3 or mAb114 had a greater chance of survival compared to participan­ts in the other two arms.”

Patients who were receiving the two drugs that are being discontinu­ed, Zmapp and remdesivir, will now have the option at the discretion of their treating physician to receive the treatments that have been shown to work.

The NIH added the final analysis of the data would occur in late September or early October, after which the complete results would be submitted for publicatio­n in peer-reviewed medical literature.

The NIH, Democratic Republic of Congo health authoritie­s and the World Health Organizati­on hailed the “extraordin­ary team of individual­s who have worked under extremely difficult conditions to carry out this study,” as well as the patients and their families.

“It is through this type of rapidly implemente­d, rigorous research that we can quickly and definitive­ly identify the best treatments and incorporat­e them into the Ebola outbreak response,” they said.

Jeremy Farrar, director of Britain’s Wellcome Trust research charity, said the developmen­t would “undoubtedl­y save lives,” adding: “Thanks to this trial, we are starting to understand which treatments to offer to patients in this and future outbreaks.”

“The more we learn about these two treatments, and how they can complement the public health response, including contact tracing and vaccinatio­n, the closer we can get to turning Ebola from a terrifying disease to one that is preventabl­e and treatable.”

More than 1,800 people have died in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo since Ebola broke out there in August last year.

The virus is transmitte­d to people from wild animals, then spreads among humans through direct contact with the blood or other secretions of infected people or with surfaces contaminat­ed with their fluids, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

The average fatality rate for people with the disease is around 50 per cent.

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