Researchers develop roadmap for effective treatment of COVID- 19
Virus disrupts health services for NCDS, says WHO As Nigerian scientists make progress in vaccines, seek assistance
Ateam of United States ( U. S.) Food and Drug Administration ( FDA) researchers has developed a roadmap for effective treatment of COVID- 19, outlining key immunological events capable of accelerating from protective to a hyper- inflammatory response leading to lifethreatening conditions.
In a study published yesterday in the journal Frontiers in Immunology, they outlined a list of drugs either under study or under consideration for use in COVID- 19 based on their potential to influence the key immunological events.
The drugs include those that could inhibit Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus type 2 ( SARS- COV- 2) entry into host cells, antivirals with the potential to block SARS- COV- 2 replication or factors that could boost the antiviral response, monoclonal antibodies targeting pro- inflammatory cytokines that drive the hyper- inflammatory response and therapeutics that could improve the lungs functions.
The researchers reviewed all of the COVID- 19 clinical and research findings to date. They provided a breakdown of key immunological factors underlying the clinical stages of COVID- 19 illness that could potentially be targeted by existing therapeutic drugs.
A senior author of the review, Dr. Montserrat Puig of the FDA, said, “There are multiple factors involved in determining if the patient’s immune response will be insufficient or successful in combating the infection.
Besides, separate reports released by the World Health Organisation ( WHO) indicate that the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted prevention and treatment services for noncommunicable diseases ( NCDS) such as cancer, diabetes, kidney failure, hypertension and that several countries were monitoring and reporting antibiotic resistance.
The second report also showed a worrying number of bacterial infections were increasingly resistant to available medicines to treat them, just as DirectorGeneral of the WHO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said, “The results of this survey confirm what we have been hearing from countries for a number of weeks now.” WHO added that NCDS kill 41 million people yearly, an equivalent to 71 per cent of all deaths globally, adding that annually, 15 million people between the ages of 30 and 69 years die from NCDS; more than 85 per cent of these “premature” deaths occur in low- and middle- income countries.
Meanwhile, a group of Nigerian scientists from different institutions coordinated by Vice Chancellor, Precious Cornerstone University ( PCU), Ibadan, Professor Kola Oloke, has developed two potential vaccines that could prevent coronavirus pandemic.