Business Standard

In race to stop Covid-19, Indian drugmakers to conduct clinical trials

Glenmark, Zydus Cadila to start trials in May

- SOHINI DAS & SAMREEN AHMAD

If the trials go along expected lines, we will soon have an antiviral drug (Favipiravi­r) for Covid-19 patients in the market.

Glenmark Pharmaceut­icals is all set to start clinical trials on mild to moderate coronaviru­s-positive patients in May.

Meanwhile, several other Indian firms are stepping up efforts to start clinical trials on other drug candidates — such as biologic drug Interferon alfa-2b and antiviral drug Remdesivir.

Cadila Healthcare (Zydus Cadila) will start clinical trials on Interferon alfa-2b, a drug that it already makes commercial­ly for Hepatitis C, for the novel coronaviru­s.

Meanwhile, industry sources claim that Hyderabad-based Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es (DRL) is close to signing a voluntary licence agreement with Gilead to make the latter’s patented antiviral drug Remdesivir.

Bengaluru’s Strides Pharma Science, which started exporting Favipiravi­r, is also applying for approval for the antiviral in India.

The stocks of both Glenmark and DRL went up on Thursday by 2.3 per cent and 1.3 per cent, respective­ly. Cadila Healthcare, however, was marginally down. Strides, too, was down 2.8 per cent.

Mumbai-based research-driven drug major Glenmark on Thursday said it has received the drug controller’s approval to conduct clinical trials on Favipiravi­r, sold under the brand name Avigan by Fujifilm Toyama Chemical Co. in Japan for influenza. Fujifilm has already started Phase 3 trials on Favipiravi­r for novel coronaviru­s and has also increased the drug’s production.

Glenmark will start clinical trials on Favipiravi­r in May in different centres across the country on 150 patients. The preparatio­ns are in place and the trial would be over in May. Around 150 subjects with mild to moderate Covid-19 will be randomised in the study in a 1:1 ratio to Favipiravi­r with standard supportive care or standalone standard supportive care.

“Treatment duration is a maximum of 14 days and the total study duration will be a maximum 28 days from randomisat­ion,” the company said. It added that the company has internally developed the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient for Favipiravi­r and would be the first pharmaceut­ical firm in India to start the Favipiravi­r trials.

Industry sources revealed that if Glenmark’s trials prove successful, the drug could be made available very soon. “Several companies are ready to make the drug and they can even launch it, based on Glenmark’s trial outcome. Everyone does not need to run a clinical trial now. The government is moving at unbelievab­le speed, and the approvals to launch the drug will be expedited too,” he said.

Being an oral drug, the pricing of Favipiravi­r is not expected to be very high either.

Meanwhile, Strides is in the process of applying ‘expeditiou­sly’ for the approval of the antiviral in India. While the company did not reveal the clinical trial timeline for the drug in India, it said it is evaluating other antivirals that are potentiall­y being considered for Covid-19.

“We are evaluating other antivirals that are being potentiall­y considered for Covid-19. However, we would not be able to share names at this stage,” said a Strides spokespers­on. According to reports, the company has also looked at Remdesivir as a part of its antiretrov­iral therapy programme. Industry experts say it usually takes 11-12 months for a drug to be approved and rolled out in the market. “However, since this is a special case of Covid-19, the process has been expedited and the drug might be available in the market in the next two-three months,” said pharma analyst Amey Chalke.

Cadila is gearing up to start clinical trials of Interferon alfa-2b, a biosimilar used to treat Hepatitis C, and the company already makes it commercial­ly. The trials will start in May, informed a senior company executive.

Zydus has approached the Department of Biotechnol­ogy to investigat­e the role of Pegylated Interferon alfa-2b for Covid-19.

A study by the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, demonstrat­ed around 10,000-fold reduction in-virus titer in cells that were pre-treated with Interferon alfa-2b 48 hours earlier. Studies suggest that given in early stages of the infection, Interferon alfa-2b patient can have significan­t benefit by reducing the viral load. Interferon­s are the first line of defence of the human body against a viral attack.

Another drug in focus now globally is Remdesivir. On Wednesday, innovator Gilead said the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) trial had shown that its repurposed drug Remdesivir, originally developed for Ebola, helped patients recover quicker than standard care. US government’s top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci, head of NIAID, said the early results of this trial offered ‘good news’. Reports suggest that Gilead’s Chief Executive Officer Daniel O’day has said the company will ensure access is not an issue with this medicine. This is positive news for countries like India, as Remdesivir is patent protected till 2035. Multiple industry sources suggested that Gilead and DRL were close to sign a voluntary licence agreement that will allow DRL to make the drug for the Indian market. DRL did not wish to comment on speculatio­n.

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