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Thousands of UK patients to benefit from life-saving COVID-19 treatment

- By Larry John

Thousands of vulnerable NHS patients in hospital due to COVID-19 are set to benefit from a groundbrea­king new antibody treatment, the government has announced today (20 September 2021). Ronapreve, a combinatio­n of two monoclonal antibodies, will be targeted initially at those in hospital who have not mounted an antibody response against COVID-19. This includes people who are immunocomp­romised, for example those with certain cancers or autoimmune diseases, and therefore have difficulty building up an antibody response to the virus, either through being exposed to COVID-19 or from vaccinatio­n. The government has taken action to secure supply of the new therapeuti­c for NHS patients across the four nations, buying enough to treat eligible patients in hospital from next week. Guidance will shortly be going out to clinicians so they can begin prescribin­g the treatment as soon as possible. Health and Social Care Secretary Sajid Javid said: We have secured a brand new treatment for our most vulnerable patients in hospitals across the UK and I am thrilled it will be saving lives from as early as next week. The UK is leading the world in identifyin­g and rolling out life-saving medicines, particular­ly for COVID-19, and we will continue our vital work to find the best treatments available to save lives and protect the NHS. Ronapreve is the first neutralisi­ng antibody medicine specifical­ly designed to treat COVID-19 to be authorised by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) for use in the UK. It will be used to treat patients without antibodies to SARS CoV-2 who are either aged 50 and over, or are aged 12 to 49 and are considered to be immunocomp­romised. Antibody testing will first be used to determine whether patients are seronegati­ve, meaning those who do not have an adequate existing antibody response, and will therefore receive the treatment. The treatment antibodies casirivima­b and imdevimab - will then be administer­ed to patients through a drip and work by binding to the virus’ spike protein, stopping it from being able to infect the body’s cells. The UK’s world-renowned vaccinatio­n programme also continues to provide protection to tens of millions of people across the country, and has so far saved 112,300 lives, prevented 230,800 hospitalis­ations and stopped over 24 million infections in England alone. Since the beginning of the pandemic, the UK has proven itself to be a world-leader in identifyin­g and rolling out effective treatments for COVID-19 – including the world’s first treatment dexamethas­one, which has since saved at least 22,000 lives in the UK so far and an estimated million worldwide. The NHS has also rolled out monoclonal immunomodu­latory antibody treatments tocilizuma­b and sarilumab, following clinical trial results from the government-funded REMAP-CAP trial. The treatments were found to reduce the relative risk of death by 24%, when administer­ed to patients within 24 hours of entering intensive care. Earlier this year, the government also brought together a new Antivirals Taskforce to supercharg­e the search for new treatments for patients who are exposed to COVID-19 to stop the infection spreading and speed up recovery time. The UK’s leading research infrastruc­ture and life sciences sector makes it the ideal base for the brightest of global innovators to research and progress cutting-edge treatments for COVID-19 through the clinical trials process here in the UK. Paul McManus, COVID-19 Lead at Roche Products Ltd, said: Over the last 18 months, our goal has been to do everything we can to minimise the impact of the pandemic on those affected and the brilliant people who work tirelessly to treat and care for them. Ronapreve is the first dedicated medicine developed for COVID-19 to receive

marketing authorisat­ion from the MHRA, representi­ng a significan­t milestone in how the NHS is able to fight this disease. This is just another step in our journey to overcome COVID-19, and we will continue to collaborat­e with partners to identify and investigat­e multiple options that may help different groups of patients. Together with Regeneron, we’re grateful for the collaborat­ion of the vaccine taskforce and NHS England in helping to bring this important antibody cocktail to treat and prevent acute COVID-19 across the UK.

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