The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Arthritis drug ‘cuts elderly Covid deaths by two-thirds’

- By Stephen Adams MEDICAL EDITOR

AN ARTHRITIS drug has been found to cut deaths in patients admitted to hospital with Covid-19 by a remarkable two-thirds – giving medics a powerful new weapon in their armoury against the disease.

The daily pill, first earmarked as a potential virus game-changer by a British firm, reduces deaths by 71 per cent in those with moderate or severe illness, researcher­s say.

Importantl­y, it works in the elderly, raising hopes that it will save the most vulnerable.

Called baricitini­b, and marketed under the brand name Olumiant, it is a relatively new drug for rheumatoid arthritis that has been available for only three years.

But i n February it was identified as a strong candidate to help treat what was then the new threat of Covid-19.

The drug was picked out by London-based Benevolent­AI, which examined thousands of existing medicines for signs they might combat Covid.

Its artificial i ntelligenc­e program predicted baricitini­b would ‘reduce the ability of the virus to infect lung cells’.

Now the idea has been validated with pan-European researcher­s, led by Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, reporting baricitini­b slashes death rates in those admitted to hospital with the disease by two-thirds.

The developmen­t came as:

● Drugs giant GlaxoSmith­Kline said it has made ‘millions of doses’ of a vaccine and hopes it will be available alongside another vaccine developed by Pfizer early next year;

● A further 26,860 Covid cases were recorded yesterday – 1,118 of them in Scotland – along with 462 deaths, with 36 of these north of the Border;

● Professor Susan Michie, a member of the Government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, urged the public to redouble their efforts so they would ‘be in a position’ to spend Christmas with loved ones;

● Doctors are signing ‘Do Not Resuscitat­e’ notices for elderly patients with Covid without seeking their consent in a move which, it is feared, is designed to free up wards;

The bosses of British Airways and Virgin Atlantic called for passengers to be allowed to have tests before leaving the UK rather than being quarantine­d for two weeks after returning.

Last night, NHS cancer specialist Professor Justin Stebbing, of Imperial College London, predicted that baricitini­b would help to save thousands of lives. He said: ‘The history of treatments for Covid has not left many drugs standing. What has been left standing is two Britishdis­covered drugs.’

The other is the steroid dexamethas­one, found to cut the risk of death in severely ill Covid patients by 33 per cent.

The results, in the journal Science Advances, come from patients hospitalis­ed with Covid-19 pneumonia at two hospitals, in Italy and Spain.

Professor Volker Lauschke, of the Karolinska Institute, who led the study, said: ‘These results are especially encouragin­g seeing as the study included a large cohort of elderly patients, a group often excluded.’

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