Published in the journal Nature Communications, the study describes
how doctors who gave the drug to a patient with both COVID-19 and a
rare immune disorder saw a marked improvement in his symptoms and
the disappearance of the virus.
"Our patient's unusual condition gave us a rare insight into the
effectiveness of remdesivir as a treatment for coronavirus
infection," said Nicholas Matheson, who co-led the study at
Cambridge University's Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and
Infectious Disease.
"The dramatic response to the drug – on repeated challenge –
suggests that it can be a highly effective treatment, at least for
some patients."
Since early in the coronavirus pandemic, scientists had hoped that
remdesivir, which was originally developed to treat hepatitis C and
subsequently tested against Ebola, might prove effective against
COVID-19.
But the drug's effectiveness against the pandemic disease has been
hotly disputed since a large World Health Organization-led trial
found in October that it failed to improve COVID-19 survival rates.
An editorial in the influential New England Journal of Medicine
earlier this month cited problems with the WHO-led Solidarity
Trial's and said they did not refute other trials that have
demonstrated benefits of the drug.
"There have been different studies supporting or questioning
remdesivir’s effectiveness, but some of those conducted during the
first wave of infection may not be optimal for assessing its
antiviral properties," said Cambridge's James Thaventhiran, who also
worked on the case.
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To address that, the team focused on a case of a 31-year-old man who became
severely ill with COVID-19 and who also had a rare genetic condition called XLA
that affects the body's ability to produce antibodies to fight infection.
Over a period of more than 2 months, the man was first treated with
hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, which had little effect, and was
subsequently given two separate courses of treatment with remdesivir, the
doctors wrote.
The patient's virus levels fell and his symptoms improved during his first
course of remdesivir, they said. And while his virus levels and symptoms
increased again after the first remdesivir course, a second course of treatment
was even more effective, and by day 64, he no longer tested positive COVID-19.
"All of this suggests that treatments will need to be tailored for individual
patients, depending on their underlying condition," said Matthew Buckland, a
doctor at London's Barts department of clinical immunology who worked with
Matheson.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Louise Heavens)
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