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Closely watched arthritis drug disappoints in COVID-19 trial


Bangladeshpost
Published : 28 Apr 2020 07:56 PM | Updated : 01 Sep 2020 01:47 AM

An arthritis drug that was being closely watched for its potential use against COVID-19 has delivered disappointing results in clinical trials, its makers said Monday, reports AFP.

Kevzara, which is made by Regeneron and Sanofi, does not attack the novel coronavirus but instead inhibits an abnormal immune response called a cytokine storm that causes the lungs of the sickest patients to become inflamed, leaving them fighting for their lives on ventilators.

An early small study in China had appeared promising, but the drug showed no benefit over a placebo in a larger US study of 276 patients with severe disease -- that is to say, those requiring oxygen but not ventilators.

There was, however, a ray of hope for those who were critical, defined as needing mechanical ventilation or high-flow oxygenation.  In this group, 44 were on a placebo, 94 were given a low dose and 88 were given a high dose.

Fifty-five percent of patients on the placebo died by the end of the study period, compared with 46 percent on the lower dose and 32 percent on the high dose. The trial will continue among this critical group.

We await results of the ongoing Phase 3 trial to learn more about COVID-19, and better understand whether some patients may benefit from Kevzara treatment, said Geo­rge Yanco­poulos, Regeneron's president and co-founder.

The company is separately developing an antibody cocktail that will directly target the virus and that it hopes to advance into human trials by June.

These antibodies are being acquired by infecting mice that have had their immune systems  genetically modified to become human-like.