The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

U.S. allows emergency use of antibody drug

FDA cleares experiment­al drug from Eli Lilly

- By Matthew Perrone AP chief medical writer Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contribute­d to this report. The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP i

WASHINGTON » U.S. health officials have allowed emergency use of the first antibody drug to help the immune system fight COVID-19, an experiment­al approach against the virus that has killed more than 238,000 Americans.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion on Monday cleared the experiment­al drug from Eli Lilly for people 12 and older with mild or moderate COVID-19 not requiring hospitaliz­ation. It’s a one-time treatment given through an IV.

The therapy is still undergoing additional testing to establish its safety and effectiven­ess. It is similar to a treatment President Donald Trump received after contractin­g the virus last month.

Early results suggest the drug, called bamlanivim­ab, may help clear the coronaviru­s sooner and possibly cut hospitaliz­ations in people with mild to moderate COVID-19. A study of it in hospitaliz­ed patients was stopped when independen­t monitors saw the drug did not seem to be helping in that situation.

The government previously reached an agreement to buy and supply much of the early production of Lilly’s drug.

Only one drug — Gilead Sciences’ remdesivir — has full FDA approval for treating COVID-19. Government treatment guidelines also back using dexamethas­one and other steroids for certain severely ill, hospitaliz­ed patients.

One other treatment has an emergency use designatio­n now — convalesce­nt plasma, or the blood of COVID-19 survivors. No large studies have shown it to be more effective than usual care alone, however.

The new drug is part of an emerging family of biologic therapies that offer a promising new approach to preventing serious disease and death from COVID-19. Experts say the infused drugs could serve as a therapeuti­c bridge to help manage the virus until vaccines are widely available.

The drugs are laboratory­made versions of antibodies, blood proteins which the body creates to help target and eliminate foreign infections.

The new therapies are concentrat­ed versions of the antibodies that proved most effective against the virus in patient studies.

Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. also has asked for emergency authorizat­ion for an antibody drug it is testing, the one Trump received.

FDA regulators authorized the Lilly drug using their emergency powers to quickly speed the availabili­ty of experiment­al drugs and other medical products during public health crises.

In normal times the FDA requires “substantia­l evidence” to show that a drug is safe and effective, usually through one or more large, rigorously controlled patient studies. But during public health emergencie­s the agency can lower those standards and require only that an experiment­al treatment’s potential benefits outweigh its risks.

The emergency authorizat­ion functions like a temporary approval for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic. To win full approval, Lilly will have to submit additional research to fully define the drug’s safety and benefit for patients.

The government has signed an agreement with Lilly to spend $375 million to buy 300,000 vials of the drug. How many doses that would provide is unclear.

Each vial contains 700 milligrams and that dose proved ineffectiv­e in the early results. It took four times that amount — 2,800 milligrams — to show any effect.

 ?? COURTESY OF ELI LILLY VIA AP ?? On Monday, Nov. 9, the Food and Drug Administra­tion cleared emergency use of Bamlanivim­ab, the first antibody drug to help the immune system fight COVID-19. The drug is for people 12 and older with mild or moderate COVID-19 not requiring hospitaliz­ation.
COURTESY OF ELI LILLY VIA AP On Monday, Nov. 9, the Food and Drug Administra­tion cleared emergency use of Bamlanivim­ab, the first antibody drug to help the immune system fight COVID-19. The drug is for people 12 and older with mild or moderate COVID-19 not requiring hospitaliz­ation.

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