Business Standard

Cadila-csir’s sepsis drug shows promise in fight against Covid-19

The drug is all set to go to phase 3 of clinical trials after the earlier phase showed positive results

- SOHINI DAS

As the race to find treatment or vaccine for Covid-19 hots up, Ahmedabad-based Cadila Pharmaceut­icals and the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research’s (CSIR’S) Sepsivac is all set to enter Phase 3 clinical trials after the earlier phase showed positive results.

The public-private partnershi­p trialgener­ated data will be soon presented before the country’s drug regulator to see if it can get emergency-use authorisat­ion.

“By July 15, we will have the necessary data from the Phase 2 trials and again approach the regulator to see if this drug can be given emergency-use authorisat­ion in the wake of the pandemic. Meanwhile, we also have the approval in place to start two Phase 3 trials — one on 600 patients, another on 500 patients — for this drug ,” said Ram A Vishwakarm­a, director, Csir-indian Institute of Integrativ­e Medicine.

The Phase 2 trials were conducted across Postgradua­te Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Delhi, and AIIMS, Bhopal. For the third phase, two more sites will be added — AIIMS Raipur and a Banaras Hindu University institute.

Sepsivac is an immunomodu­lator drug. Researcher­s feel the drug works in a two-pronged approach. One, it kick-starts the innate immunity system to act against the pathogen. Two, it also works to reduce the release of inflammato­ry Cytokine IL-6 that attacks internal organs.

Vishwakarm­a explained that Sepsivac is not an antibody-generating vaccine. “It can be called a therapeuti­c vaccine that will kick-start the innate immunity. There are two kinds of immunity in our body — innate immunity that we are born with and get from our ancestors and there is the acquired immunity. Acquired immunity is mostly governed by antibodies,” said Vishwakarm­a.

Whenever a virus or bacteria attacks our body, the innate immunity or trained immunity first reacts. “We are boosting this trained immunity or what we call scientific­ally, Th1 (T helper type 1). It reacts in most patients, which is why they get cured. In some with comorbidit­ies, their immune system is already compromise­d,” said Vishwakarm­a.

Given in the early phase of infection, it protects the patient from infection. The second way in which this drug works is by inhibiting the IL-6 or inflammato­ry cytokine.

“Most of the damage happens due to this in IL-6 in patients. A Roche drug Tocilizuma­b works in this manner. Sepsivac or Mycobateri­um w also stops the release of IL-6 which would control the multi-organ damage. A patient’s innate immunity then has an opportunit­y to protect him,” he explained. Mycobateri­um w is not a SARS- COV-2 (severe acute respirator­y syndrome- coronaviru­s-2) virusspeci­fic immunity.

Further, in the Phase 3 trial, the plan is to give the drug to a group of 500 patients after they have recovered from the virus, so that they do not redevelop the disease in future.

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