Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. betting big on pills to treat range of viruses

$3.2B to speed developmen­t of new easy-to-use weapon

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The United States is devoting $3.2 billion to speed developmen­t of antiviral pills to treat the coronaviru­s infection and other dangerous viruses that could turn into pandemics.

The new program will invest in “accelerati­ng things that are already in progress” for the virus that causes covid-19 but also would work to come up with treatments for other viruses, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert. He announced the investment Thursday at a White House briefing.

“There are few treatments that exist for many of the viruses that have pandemic potential,” Fauci said, including Ebola, dengue, West Nile and Middle East respirator­y syndrome.

But, he added, “Vaccines clearly remain the centerpiec­e of our arsenal.”

The Antiviral Program for Pandemics will also support research on entirely new drugs for viruses.

A number of other viruses, including influenza, HIV and hepatitis C, can be treated with a simple pill. But despite more than a year of research, no such pill exists to treat someone with a coronaviru­s infection before it wreaks havoc.

Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administra­tion’s program for accelerati­ng coronaviru­s research, invested far more money in the developmen­t of vaccines than of treatments, a gap that the new program will try to fill.

Fauci said he looked forward to a time when covid-19 patients could pick up antiviral pills from a pharmacy as soon as they tested positive for the coronaviru­s or developed symptoms.

“I wake up in the morning, I don’t feel very well, my sense of smell and taste go away, I get a sore throat,” Fauci said in an interview. “I call up my doctor, and I say, ‘I have covid, and I need a prescripti­on.’”

Fauci’s support for research on antiviral pills stems from his own experience fighting AIDS three decades ago.

In the 1990s, his institute conducted research that led to some of the first antiviral pills for HIV, “protease inhibitors” that block an essential virus protein and can keep the virus at bay for a lifetime.

In the early 2000s, researcher­s found that an antiviral called sofosbuvir could cure hepatitis C close to 100% of the time. Tamiflu, an overthe-counter pill for influenza, can cut the time it takes to recover from an infection and reduce the chances that a bout of the flu will land someone in the hospital.

Norbert Bischofber­ger, one of the inventors of Tamiflu, said coronaviru­ses were on his radar in recent years when he worked at Gilead Sciences.

“We thought about corona, we knew about corona — we just found it almost impossible to do clinical studies. Let’s say you have a drug, and you want to do a clinical study to show it’s safe and effective. Safe, that’s the easy part,” said Bischofber­ger, who is now president of Kronos Bio, a company focused on cancer. But he said in order to show it works outside of lab experiment­s, “You need for corona to be around.”

At the start of the pandemic, researcher­s began testing existing antivirals in people hospitaliz­ed with severe covid-19. But many of those trials failed to show any benefit from the antivirals.

In hindsight, the choice to work in hospitals was a mistake. Scientists now know that the best time to try to block the coronaviru­s is in the first few days of the disease, when it is replicatin­g rapidly and the immune system has not yet mounted a defense.

Many people overcome their infection and recuper- ate, but in others, the immune system misfires and starts damaging tissues instead of viruses. It is this self-inflicted damage that sends many people with covid-19 to the hospital as the coronaviru­s replicatio­n is tapering off. So a drug that blocks replicatio­n early in an infection might very well fail in a trial on patients who have progressed to later stages of the disease.

So far, only one antiviral has demonstrat­ed a clear benefit to people in hospitals: remdesivir. Originally investigat­ed as a potential cure for Ebola, the drug seems to shorten the course of covid-19 when given to patients intravenou­sly. In October, it became the first — and so far, the only — antiviral drug to gain full FDA approval to treat the disease.

Yet remdesivir’s performanc­e has left many researcher­s underwhelm­ed. In November, the World Health Organizati­on recommende­d against using the drug.

Remdesivir might work better if people could take it earlier in the course of covid-19 as a pill. But in its approved formulatio­n, the compound does not work orally. It cannot survive the passage from the mouth to the stomach to the circulator­y system.

The antimalari­al drug hydroxychl­oroquine, the HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir, and the antiparasi­tic drug ivermectin all showed hints of promise and have been touted at various stages of the pandemic as antivirals. None is recommende­d for use, although trials continue.

