Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ANTIBODY DRUGS present new challenges.

Supply of antibody drugs said limited

- EMMA COURT AND RILEY GRIFFIN

Powerful drugs recently authorized by the U.S. that may prevent those at the earliest stages of covid-19 from suffering severe disease present thorny new challenges, including who will get them and where they’ll be administer­ed.

Antibody treatments, like one from Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. that was used to treat President Donald Trump, are often administer­ed to patients at their peak contagious­ness. Regeneron’s drug, along with a therapy from Eli Lilly & Co., were authorized by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for use within 10 days after patients’ first symptoms, and doctors will be racing against time to administer them.

Though the U.S. has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to snap up the antibody treatments, they will be rationed because of limited supplies. Officials are working to establish sites to infuse the medication­s to patients with mild to moderate disease who had until recently been advised to stay home during an unpreceden­ted surge in cases.

“Having a patient who has a coronaviru­s infection come to a hospital setting to get an IV injection is a problem, mostly because you have to isolate the patients from the rest of the patient population,” Operation Warp Speed leader Moncef Slaoui said. “That’s what we are working very hard to solve.”

The Lilly and Regeneron monoclonal antibodies mimic proteins the body normally makes to block the virus from entering cells; they were cleared by the FDA this month. They’re the first drugs authorized specifical­ly for nonhospita­lized patients, and are targeted at those at risk of severe symptoms because of older age, obesity and other chronic conditions.

While Trump touted Regeneron’s therapy after receiving it in October, infectious-disease doctors note that the evidence supporting the drugs’ use in covid-19 is not yet definitive. Yet there’s hope they could help the country battle its worst-ever coronaviru­s surge, as average daily infections soared to almost 170,000 over the past week. About 90,500 Americans were hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 as of Thursday, according to the Covid Tracking Project.

Coronaviru­s-beset hospitals are also grappling with more infected staff members, said Allison Suttle, chief medical officer at Sanford Health, a nonprofit health system based in South Dakota. Treatment that keeps patients from being admitted would offer a tantalizin­g reprieve.

“That gives us a lot more breathing room in our hospitals,” she said, “that relieves a lot of the issues we’re having.”

Physicians will refer patients for treatment, and in some cases emergency department providers can administer the drugs, U.S. health officials said at a Monday briefing. Yet access issues loom.

The U.S. has paid Lilly $375 million to supply 300,000 vials of its antibody, bamlanivim­ab, over the next two months. It also awarded Regeneron $450 million to make and supply enough doses of its antibody cocktail for another 300,000 patients through the end of January. Both companies intend to scale up supply for the U.S. next year.

That still won’t be enough for some 300,000 high-risk patients diagnosed each week, according to Lilly Chief Executive Officer David Ricks. The government is distributi­ng the treatments to each state and territory according to the size of their outbreaks, with state and local health department­s taking the lead from there.

Timely testing, a long-standing challenge in the U.S., is also a key factor. Testing giant Quest Diagnostic­s Inc., which currently reports average turnaround times of two to three days, prioritize­s results for certain patient groups, including those in long-term care facilities, but not based on individual risk factors.

“The sooner you have some of the signature symptoms, the sooner you get tested, the sooner you get results, the sooner you’ll be a candidate for the medicine,” Ricks said.

Meanwhile, health officials are determinin­g where and how to infuse the medicine to patients who are still in the early stages of the disease and may be highly infectious. Maryland is setting up four infusion sites around the state, including a covid-19 field hospital at the Baltimore Convention Center, said Howard Haft, an official with the Maryland Department of Health.

With about 1,100 doses of Lilly’s bamlanivim­ab, “the challenge is identifyin­g the right patients as early as possible to avoid unnecessar­y hospitaliz­ations,” Haft said.

Health officials are looking at ways to prioritize patients for antibody treatment. Northweste­rn Medicine in Illinois is using a risk score based on factors like age and body mass index, said Tina Stosor, a professor at Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine.

“People have been calling in from all over to get scheduled,” she said.

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