Albany Times Union

COVID -19 pill moves closer to full approval

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill Paxlovid won another vote of confidence from U.S. health advisers Thursday, clearing the way for its full regulatory approval by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The medication has been used by millions of Americans since the FDA granted it emergency use authorizat­ion in late 2021. The agency has the final say on giving Pfizer’s drug full approval and is expected to decide by May.

A panel of outside experts voted 16-1 that Paxlovid remains a safe and effective treatment for high-risk adults with COVID-19 who are more likely to face hospitaliz­ation and death due to the virus.

“We still have many groups that stand to benefit from Paxlovid, including unvaccinat­ed persons, under-vaccinated persons, the elderly and the immuno-compromise­d,” said Dr. Richard Murphy of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The FDA said using Paxlovid in high-risk patients could prevent 1,500 COVID-19 deaths and 13,000 hospitaliz­ations per week.

The panel’s positive vote was widely expected, given that Paxlovid has been the go-to treatment against COVID-19, especially since an entire group of antibody drugs has been sidelined as the virus mutated.

The U.S. continues reporting about 4,000 deaths and 35,000 hospitaliz­ations weekly, the FDA noted.

The agency asked its panel of independen­t medical experts to address several lingering questions involving Paxlovid, including which people currently benefit from treatment and whether the drug plays a role in cases of COVID-19 rebound.

The panel agreed with assessment­s by both the FDA and Pfizer that found no clear link between the use of Paxlovid and returning symptoms, but said more informatio­n is needed from studies and medical records data. High-profile cases drew attention to the issue last year, including President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden.

Between 10 percent and 16 percent of patients across multiple Pfizer studies had symptoms return, regardless of whether they’d received Paxlovid or a dummy pill. Such cases “likely reflect natural COVID-19 progressio­n,” the FDA concluded.

The federal government has purchased more than 20 million doses of Paxlovid and encouraged health profession­als to prescribe it aggressive­ly to help prevent severe COVID-19. But that’s led to concerns of overprescr­ibing and questions of whether some patients are needlessly getting the drug.

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