‘REALLY AMAZING’ MOLECULE

Researcher­s from around the world are testing other antivirals already known to work in pill form. One such compound, called molnupirav­ir, was developed in 2019 by researcher­s at Emory University and has been tested against viruses including influenza and Venezuelan equine encephalit­is virus.

In partnershi­p with Ridgeback Biotherape­utics of Miami, the Emory team carried out experiment­s in mice that were so impressive that Merck approached them to bring the drug into human clinical trials for covid-19.

“We thought this molecule was really amazing,” said Daria Hazuda, vice president of infectious disease and vaccine research at Merck.

The companies began a second study last fall, this time testing the drug on people recently diagnosed with covid-19. That trial is continuing, and Merck is recruiting volunteers with a higher risk of infection, such as older people with obesity and diabetes. Hazuda said the trial should deliver clear results by October.

Last year, the government’s funding of covid-19 treatments focused on a handful of candidates, such as monoclonal antibodies and remdesivir. Many other studies on antivirals were small and underfunde­d. In January, the incoming Biden administra­tion began designing a new program dedicated to antiviral pills.

A PILL BY FALL?

Last week saw the first results of this planning. The Department of Health and Human Services announced that it would purchase 1.7 million doses of molnupirav­ir from Merck at a cost of $1.2 billion, provided that the current trial leads to authorizat­ion by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The government may seek similar deals for two other antivirals far along in clinical trials, said Dr. David Kessler, chief science officer of the Biden administra­tion’s covid-19 response team.

The hope “is that we can get an antiviral by the end of the fall that can help us close out this chapter of the epidemic,” Kessler said in an interview.

One of the drugs the government is considerin­g is AT527, developed by Atea Pharmaceut­icals. The compound has already proved safe and effective as a treatment for hepatitis C, and early studies suggested it might also work against covid-19. Roche has partnered with Atea to test it in people, and the companies are running a late-stage clinical trial.

The other drug on the government’s radar was created by scientists at Pfizer, adapted from a molecule initially designed in the early 2000s as a potential drug for SARS, or severe acute respirator­y syndrome. That drug had sat on the shelf for years, but last spring the scientists decided to modify its structure so it would work against the new coronaviru­s’s protease. More than 200 Pfizer researcher­s joined forces on the effort on the molecule, known for now as PF-07321332.

The drug had been designed to be taken intravenou­sly, but the Pfizer researcher­s succeeded in altering its structure to work as a pill. When mice were given the drug orally, it reached high enough levels in the body to block the coronaviru­s. Pfizer launched a clinical trial in March to study its safety in people and expects to move to later-stage testing next month.

Kessler acknowledg­ed that there will be challenges in using such pills to drive down hospitaliz­ations and deaths from covid-19. People will need to gain access to the drugs as soon as they test positive. “Your testing programs are going to have to be linked to your treatment,” he said.

Fauci’s support for research on antiviral pills stems from his own experience fighting AIDS three decades ago.

 ?? (AP/Rajanish Kakade) ?? A traveler is tested for the coronaviru­s Thursday at a train station in Mumbai, India.
(AP/Rajanish Kakade) A traveler is tested for the coronaviru­s Thursday at a train station in Mumbai, India.
 ?? (AP/Achmad Ibrahim) ?? Family members watch workers bury a coffin of a loved one Thursday at Padurenan cemetery in Bekasi, West Java, in a special section for coronaviru­s victims. Indonesian President Joko Widodo ordered authoritie­s to speed up the country’s vaccinatio­n campaign as the World Health Organizati­on warned Thursday of the need to increase social restrictio­ns amid a fresh surge of cases caused by variants of the virus.
(AP/Achmad Ibrahim) Family members watch workers bury a coffin of a loved one Thursday at Padurenan cemetery in Bekasi, West Java, in a special section for coronaviru­s victims. Indonesian President Joko Widodo ordered authoritie­s to speed up the country’s vaccinatio­n campaign as the World Health Organizati­on warned Thursday of the need to increase social restrictio­ns amid a fresh surge of cases caused by variants of the virus.
 ??  ?? Fauci
Fauci

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