Relief, NeuroRx say emergency treatment with RLF-100
helps critically ill Covid patients
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[August 03, 2020]
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Critically ill
COVID-19 patients recovered rapidly from respiratory failure after three
days of treatment with RLF-100, a therapy granted fast-track designation
in the United States, two drug companies said on Sunday.
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Geneva-based Relief Therapeutics Holdings AG <RFLB.S> has a patent
for RLF-100, or aviptadil, a synthetic form of a natural peptide
that protects the lung. U.S.-Israeli NeuroRx Inc partnered with
Relief to develop the drug in the United States.
In June the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted fast-track
designation to RLF-100 for treatment of respiratory distress in
COVID-19.
While a Phase 2/3 clinical trial with 70 patients is ongoing,
RLF-100 is being administered on an emergency basis to some patients
who are too ill to be admitted to the trial.
The first report of rapid recovery under emergency use was posted by
doctors from Houston Methodist Hospital, the companies said in a
joint statement.
It said a 54-year-old man who developed COVID-19 while being treated
for rejection of a double lung transplant came off a ventilator
within four days of treatment with RLF-100.
Similar results were subsequently seen in more than 15 patients
treated under emergency use, the companies said.
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The two companies also said independent researchers in a biocontainment
laboratory in Brazil reported that aviptadil blocked replication of the SARS
coronavirus in human lung cells and immune cells.
"No other antiviral agent has demonstrated rapid recovery from viral infection
and demonstrated laboratory inhibition of viral replication," NeuroRx CEO
Jonathan Javitt said.
The clinical trials are looking at whether similar observations will be
confirmed for less ill patients with COVID-19-related respiratory failure.
An independent data monitoring committee will be conducting an interim analysis
of these data later this month, Javitt told Reuters.
(Reporting by Tova Cohen; Editing by Steven Scheer and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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