China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nation’s antibody therapy could be in use soon

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s domestical­ly developed monoclonal neutralizi­ng antibody therapy for COVID-19 treatment could be used clinically in the country within weeks after it was included in the country’s Diagnosis and Treatment Protocol for COVID-19 — adding a tool to the global arsenal against the coronaviru­s.

The global fight could also get a boost when the United States Food and Drug Administra­tion makes a decision in one or two months on the applicatio­n for emergency use authorizat­ion for the dual-antibody therapy, said Zhang Linqi, director of the Global Health and Infectious Diseases Research Center and Comprehens­ive AIDS Research Center at Tsinghua University’s

School of Medicine.

“It’s a success of the cooperatio­n among Brii Bioscience­s, Tsinghua University and the Third People’s Hospital of Shenzhen, which have jointly developed the antibodies,” said Zhang, who led the research team. “The team has accomplish­ed a task within 20 months that usually takes 10 years.”

Monoclonal antibodies mimic those generated by the body to fight the virus that causes COVID-19. Antibody therapies can act more rapidly than the body’s own process of making antibodies.

China’s drug authority granted emergency approval for the antibody cocktail, administer­ed via injections, on Dec 8, based on positive final and interim results from the phase 3 clinical trial with 847 enrolled outpatient­s around the world. The trial was sponsored by the US National Institutes of Health, according to Brii Bioscience­s, a multinatio­nal biotech company with offices in China and the US.

Trial data found that the therapy could reduce the risk of hospitaliz­ation and death in high-risk patients by around 80 percent.

Regarding the emerging Omicron variant of the virus, Zhang said that in vitro pseudoviru­s testing data suggests that the therapy’s combinatio­n of monoclonal neutralizi­ng antibodies will work against Omicron and other variants.

Moreover, the therapy can protect people, especially those whose physical condition doesn’t allow vaccinatio­n, from becoming infected by COVID-19 for around nine to 12 months, he said.

It’s a success of the cooperatio­n among Brii Bioscience­s, Tsinghua University and the Third People’s Hospital of Shenzhen. ... The team has accomplish­ed a task within 20 months that usually takes 10 years.”

Zhang Linqi, Tsinghua University School of Medicine

Zhang, a veteran scientist in the fight against HIV/AIDS, said his previous experience helped a lot in the COVID battle.

“The whole developmen­t process of the new combinatio­n therapy will also contribute to future research and applicatio­n of the HIV antibodies, which was like a big test for us,” he said. “The team will continue to conduct research on better antibodies and strengthen the efficacy of the current therapy and make it more long-lasting.”

He also said clinical applicatio­n of the therapy faces challenges, including that production of monoclonal antibodies takes around two to three months.

“To use the therapy efficientl­y and scientific­ally, the authoritie­s need to make a good calculatio­n of the quantity needed, and the company would then produce them based on orders,” he said.

Furthermor­e, monoclonal antibodies are usually expensive. Industry insiders said the Chinese government might include the combinatio­n therapy in the public health insurance program, though nothing has been decided.

Zhang, noting that China has used science and technology to fight COVID-19 since the beginning of the outbreak, said: “Science is the core to solving the issue. Science has shown its power in all sectors, from medical treatment, medicine and vaccine developmen­t to prevention and control measures.”

 ?? WANG YING / XINHUA ?? People line up in New York City’s Times Square on Monday for COVID-19 tests. Omicron is now the dominant strain of the coronaviru­s in the United States, accounting for 73 percent of new infections last week.
WANG YING / XINHUA People line up in New York City’s Times Square on Monday for COVID-19 tests. Omicron is now the dominant strain of the coronaviru­s in the United States, accounting for 73 percent of new infections last week.

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