Source: Reuters
FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective face mask walks past an
illustration of a virus outside a regional science centre in
Oldham
FILE PHOTO: A nurse uses a syringe to give an injection to a
COVID-19 patient inside a field hospital builtĘon a soccer
stadium in Machakos
Researchers who studied the DNA of 2,700 COVID-19 patients in
208 intensive care units across Britain found that five genes
involving in two molecular processes - antiviral immunity and
lung inflammation - were central to many severe cases.
"Our results immediately highlight which drugs should be at the
top of the list for clinical testing," said Kenneth Baillie, an
academic consultant in critical care medicine at Edinburgh
University who co-led the research.
The genes - called IFNAR2, TYK2, OAS1, DPP9 and CCR2 – partially
explain why some people become desperately sick with COVID-19,
while others are not affected, Baillie said.
The findings, published in the journal Nature, should help
scientists speed up the search for potential drugs for COVID-19
by conducting clinical trials of medicines that target specific
antiviral and anti-inflammatory pathways.
Among those with the most potential, he said, should be a class
of anti-inflammatory drugs called JAK inhibitors, which includes
the arthritis drug baricitinib, made by Eli Lilly.
Baillie's team also found that a boost in the activity of the
INFAR2 gene could create protection against COVID-19, because it
is likely to mimic the effect of treatment with interferon.
Various existing drugs are being explored in clinical trials for
their potential against COVID-19 including interferon-beta-1a,
interleukin-1 receptor antagonist and Sanofi's arthritis drug
Kevzara.
So far, a steroid called dexamethasone and a newly developed
antiviral called remdesivir, made by Gilead, are the only drugs
authorised around the world to treat COVID-19 patients -
although remdesivir is not recommended for severe cases of the
disease and has had mixed results in trials.
Last month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Eli
Lilly's antibody drug for COVID-19, bamlanivimab, for patients
who are not hospitalized but are at risk of serious illness
because of their age or other conditions.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by William Maclean)
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