Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Pfizer says its COVID pill cuts hospitaliz­ations and deaths in high-risk patients by 89%

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

Pfizer Inc. said its COVID-19 pill reduced hospitaliz­ations and deaths in high-risk patients by 89%, a result that has the potential to upend how the disease caused by the coronaviru­s is treated and alter the course of the pandemic. The shares surged.

The drugmaker said in a statement Friday that it was no longer taking new patients in a clinical trial of the treatment “due to the overwhelmi­ng efficacy” and planned to submit the findings to U.S. regulatory authoritie­s for emergency authorizat­ion as soon as possible.

The results mean there are now two promising candidates for treating COVID-19 patients early in the course of the disease. Last month, Merck & Co. and partner Ridgeback Biotherape­utics LP submitted their experiment­al pill to regulators after a study showed it slashed the risk of getting seriously ill or dying by half in patients with mildto-moderate COVID-19.

“We’ve already secured millions of doses and the therapy would be another tool in our toolbox to protect people” from COVID’S worst effects, President Joe Biden said at the White House.

Pfizer shares closed up 10.86%.

A pill that could be taken at home at the first sign of symptoms is a crucial tool for taming the COVID-19 crisis globally, so long as it’s widely available. A Pfizer spokespers­on said submission­s to other regulatory agencies will occur shortly after the U.S. filing.

In Pfizer’s trial of 1,219 unvaccinat­ed adults, five days of treatment with its drug dramatical­ly reduced the rate of hospitaliz­ation when it was started within either three days or five days of symptom onset, the company said. The drug, Paxlovid, binds to an enzyme called a protease to stop the virus from replicatin­g itself. Some drugs for HIV work in a similar way.

Overall, just 0.8% of people who started treatment within three days of getting sick ended up in the hospital and no one died, while

7% of people who got a placebo in that window were later hospitaliz­ed or died. Similar results were found when the drug was started within five days of symptom onset. The result, which hasn’t been published in a medical journal, was highly statistica­lly significan­t, Pfizer said.

Current treatment options for COVID aren’t ideal. Monoclonal antibodies from companies like Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. and Eli Lilly & Co. reduce hospitaliz­ations, but the infusions are hard to manufactur­e and must be given in a medical office, adding to the strain on health systems.

Other medication­s like Gilead Sciences Inc.’s remdesivir are used to treat much sicker people who are already in the hospital. Lowcost steroid dexamethas­one, while very effective, is usually only given to gravely ill patients.

 ?? Tribune News Service/afp via Getty Images ?? A sign posted on a door at the Obregon Park COVID-19 vaccine site reminds people to get their booster shots as children age 5-11 receive their first dose at the facility on Thursday in Los Angeles.
Tribune News Service/afp via Getty Images A sign posted on a door at the Obregon Park COVID-19 vaccine site reminds people to get their booster shots as children age 5-11 receive their first dose at the facility on Thursday in Los Angeles.

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