Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Drug offers hope amid spikes in virus cases

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ATLANTA — As nations grapple with new outbreaks and spiking death tolls from the coronaviru­s, a commonly available drug appeared Tuesday to offer hope that the most seriously ill could have a better chance of survival.

The pandemic has forced countries to impose lockdowns and tough restrictio­ns on daily life and travel, but infections have surged as they eased these rules and reopened their economies. With no vaccine available and much still unknown about the virus, researcher­s in England announced the first drug shown to save lives.

The drug, called dexamethas­one, reduced deaths by 35% in patients who needed treatment with breathing machines and by 20% in those only needing supplement­al oxygen, researcher­s in England said. It did not appear to help less ill patients.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the drug was the “biggest breakthrou­gh yet” in treating the coronaviru­s, and top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci called it “a significan­t improvemen­t in the available therapeuti­c options that we have.”

Britain is making dexamethas­one available to patients on the country’s National Health Service. The U.K. Department of Health said the drug had been approved to treat all hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients requiring oxygen, effective immediatel­y. It said the U.K. had stockpiled enough to treat 200,000 patients.

“It’s on almost every pharmacy shelf in every hospital, it’s available throughout the world, and it’s very cheap,” said Peter Horby of Oxford University, one of the leaders of the trial that randomly assigned 2,104 patients to get the drug and compared them with 4,321 patients getting only usual care.

Since the virus first emerged in China late last year and spread around the globe, there have been more than 8 million confirmed cases and more than 435,000 deaths.

The U.S. death toll has reached 116,526, according to Johns Hopkins University. That surpasses the number of Americans who died in World War I, when 116,516 were killed — although both death tolls are far from precise.

The U.S. has the most confirmed infections and deaths from COVID-19 in the world, and as parts of the economy have reopened in recent weeks, cases have surged in places such as Texas, Florida and Arizona.

Countries that appeared to have largely contained the virus are seeing outbreaks.

In China, authoritie­s on Tuesday locked down a third neighborho­od in Beijing to contain an outbreak that has infected more than 100 people.

Most of the cases have been linked to the capital’s Xinfadi wholesale food market, and people lined up for massive testing of anyone who had visited in the past two weeks or come in contact with them.

New Zealand, which hadn’t seen a new case in three weeks, was investigat­ing a case in which two women who flew in from London to see a dying parent were allowed to leave quarantine and drive halfway across the country before they were tested and found to be positive.

The re-emergence of the virus in the country once praised for how it handled infections raised the specter that internatio­nal air travel could trigger a fresh wave of contagion just as countries are reopening airports to stimulate tourism.

Canada and the U.S. will extend to July 21 an agreement to keep their border closed to nonessenti­al travel, with many Canadians fearing cases arriving from the U.S. “This is a decision that will protect people on both sides of the border as we continue to fight COVID-19,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.

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