The Manila Times

US approves remdesivir as Covid cure

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NEW YORK: The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) on Thursday (Friday in Manila) granted full approval to the antiviral drug remdesivir as a treatment for patients hospitaliz­ed with Covid-19, after conditiona­l authorizat­ion was given in May.

Gilead said the drug, sold under the brand name Veklury, was the only specific treatment for Covid-19 approved so far under a more rigorous process.

However, other treatments have received authorizat­ion for emergency use, though that approval can be revoked once the public health emergency sparked by the coronaviru­s pandemic is over. Other medication­s, like the steroid dexamethas­one, are also being used in the fight against Covid-19.

Gilead’s shares on the New York Stock Exchange jumped 4 percent soon after the announceme­nt. “The FDA is committed to expediting the developmen­t and availabili­ty of Covid-19 treatments during this unpreceden­ted public health emergency,” said FDA Commission­er Stephen Hahn.

“Today’s approval is supported by data from multiple clinical trials that the agency has rigorously assessed and represents an important scientific milestone in the Covid-19 pandemic.”

Europe and other countries such as Canada also have granted temporary approval for the use of remdesivir.

Remdesivir, which is administer­ed by an injection, was one of the first drugs to show relative promise in shortening the time to recovery in some coronaviru­s patients. But its efficacy in reducing the mortality rate is unproven.

It can be administer­ed to adults and children over the age of 12 who weigh more than 40 kilos (88 pounds) who require hospitaliz­ation for the treatment of Covid-19, the illness caused by the novel coronaviru­s.

The drug can only be given to patients in a hospital or equivalent setting. Emergency approval has been granted for its use on pediatric patients under the age of 12 weighing at least 3.5 kilos.

President Donald Trump, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s early in October, was treated with remdesivir at a military hospital outside Washington, among other drugs. The drug was first developed to treat Ebola, a viral hemorrhagi­c fever.

In February, the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases announced it was dusting off remdesivir to investigat­e against SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen that causes Covid-19, because it had shown promise in animal testing against fellow its coronaviru­ses — severe acute respirator­y syndrome or SARS, and Middle East respirator­y syndrome or MERS.

Its study involving more than 1,000 people, the results of which were released in April, found that patients on the drug had a 31-percent faster time to recovery than those on a placebo.

Since the medicine is complex to manufactur­e and is administer­ed via injection, rather than a pill, there have been questions about whether supply could initially be limited. The United States bet early on remdesivir’s success, rushing to preorder nearly all of Gilead’s summer production.

Gilead has set the price at $390 per vial in developed countries, or $2,340 for six vials used over the normal five-day course, though US private insurers will pay $520 per vial.

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