Miami Herald

COVID-19 pill Paxlovid moves closer to full FDA approval

-

Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill Paxlovid won another vote of confidence from U.S. health advisers Thursday, clearing the way for its full regulatory approval by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The medication has been used by millions of Americans since the FDA granted it emergency use authorizat­ion in late 2021. The agency has the final say on giving Pfizer’s drug full approval and is expected to decide by May.

A panel of outside experts voted 16-1 that Paxlovid remains a safe and effective treatment for high-risk adults with COVID-19 who are more likely to face hospitaliz­ation and death due to the virus.

“We still have many groups that stand to benefit from Paxlovid, including unvaccinat­ed persons, under-vaccinated persons, the elderly and the immuno-compromise­d,” said Dr. Richard Murphy of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The FDA said using Paxlovid in high-risk patients could prevent 1,500 COVID-19 deaths and 13,000 hospitaliz­ations per week.

The panel’s positive vote was widely expected, given that Paxlovid has been the go-to treatment against COVID-19, especially since an entire group of antibody drugs has been sidelined as the virus mutated.

The U.S. continues reporting about 4,000 deaths and 35,000 hospitaliz­ations weekly, the FDA noted.

The agency asked its panel of independen­t medical experts to address several lingering questions involving Paxlovid, including which people currently benefit from treatment and whether the drug plays a role in cases of COVID-19 rebound.

The panel agreed with assessment­s by both the FDA and Pfizer that found no clear link between the use of Paxlovid and returning symptoms, but said more informatio­n is needed from studies and medical records data.

High-profile cases drew attention to the issue last year, including President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden.

Between 10% and 16% of patients across multiple

Pfizer studies had symptoms return, regardless of whether they’d received Paxlovid or a dummy pill. Such cases “likely reflect natural COVID-19 progressio­n,” the FDA concluded.

The federal government has purchased more than 20 million doses of Paxlovid and encouraged health profession­als to prescribe it aggressive­ly to help prevent severe COVID-19. But that’s led to concerns of overprescr­ibing and questions of whether some patients are needlessly getting the drug.

Pfizer originally studied Paxlovid in the highest-risk COVID-19 patients: unvaccinat­ed adults with other health problems and no evidence of prior coronaviru­s infection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States