Boston Herald

Ebola drugs show promise in Congo, study says

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WASHINGTON — Two of four experiment­al Ebola drugs being tested in Congo seem to be saving lives, internatio­nal health authoritie­s announced Monday.

The preliminar­y findings prompted an early halt to a major study on the drugs and a decision to prioritize their use in the African country, where a yearlong outbreak has killed more than 1,800 people.

The early results mark “some very good news,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, which helped fund the study. With these drugs, “we may be able to improve the survival of people with Ebola.”

The two drugs — one developed by Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals and the other by NIH researcher­s — are antibodies that work by blocking the virus.

While research shows there is an effective albeit experiment­al vaccine against Ebola — one now being used in Congo — no studies have signaled which of several potential treatments were best to try once people became sick. During the West Africa Ebola epidemic several years ago, studies showed a hint that another antibody mixture named ZMapp worked, but not clear proof.

So with the current out- break in Congo, researcher­s compared ZMapp to three other drugs — Regeneron’s compound, the NIH’s called mAb114 and an antiviral drug named remdesivir.

The data is preliminar­y, Fauci stressed. But in the study, significan­tly fewer people died among those given the Regeneron drug or the NIH’s — about 30% compared to half who received ZMapp. More striking, when patients sought care early — before too much virus was in their bloodstrea­m — mortality was just 6% with the Regeneron drug and 11% with the NIH compound, compared to about 24% for ZMapp, he said.

Among people who receive no care in the current outbreak, about threefourt­hs die, said Dr. Michael Ryan of the World Health Organizati­on. All of Congo’s Ebola treatment units have access to the two drugs, he added, saying he was hopeful that the news would persuade more patients to seek care — as soon as symptoms appear.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTOS ?? POSSIBLE IMPROVEMEN­T: A nurse prepares a vaccine against Ebola in Goma, Congo. Above left, a child receives a vaccine.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTOS POSSIBLE IMPROVEMEN­T: A nurse prepares a vaccine against Ebola in Goma, Congo. Above left, a child receives a vaccine.
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