A combination of flu and HIV medications may be able
to treat severe cases of 2019-nCoV, the new coronavirus that has emerged in
China, according to doctors in Thailand who have been caring for infected
patients. The team’s approach, which used large doses of the flu drug Oseltamivir combined with HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir, improved the
conditions of several patients at the Rajavithi Hospital in Bangkok.
“This is not the cure, but the patient’s condition
has vastly improved,” Rajavithi Hospital’s Kriangsak Atipornwanich says of one
70-year-old Chinese woman from Wuhan, according to Reuters. “From testing positive for 10 days
under our care, after applying this combination of medicine the test result
became negative within 48 hours.”
Thailand has so far recorded 19 cases of
coronavirus, Reuters reports, making it the country with the greatest number of
infections in Southeast Asia. Eight patients have recovered, while the rest are
still undergoing treatment. Officials say that the country’s health ministry
would meet today (February 3) to discuss the new treatment for severe cases. “We
still have to do more study to determine that this can be a standard
treatment,” Atipornwanich tells reporters.
Other countries have also showed interest in using
HIV drugs against the new coronavirus. China’s National Health Commission
recently began recommending lopinavir and ritonavir (sold together by
Illinois-based pharma AbbVie as Kaletra), according to Fierce Pharma. AbbVie has pledged to
donate about $1.5 million worth of Kaletra for the effort.
A randomized controlled clinical trial is now
underway in China to test the anti-HIV drugs’ efficacy, according to a study
published last week (January 24) in The Lancet. Scientists in Hong Kong
will also likely test these drugs in patients alongside immune system–boosting
medications, Hong Kong University microbiologist Yuen Kwok-Yung tells Science.
Other treatments being considered by national
governments and pharma companies include Gilead Sciences’s remdesivir, a drug
that was designed to treat Ebola but failed efficacy tests. “Gilead is working
closely with global health authorities to respond to the novel coronavirus
(2019-nCoV) outbreak through the appropriate experimental use of our
investigational compound remdesivir,” the company’s Chief Medical Officer
Merdad Parsey says in a statement.
Massachusetts-based Moderna Therapeutics, meanwhile,
is collaborating with the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases to develop an mRNA vaccine, Fierce
Pharma reports.
Catherine
Offord is an associate editor at The Scientist. Email her at cofford@the-scientist.com.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário