Remdesivir tests for covide treatments introduce new phase


A large federal study that found an antiviral drug, remdesivir, may record recovery in hospitals in Covid-19 patients, has begun a new phase of research.

Now it will investigate whether adding another medication, beta-interferon – which kills viruses in particular but can also tackle inflammation – would improve the effects of inhibitor and make recovery even faster.

To date, remdesivir, an experimental drug, has been approved for emergency use by the Food and Drug Administration to treat Covid patients. In a large clinical trial, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, remdesivir was shown that the recovery time was modestly short, averaging four days, but it did not reduce death.

The additional drug, beta-interferon, is already approved for the treatment of multiple sclerosis, which benefits from its anti-inflammatory effect.

The American trial, known as ACCT, is designed to move fast. Known as an adaptive trial, it is a race between treatments. It tests one treatment against another and when the results are in, the medicine that won this phase becomes the control drug for the next phase, in which it is tested against another drug.

The new phase is the third of the study. A total of 1,000 patients will receive inhibitor and placebo as inhibitors and beta-interferon.

Interferon is given as an injection. Remdesivir, made by Gilead Sciences, is given as an intravenous infusion.

A team of researchers held multiple group conferences to try to select the new test medication for Phase 3, said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an expert scholar at the University of California, San Francisco.

Their first suggestion was to try an experimental drug made by Merck known as EIDD-2801, which, like brake drug, is an antiviral but a pill. But they wanted something that was already approved and available for other diseases. They hope that by showing that the new medicine was effective, and already approved for other diseases, that doctors could give it to Covid patients immediately.

The group also considered dexamethasone, a common steroid that appears to be effective in reducing the risk of death in critically ill patients. The drug, which suppresses inflammation, may be even better when added to brake drug, the researchers reasoned.

But they worried. Dexamethasone is cheap and easily available. With widespread publicity about the apparent efficacy, many patients would participate in a study in which they could receive a placebo.

Then the group waited with beta-interferon, which went several things ahead. It is marketed as a treatment for multiple sclerosis, due to its weak anti-inflammatory properties. It kills the new coronavirus in laboratory studies and it kills SARS and MERS, which are also coronaviruses.

And, most impressively, said Dr Chin-Hong, the drug was tested twice in Covid patients, with promising results. One test was in England, where beta-interferon was delivered as a placebo to 101 patients in the hospital. They inhaled it into a nebulizer, a device similar to that used to deliver asthma medication.

The study, although small, found that those who received the drug performed better than those who received a placebo.

The other study, in Hong Kong, involved 127 patients receiving beta-interferon along with two antiviral drugs. The patients were hospitalized, but many were not seriously ill. The drug cocktail was superior to placebo in accelerating recovery.

But the US trial will be the only major rigorous trial to test beta interferon in Covid patients.

The first phase of inhibitory involvement began on February 21, testing the experimental drug against a placebo. That phase closed on April 19 after 1,000 patients were enrolled. The National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which sponsors the study, announced preliminary results on April 27.

The next phase began on May 8, testing for brakes and a placebo against brakes and baricitinib, an arthritis medicine that causes inflammation. Researchers hope that the addition of the arthritis medication would improve patients’ outcomes by triggering an overreaction of the immune system to the virus, a so-called cytokine storm, which can occur in seriously ill patients and can be fatal. After 1,000 patients were enrolled and followed up, that part of the study was closed.

Phase 2 results are still being evaluated. Dr Chin-Hong said he and others were fairly certain that if the addition of the arthritis drug, baricitinib, had been helped in any case, the effect would not have been enormous. If the drug had shown an impressive effect, the study’s data safety and monitoring table, which oversees the trial, would have stopped it and given each patient inhibitor and baricitinib. That combination would then have been the control drugs for Phase 3 of the study.

That did not happen.

Rather than wait while the data with baricitinib could be fully evaluated, the study moved on to its next phase, testing inhibitors and placebo against inhibitors and beta-interferon.

Registration began this month.

At the University of California, San Francisco and San Francisco General, nine patients have participated so far.

“We are approaching another today,” said Drs. Chin-Hong on Monday.