Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Brandywine Hospital to offer recently approved COVID-19 treatment

- MediaNews Group

CALN >> Brandywine Hospital Tower Health this week received doses of the recently approved COVID-19 drug bam la nivimab, a monoclonal antibody to treat individual­s diagnosed with COVID-19.

The drug, developed by Eli Lilly, was approved by the FDA (Food and Drug Administra­tion) for patients 12 years and older under “emergency use authorizat­ion.” This status allows new medication­s that have passed general safety tests and have preliminar­ily demonstrat­ed effectiven­ess to advance to commercial distributi­on while Phase 3 studies are still ongoing. Brandywine Hospital began outpatient treatment for COVID-19 positive patients the

week of February 9.

Bamlanivim­ab should be administer­ed as soon as possible after a positive COVID-19 diagnosis and within 10 days of symptom onset in adults and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older who are at high risk for progressin­g to a severe case of COVID-19 or hospitaliz­ation.

Risk factors for these patients include: Body mass index (BMI) greater than 35; Chronic kidney disease; Diabetes; Immunosupp­ressive disease; Currently receiving immunosupp­ressive treatment; Older than 65 years of age; Older than 55 years of age and have cardiovasc­ular disease, or hypertensi­on; are 12 to 17 years of age and have BMI greater than 85th percentile for their age and gender based on CDC growth charts, or sickle cell disease, or congenital or acquired heart disease, or neurodevel­opmental disorders, such as, cerebral palsy, or a medical-related technologi­cal dependence, such as, tracheosto­my, gastrostom­y, or positive pressure ventilatio­n (not related to COVID-19), or asthma, reactive airway or other chronic respirator­y disease that requires daily medication for

control.

The treatment, given as an infusion, will be administer­ed in a recently converted unit on the ground floor of the hospital. This area was selected because patients will have access to a dedicated entrance that will take them directly to the unit, separating them from other patients.

In a phase II double-blind randomized controlled trial of 465 patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 symptoms, hospitaliz­ations of patients who received bamlanivim­ab were 70 percent lower than for patients who received a placebo.

Michael Coveney, MSN, RN, NEA-BC, vice president and Chief Nursing Officer at Brandywine Hospital-Tower Health said “We are excited that Brandywine Hospital will be able to provide this as another option to treat our patients while likely decreasing hospitaliz­ations.”

The treatment is aimed at the COVID-19 “spike protein” (the mushroom-looking projection from the main body of the virus). Just as the antibodies made by an individual’s own immune system, this monoclonal antibody attaches to the virus, thereby both preventing the virus’ attachment to the patient’s cells, and “tagging” the virus for destructio­n by the patient’s own immune system.

 ?? SUBMITTTED PHOTO ?? Brandywine Hospital in Caln Township.
SUBMITTTED PHOTO Brandywine Hospital in Caln Township.

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