The Star Malaysia

Testing new drugs for Covid-19

Three medication­s will soon undergo internatio­nal clinical trials to see if they are effective in treating this disease.

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THE World Health Organizati­on (WHO) announced last Wednesday major internatio­nal trials of three drugs to find out whether they improve the condition of hospitalis­ed Covid-19 patients.

Artesunate, imatinib and infliximab will be tested on thousands of volunteer patients in more than 600 hospitals in 52 countries.

“Finding more effective and accessible therapeuti­cs for Covid19 patients remains a critical need,” said WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

Artesunate is a treatment for severe malaria; imatinib, a drug used for certain cancers; and infliximab, a treatment for immune system disorders such as Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

The coordinate­d research across dozens of countries allows the trial to assess multiple treatments using a single protocol, thereby generating robust estimates on the effect a drug may have on death, including moderate effects, said the WHO.

The drugs were chosen by an independen­t expert panel for their potential in reducing the risk of death in hospitalis­ed Covid-19 patients.

They were donated for the trial by their manufactur­ers and are already being shipped out to the hospitals involved.

The testing of artesunate, imatinib and infliximab on Covid-19 patients is the second stage of the WHO’S Solidarity hunt for effective treatments against the killer disease.

Previously, four drugs were evaluated by the Solidarity trial, involving almost 13,000 patients in 500 hospitals across 30 countries.

The provisiona­l results issued in October showed that remdesivir, hydroxychl­oroquine, lopinavir and interferon had little or no effect on hospitalis­ed patients with Covid-19.

The final results are due out next month.

“We already have many tools to prevent, test for, and treat Covid19, including oxygen, dexamethas­one and IL-6 blockers.

“But we need more, for patients at all ends of the clinical spectrum, from mild to severe disease,” Ghebreyesu­s told a news conference.

The WHO Covid-19 Therapeuti­cs Advisory Group recommende­d evaluating the anti-inflammato­ry properties of artesunate, which has been extensivel­y used in the treatment of malaria and other parasitic diseases for more than 30 years, and is regarded as being very safe.

A randomised clinical trial in the Netherland­s reported that imatinib, a small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor, might confer clinical benefit in hospitalis­ed Covid-19 patients.

Meanwhile, infliximab has shown favourable efficacy and safety in restrictin­g broad spectrum inflammati­on, including in the elderly population­s who are the most clinically vulnerable to Covid-19.

The novel coronaviru­s has killed at least 4.3 million people since the outbreak emerged in China in December 2019, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP.

Nearly 204 million cases worldwide have been registered.

Lamenting that the 200 millionth known case came just six months after the 100 millionth, Ghebreyesu­s said the real number of cases was “much higher”.

“Whether we reach 300 million, and how fast we get there, depends on all of us,” the UN health agency chief said.

“At the current trajectory, we could pass 300 million reported cases early next year.

“But we can change that. “We’re all in this together, but the world is not acting like it.”

The WHO has consistent­ly decried the drastic imbalance between rich and poor countries in access to Covid-19 vaccines. – AFP Relaxnews

 ??  ?? Will artesunate, imatinib or infliximab be the drug that can help manage Covid-19 effectivel­y? — AFP
Will artesunate, imatinib or infliximab be the drug that can help manage Covid-19 effectivel­y? — AFP

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