Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study: Drug limits illness

Remdesivir blocked virus

- By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press

For the first time, a major study suggests that an experiment­al drug works against the new coronaviru­s, and U.S. government officials said Wednesday that they would work to make it available to appropriat­e patients as quickly as possible.

In a study of 1,063 patients sick enough to be hospitaliz­ed, Gilead Sciences’s remdesivir shortened the time to recovery by 31 percent — 11 days on average versus 15 days for those just given usual care, officials said. The drug also might be reducing deaths, although that’s not certain from the partial results revealed so far.

“What it has proven is that a drug can block this virus,” the National Institutes of Health’s Dr.

Anthony Fauci said.

“This will be the standard of care,” and any other potential treatments will now have to be tested against or in combinatio­n with remdesivir, he said.

No drugs are approved now for treating the coronaviru­s, which has killed about 226,000 people worldwide since it emerged late last year in China. An effective treatment for

COVID-19 could have a profound effect on the pandemic’s impact, especially because a vaccine is likely to be a year or more away.

Fauci revealed the results while speaking from the White House.

Remdesivir was being evaluated in at least seven major studies, but this one, led by the NIH, was the strictest test. Independen­t monitors notified study leaders just days ago that the drug was working, so it was no longer ethical to continue with a placebo group.

Dr. Elizabeth Hohmann, who enrolled 49 patients in the experiment at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, said study leaders were told Tuesday night that the results are based on “the first cut of 460 patients.”

“There’s over 1,000 in the study so there’s a lot more informatio­n to come” and full results need to be seen, she said. “I’m cautiously optimistic.”

Dr. Babafemi Taiwo, chief of infectious diseases at Northweste­rn Medicine, which also participat­ed in the study, called the results “really exciting.”

“For the first time we have a large, well-conducted trial” showing a treatment helps, he said. “This is not a miracle drug … but it’s definitely better than anything we have.”

Fauci said the partial results showed that the drug had “a clear-cut significan­t positive effect,” shortening the time to hospital discharge by four days.

By comparison, antiviral drugs for the flu shorten illness by about one day on average and only when started within a day or two of symptoms first appearing.

No informatio­n was given on side effects. Fauci said full results would be published in a medical journal soon. He said final numbers might change a bit but that the study’s overall conclusion would not.

Remdesivir is among dozens of treatments being tried against the coronaviru­s but was the farthest along in testing. It’s given through an IV and blocks an enzyme the virus uses to copy its genetic material.

 ??  ?? Anthony Fauci
Anthony Fauci

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